Weather · four traditions
The sky has a name
Spinners and storm-throwers, Mokosh at the loom of weather, Perun chasing Veles through the clouds, Stribog's eight wind-grandchildren on the road.
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
- Wed, Jul 8, 3:02 PM
the lore
Who holds this sky
The same weather, read the old way: the Slavic deity who holds it, their story, and an omen to carry.

Slavic · cloudy
Mokosh
earth-mother, spinner of fates
When the new faith spread, Mokosh did not leave, she changed her headscarf and became Saint Friday, Paraskeva of the flax. On her day no honest woman spun or did laundry, and the old people said she walked from house to house at night, pricked by every spindle left out, her fingers wounded by other women's unfinished work. Not a punishment, a reminder, some days are for the hands to rest. A shut grey sky has the feel of her day about it, the light itself declining to work hard. Let something stay unfinished today on purpose, she counts that as an offering too.
A grey lidded sky on a decision day is Mokosh still spinning your options, do not cut the thread before she has drawn it out.
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 slavic 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