Day of blessing of rain, giver of all life and lightning, a gift of nitrogen to Mother Earth and ozone to Father Sky….Click hereto read full description.
The Trecena of Kawok (11th – 23rd April 2026)
by Mark Elmy
The trecena of Kawok brings the opportunity to birth something new, or to be reborn ourselves. Click here to view Mark’s Kawok trecena video.
Tzolkin Trecena Notes 1 Storm (Cauac)
by William and Viola Welsch
Cauac (Storm/Rain) – purification, activation, dynamic force, healing, nourishment, compassion, gathering energies within. Tempestuous energies, emotional energies, the storm gathers within. Separate thinking and emotions from awareness. Watch the storm wash away the ego, allowing room for the new consciousness…Click here to read full article.
Jaguar Wisdom 1 – Storm (Cauac)
by Kenneth Johnson
Kawoq is sometimes called “the universal community,” or even “the celestial home of the gods,” for heaven is the ultimate model for the lives we live here on earth. On a Kawoq day, it is the degree of balance and harmony which we experience with family and community which may need to be brought back into the flow of things…Click here to read full article.
The Tzolk’in Clock Storm Trecena
by White Shaman
The storm (rainstorm) trecena is prominently located on the north face of the Tzolk’in Clock. This trecena is deeply connected to our sleep selves, the place we go when we are asleep. Spend time with meditation. Keep calm and placid waters in your mind and heart. Your sleep self is taking care of your future reality during this trecena. The Madrid codex north face looks gruesome below. It represents transformation from awake to the place we go when we sleep, each night and ultimately death…Click here to read full article.
Ancient Maya Settlement Confirmed Submerged Beneath Lake Atitlan
by Gary Manners
AA groundbreaking underwater archaeological mission has confirmed the existence of a submerged Maya settlement beneath the waters of Lake Atitlán in the Guatemalan highlands, reframing the site from scattered ritual remains into a once-thriving village now permanently flooded by rising lake levels. The research, carried out in close collaboration with the indigenous Tz’utujil Maya community, has been published in the Journal of Maritime Archaeology and represents one of the most significant underwater archaeological discoveries in Mesoamerica in recent decades...Click here to read full article.