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Source: Kt Boehrer in The
Other Dimension, NCGR Declination SIG Newsletter - Volume
6, No.4, p. 1, 14-15, Winter 2001
All tools (see software)
helpful as they are, fall short of producing the chart
and/or the information that all astrologers truly needs
at their fingertips.
The round declination chart is helpful but it is not
the ultimate declination chart. It is in fact, a pretty
poor substitute for the correct declination chart that
Kt Boehrer designed, copyyrighted, published and produced
in tablet form in 1975.
That chart combines both the planets's longitude and
declination in a chart that allows the astrolger to
see, with vivid clarity, the relationships that exist
among planets by both longitude ande declination, plus
immediately identifies the planets that have gone beyond
the ecliptic and/or the planets that are situated exactly
on the ecliptic.

This elliptical chart is © by Kt Boehrer 1994,
see article in The
Other Dimension, Vol 6, No4 with comments from Leigh
Westin.
An example of Kt's eliptic chart,
showing its value, set for September 11, 2001, EST 8:46
am, Manhattan NY.
Mars, Mercury and Uranus were off the ecliptic in south
declination; Venus barely, but nevertheless off, north.
Only Mars OOB would have been noted by given declination.
Jupiter and Neptune were just inside the ecliptic, withj
Moon slightly under, all powerful positions. Mars' active
point mirrored into the Ecliptic was 20S04, widely contra-parallel
Saturn (20N47). Other aspects easily seen via this configuration
are: ASC contra-parallel Sun, Moon parallel MC, Jupiter
and N.Node, Venus contra-parallel Uranus. This chart
form is considerably more visually effective than the
ecliptic chart one proposed by the Magi Society.
The combination of both longitude
and declination provides a most powerfully inpressive
chart - much more informative and much more accurate
than the round declination chart that is our other current
option.
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