Trying again on the images -- it's page 71 of this manuscript, third set of images down:
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I found . . . . another flower!
It turns out that thunder was a big "predictor" in the time around the carbon dating so I started looking at various thunder prediction calendars in hopes of finding a visual image of the sound of thunder. Spoiler -- have not been successful, but will keep looking.
However, had to share I was excited to find a similar image in a relatively early but still possible (1389) Girdle Book maybe owned by a Hayward (high level serf - foreman) in Worchestershire, England. It's MS Rawlinson D939 in the Bodleian Library.
It was in the pictorial prediction of thunder in November (Habundanciam frugal & iocunditatem - Good fruit harvest and pleasantness).
What is that "thing" next to the Voynich-like symbol? Could it be some sort of weird "gun"?
Unfortunately, having found a paper discussing the manuscript
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turns out it's a trumpet with a banner hanging down from it -- a well known pictoral representation of jovial and pleasant times. The star-flower couldn't represent any sound because it's on the wrong "end." So it must be part of the whole "good fruit harvest," thing. Sigh.
But the Girdlebook was interesting to review (sitting on the cusp between literate and illiterate owners) and had some art about at the same level as the Voynich, in my opinion.