Colorado Weather - Where do you get your forecasts?

midwestwi

FNG
Joined
Jan 11, 2018
Messages
22
Location
Western Wisconsin
Where do you get your weather forecasts while out elk hunting? Is there a good resource on AM/FM radio???

What resources do you use for westher?


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Joined
Feb 29, 2012
Messages
1,796
Location
East Wenatchee, WA
I'm not in CO, but I use a number of apps on my phone and compare the two. I use Accuweather and the NOAA weather app. The nice thing about the NOAA app is that you can pick a specific spot on the map and it will give you the weather from the nearest weather monitoring station.
 

come2elmo

WKR
Joined
Aug 18, 2018
Messages
325
Location
South Texas
NOAA weather radio. Inreach has a weather feature but haven’t tried it myself. Phone weather apps obviously only good if you have signal.
 

M22

FNG
Joined
Aug 27, 2020
Messages
16
Mountain weather forecasts can helpful for bow season in CO, especially in early season when you can find yourself above treeline: https://www.mountain-forecast.com/

I use that in conjunction with the zip code forecast on NOAA’s page (this is my go-to usually) - once you search a zip, you can customize and locate the forecast zone, and it’s usually pretty solid:https://www.weather.gov/
 

tjihrig

FNG
Joined
Jun 26, 2019
Messages
66
InReach weather is ok but really vague. It’s more temperatures and sky conditions. I’m going to carry a clip on barometer this year so I can watch pressure trends. I check the 7 day forecast before going in and make note of it as well.


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Rky Mtn Farmer

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 21, 2020
Messages
103
I use a couple weather apps on my iPhone, Dark Sky and a local Denver weather app Fox 31 Weather. At camp I usually don’t get signal, but during the day when I get up on a ridge I will check the weather and see what the forecast is.
 
Joined
Jul 31, 2018
Messages
63
Location
Central Colorado
I wear a barometer watch that tracks trends and has a storm alert when pressure drops significantly (Suunto Traverse Alpha) and I use my eyes. I’ve been caught out up high and had some very close calls in lightning storms, so I’m very cautious with storms near and above treeline.
 
Joined
Feb 4, 2014
Messages
547
Location
Colorado
My experience has been predicting weather in the mountains is throwing darts in the dark. I usually check closer on third season as big storms are more predictable. We used the inreach weather one September and it was vague to say the least. A 10% of precip was 8" of snow. The higher up on the hill the crazier it can and will get.
 

rayporter

WKR
Joined
Jul 3, 2014
Messages
4,403
Location
arkansas or ohio
am/fm weather forecast in the mountains has been so bad i could call them and give them the weather.

as in like "snow in the high country" no crap, dick tracy -----when your looking at a foot and dont know when it will stop. now if they say major storm coming you better button down, or scoot.
 
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