Aeromancy is weather divination — reading cloud formations, wind currents, and the sky's cosmological events for guidance. Its narrower cousins have their own names: Austromancy for winds and cloud shapes, Anemoscopy for the wind's speed, direction, and sound, Nephomancy for the color, shape, and position of clouds — here, they're all folded together simply as aeromancy. It turns up condemned in the Bible by Moses, tied to necromancy by Albertus Magnus, and named among the Renaissance's forbidden arts alongside geomancy, hydromancy, pyromancy, palmistry, and scapulimancy. Weather has always been read as the mood of the gods — Thor's thunder, Zeus's sky, Vayu's wind, Aditi's heavens — and folk magic across cultures still tracks weather to predict it, to work with it, and to lend its energy to other magic.
This tracker follows the old four-humour model — blood, yellow bile, black bile, and phlegm — mapped to the seasons, the elements, and their hot/cold, wet/dry qualities, alongside wind direction (each of the four winds carrying its own energy, from the fresh opening of the East to the reflecting clarity of the North), wind speed, moon phase, and the day's runic period. Together they build a daily reading of what the air itself is doing — useful on its own, or as a way to prime the eye for cloud and scrying work.
Step outside, feel which way the wind is moving, and let the sky tell you what it knows.