RI Skywarn Training a Success

Providence Radio Association President David Tessitore, K1DT and fellow W1OP club members attended the final Rhode Island in-person NOAA NWS Skywarn Training offered Tuesday April 30, 2024.

Last Tuesday’s in-person Skywarn Training by NOAA-NWS meteorologist Bryce Williams at Newport’s CCRI was a success. This was the final in-person training in RI planned for 2024, and was attended by about 60 motivated people – including at least a dozen radio amateurs from the Providence Radio Association (PRA), Newport County Radio Club (NCRC), Fidelity Amateur Radio Club, Blackstone Valley Amateur Radio Club (BVARC), and RI-ARES leadership.

Please note: “NEW FOR 2024: NWS Boston is no longer issuing individual SKYWARN numbers or requiring re-training every 5 years in order to remain a spotter. While we encourage spotters to retrain periodically, it is not required to continue to provide reports.” https://www.weather.gov/box/skywarn

Huge shout-out to Danny Bright, age 18, who drove 2 hours from Boston to attend.  He is a dedicated lifelong weather spotter and was thrilled to be able to meet NOAA-NWS weather officials and be at this in-person training.  Danny will be attending U Mass Lowell’s respected program in Meteorology and Atmospheric Science next fall. He is not yet a licensed radio amateur, and I encourage clubs in the Boston/Lowell area to reach out.

Future meteorologist Danny Bright (left) drove from Boston to attend this NOAA NWS Skywarn training. The final in-person class was conducted at CCRI Newport on April 30, 2024 by Bryce Williams (shown right). Rhode Island thanks you for your commitment and service.

Bryce Williams presentation was fact-filled, used helpful videos, and was engaging with wide-ranging comments. These included:

  • Lightening is the #2 weather-related killer;  #1 is heat.
  • Radar does not provide truth at the ground level, and about 1/3 of  decisions are made based on ground-truth reporting. Being a weather spotter matters!
  • Like many Millenial meterologists, Bryce Williams was first motivated toward this career path after watching the 1996 movie, Twister. A sequel is due out soon, and they can’t wait!
  • New England is overdue for a major hurricane. Be prepared to be self-sufficient for at least 3 days. KNOW YOUR EVACUATION ROUTE ahead of time.  https://riema.ri.gov/planning-mitigation/evacuation

To learn more about emergency preparedness for you, your family and community, as well as the public service mission of amateur radio, please join RI-ARES. This upcoming Wednesday’s RI-ARES monthy meeting will cover some topics raised here, as well as the new ARES course released by ARRL.

The RI ARES  next Zoom meeting will  be this Wednesday May 8, 2024 from 8-9:45pm and will be run by ARRL RI Section Emergency Coordinator, Jeremy Taylor, K1JST.

We hope to meet you there,  or during an ARES or Skywarn net.

For more information, please join us at RIARES.org https://riares.org/ . Or reach out to Teri DiIorio, W1PUP, ARRL RI Assisant Section Emergency Coordinator.

Active FEMA, Red Cross Shelter, CERT, PEMA, and RI-ARES volunteer leader Teri, W1PUP (left) attended from North Providence. Along with Dan Masterson, KC1KXE from Coventry.

5 ways to up your Weather Game

1. Prep to be a SKYWARN Weather Spotter

Follow Rob Macedo, KD1CY and the Boston NWS

https://wx1box.org/

Get familiar with the material covered by KD1CY in his 2-hour SKYWARN Training and Review video from 2023 posted there: https://youtu.be/19AQfzxO648?feature=shared 

2023 Virtual SKYWARN Weather Spotter Training

“This is the recording of the 2023 Virtual SKYWARN Weather Spotter Training from Saturday May 13th 2023. This presentation helps support taking and passing the online quiz to become a new SKYWARN Spotter or to refresh your SKYWARN training to support the retraining requirement every 5 years. This virtual training was taught by Eastern Massachusetts ARES Section Emergency Coordinator & SKYWARN Coordinator Rob Macedo, KD1CY.”

Stay tuned for virtual and in-person 2024 training options.

Learn how to provide critical situational awareness and support your community.

2. FREE Cloud Charts

Plus great interactive learning tips for every age. 

Have you looked at clouds from both sides now and still not sure what you are seeing?  Start here!

https://www.noaa.gov/jetstream/clouds/nws-cloud-chart

Did you know? “In the United States today, the 27 cloud symbols are no longer plotted on surface maps. Weather observations became computerized in the 1990s, and these automated observing systems can only detect cloud height, not cloud type. However, weather observations by humans continue in most of the world and include the ‘state of the sky’ using these symbols.”

https://www.noaa.gov/sites/default/files/2023-03/cloudchart-front.pdf

3. Go Deeper: Storm Spotting and Amateur Radio 3rd Edition

by Mike Corey, KI1U (RI Assistant Section Manager – among so many other things) with contributing editor Rob Macedo, KD1CY

ISBN: 978-1-62595-141-0. Available from ARRL or Amazon.  Highly recommended.

“During severe weather events, thousands of ham radio volunteers provide real-time information to partners like emergency management and forecasters at the National Weather Service. Storm Spotting and Amateur Radio can help you become one of those volunteers, providing ground-truth information when it is needed most.” 

 

4. Invest in a High or Low Tech Weather Station

High-Tech – The Weather Flow Tempest Weather Station – Amazon $339 

Classic Professional Grade: Davis Vantage Pro Weather Station, runs over $1500

Entry Level Weather Station options are many from $50-$300

Low-Tech – CoCoRaHS Rain Gauge.  – Participate daily in the Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network https://cocorahs.org/

5. Join a SKYWARN Net 

The RI SKYWARN Net meets every Wednesday at 19:30 on the NB1RI Network.

During severe weather events the net activates at least daily at 19:30 and more often as needed. The SKYWARN net is open to all licensed operators and welcomes new participants.  Net Manager – Martin N1JMA

For more on SKYWARN and RI ARES nets hosted on the linked NB1RI Repeater network, see: 

RI ARES & SKYWARN Nets: https://riares.org/nets

NB1RI repeater network: https://nb1ri.net/

 

Did you know …. that fog melts snow faster than rain?  

meteorological wisdom courtesy of Peter Bartram, KQ1X 

Are you a meteorology-minded ham? A confused beginner? 

Join the SKYWARN net Wednesdays at 7:30pm.

Let’s mentor one another before the storm