Weather · four traditions
The sky has a name
The breath of the world, Sila in the air itself, Sedna grieving below the sea, the three thunder-sisters working summer's brief storm.
Reading the sky over Las Vegas, set yours below
Set your city above (or tap 📍) to read the actual sky over you and the next three days.
the sky right now
Your actual weather
The real readings over Las Vegas, today and the next three days, straight from the sky itself.
the sky right now
Live weather
Allow live weather in the cookie banner (or set your city above) to read the actual sky above you.
- Read
- Tue, Jul 7, 11:57 PM
the lore
Who holds this sky
The same weather, read the old way: the Inuit deity who holds it, their story, and an omen to carry.

Inuit · cloudy
Sila
the air working something out
Sila has no face and needs none, its whole language is weather, and cloud is the low register of that voice, the sentence begun and not finished. The old shaman said storms are Sila speaking sternly, but a soft grey sky is different, it is the pause in the speech, the breath between words when nothing has been decided about you yet. The people learned to read the pause as carefully as the sentence. Standing under this ceiling today, you are inside an unfinished thought of the world's, and unfinished means nothing is closed, not the sky, not your day.
If the grey follows you all day, it is not a no, it is a not-yet.
A sample sky — set your city above to draw the deity who holds the real weather over you.
How this works
With live weather on, the card reads the actual sky above you and surfaces the inuit deity who holds that weather, each with their own painting and myth. The real readings sit in their own section above.
Refresh or keep
- Draw again, same tradition, a new card, a new telling.
- Share this exact card
Other tools
Weather & the Sky
Your day's forecast, the card on the horizon, and a short myth of the weather.
Arrives every morning