A Look Inside the Two Wall Calendars
The Extra Large Wall - 8.5" High X 11" Wide
When the first Planetary Calendar was introduced in 1949 wall calendars, like homes, were much smaller. We added this larger version basically because Ralph has large hands and he likes to write notes on the calendar. That is also the reason we continue to print on uncoated paper, easier note writing. Apparently other people like having a little more note space too so this version continues to grow in popularity.
(for more note space consider the book bound Day Planner
The Original Wall - 7" High X 9" Wide
While this version doen't allow for as many notes, it also makes a great desk calendar and it continues to have its many fans.
(See size comparison image at left. Original is shown inside the outline of the XL Wall size.) All Calendars are Pacific Time
The Forecast
The 150 plus annotated forecasts highlight significant events in the month and offers insights about good general strategies. At the bottom of the page is a Glyph to English Guide with keywords for a quick reminder about the meaning of the glyphs.
The Calendar
The Extra-Large XL Calendar allows more room for notes, but the popular Original Medium size calendar also gives you the information when you need it. The extra day blocks contain a plain language monthly ephemeris for quick reference that is great for planning out your month.
Instructions
This explains how the calendar was designed in an intuitive fashion that makes the information easy to understand. A complete mini-astrology course starts after the calendar pages, from 29 to 34, so they remain easy to reference at the back during the year.
Annual Ephemeris
For those who depend on the raw data, the annual scientific ephemeris follows the months. Calculated for Universal Time.
Quick Reference Sheets
Quick reference pages let you access those helpful bits of info that you need to check often and are easily accessible on the final pages.
Back Cover
The inside back cover includes Quick Reference info and the cover itself offers an overview of the Planetary Calendar.