Arriving at William Lamont Astrologer, the first thing you read is a 2,000-word essay about what introverts want from a romantic partner. No horoscope, no birth chart, no fixed-star reading anywhere on the page. That opening sits oddly for a site named after a working astrologer, and the rest of the visit compounds the oddity rather than explaining it.
The listing puts William Lamont Astrologer in the Spirituality category, and the keywords around it point clearly: astrology reports, horoscopes, fixed stars, a blog, an Australian audience. None of that appears once you reach the actual site. The homepage is given over entirely to one article, "What Introverts Really Want in a Romantic Connection," which discusses emotional depth, slow-burn relationships, and the idea that safety needs to come before intimacy. Read on its own terms it is a competent relationship-advice piece, the sort you might find on a personal-growth blog. It has no thread back to charts, planets, or anything an astrologer would sell.
Missing astrology services
People who look up an astrologer are usually after a reading, a natal chart report, or a consultation. William Lamont Astrologer offers none of these. There is no pricing, no description of services, no account of how a session would work, no booking step. The navigation runs to two items only: a homepage and a contact tab. For a practice built around one person and one craft, that structure leaves the core promise of the name completely unfulfilled.
Escort link in article text
One detail pushes William Lamont Astrologer from puzzling into genuinely concerning. Inside the introvert article, the text links out to eroticmonkey.ch, an escort-service site. This is not a stray footer ad or a compromised banner you could shrug off as a hacking incident. It sits in the running prose of the only content the site has. A link placed that way matches how private blog networks and paid backlink schemes typically work: a respectable-sounding niche, one essay that reads cleanly in isolation, and an outbound link tucked into the prose pointing at something wholly unrelated to the stated business.
Whatever the intent, the damage to William Lamont Astrologer lands either way. A spiritual practice runs on trust. Someone consulting an astrologer is handing over their birth time, their relationship worries, and sometimes real money on faith. An outbound link to adult escort content, dropped into a page framed as spiritual guidance, undercuts that trust before any reading is offered. It makes the site impossible to take at face value, and no amount of competent prose around it changes that.
The brand's own presentation does not help. The page title reads "Willam Astrologer," missing the "i" in William. A practitioner who builds an entire identity around their own name usually gets the spelling right in the browser tab. It reads less like the careful front-of-house of William Lamont Astrologer and more like a template filled in quickly and never proofed.
No practitioner biography
There is also nothing on the site about the person behind the name. No biography of William Lamont, no account of how long they have practised, no school of astrology they follow, no training, no sample of their written work in the field. For a discipline where a reader often picks a practitioner on the strength of their voice and their stated approach, that gap is loud. The name is the entire pitch, and William Lamont Astrologer gives a visitor no means of learning who actually stands behind it.
Contact follows the same pattern. A contact tab exists in the navigation, which is at least a route somewhere, though the contents of that page were not retrievable. The homepage itself shows no phone number, no postal address, and no business hours. For a remote astrology service operating entirely online, a contact form can work fine as the only channel. But paired with every other problem here, the absence of any visible, grounded way to reach a real person adds to the impression of a site that does not want to be pinned down.
Checking third-party verification
Checking for third-party coverage returned nothing usable: a DNS failure took the search tool offline, so no reviews, ratings, or mentions for William Lamont Astrologer could be confirmed either way. That is not evidence against the practice on its own. But it does mean a prospective client has no outside voices to draw on, and they are left judging William Lamont Astrologer entirely by a single relationship essay and a misplaced link. Those two things together do not form a foundation anyone should feel comfortable building a decision on.
To be fair to what is present: the introvert article is competently written and stays on topic. If the site were simply a personal blog about relationships and inner life, it would be unremarkable in a harmless way. The problem is the mismatch between the label and the contents, and the escort link makes that mismatch worse than ordinary incoherence. William Lamont Astrologer, as it stands, does not deliver what the name advertises, and the one piece of content it does offer carries an embedded link that few astrology clients would expect or want to find there.
Readers looking for chart readings, fixed-star interpretation, or written astrology reports will not find a service to buy or even read about at William Lamont Astrologer. The spelling error in the page title, the missing biography, the single off-topic article, and the escort link are hard to reconcile with a genuine working practice. Whether William Lamont Astrologer is dormant, misdirected, or something else entirely is unclear from the published evidence. What is clear is that the site, in its current state, gives no good reason to go further.


Business address
William Lamont Astrologer
New South Wales
Australia