Forecasts, analysis, data
- Washington Marine Weather - From U.W. Atmospheric Sciences Dept.
- Washington Marine Weather - From NOAA
- Washington Marine Weather - From Weather Underground
Note: the links above have basically the same information, but some may have been updated more recently and some may download faster than others.
- Environment Canada Weather
All of coastal B.C.
- U.W. Atmospheric Sciences Home Page
- Cliff Mass Weather Blog - Discussion of the current weather picture by UW Professor Cliff Mass
- NOAA Seattle Home Page
- Complete set of weathermaps for the Pacific with loops
- Point Reyes Weatherfax - lots of weather maps
NOAA Tides and Currents
MM5 and WRF models from UW.
The forecasts are initialized at 0 or 12 UTC, (1700 or 0500 PDT), and the "Forecast Hour" is relative to that time.
Note Universal Time is used for these forecasts, also labeled GMT. (subtract 7 from UTC to get PDT or 8 to get PST)
SLP stands for Sea Level Pressure.
The 36km domain maps cover the Pacific and Western US and Canada; the 12km domain maps show more detail over the Northwest. The 4km domain maps (WRF Model only) have the most detail. The 4km domains take the longest to finish, and they may not be available for your desired forecast time. If the 4km domain is not available, try "subdomain" under the 12km domain, or find an earlier run.Find your desired "product." Select your desired forecast hour and plot, hit "submit selection" and see what you get! The correct PDT for the forecast is given at the top of the map.
- Predict Wind
Observations
- Local Radar Images
- Handy local winds and wind history
- Observations from Washington State Ferries
- Current Observations from floating bridges
- Current Observations at West Point. There is a link to the marine forecast here too.
- Current Observations at Smith
Island. and Tatoosh.
- List of pressure differences, with rules for predicting wind speeds from them.
Maps of pressures and winds, and more around Washington - (If your browser does not show the data, click on a location and a box with data will appear.)
Western Washington Surface Readings
Map of Surface Readings From UW Atmospheric Sciences. See how the weather is changing across the area. Helps visualize the pressure gradientsThe numbers are the Farenheit temperature and the pressure in tenths of a mbar difference from 1000 mbar. So, for example, a reading of 58 166 means 58 degrees F and 1016.6 mbar pressure.
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Observations for the past 12 hours.
The UW gives lists of observations for many stations, arranged by time. Pick "current", or a number of hours ago in their box, then hit "go."NOAA now has a fancier web based scheme for getting readings at specific sites.
Current Weather at Sea-Tac from the National Weather Service. This page contains links to other NWS information.