:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Weather is a physical system. Reading it without an app is just reading the system directly. :INFO What You Can Actually Predict Without Instruments Reliable observation-based forecasting gives you a 6 to 12 hour window with reasonable accuracy. What you can predict: rain likelihood from cloud progression and type; wind shift indicating approaching fronts; thunderstorm risk from cumulus development; and overnight frost risk from clear-sky and humidity conditions. The primary tools are cloud identification, wind direction, and pattern recognition of how conditions change over 1 to 2 hours. :COUNTER.half 6 to 12 Hours | :COUNTER.half Mackerel Sky :PATH Learn the Key Cloud Types Six cloud formations predict weather reliably — the rest is noise. | :INFO Learn the Key Cloud Types Cumulus (fair weather): flat base, cauliflower top, detached — stable conditions. Cumulonimbus (thunderstorm): cumulus growing vertically to anvil shape — imminent severe weather. Cirrus (high thin streaks): ice crystals, precede warm fronts by 24 to 48 hours. Altostratus (gray layer, dim sun): rain in 6 to 12 hours. Nimbostratus (dark gray, continuous): rain now. Fog in morning: burns off for a clear afternoon in most cases. :PATH Read Wind Direction for Front Prediction Backing wind (veering counterclockwise) indicates approaching low pressure. | :INFO Read Wind Direction for Front Prediction In the northern hemisphere: if the wind shifts counterclockwise (backs) — from south to southeast to east — a low-pressure system is approaching, bringing deteriorating weather. If wind shifts clockwise (veers) — from south to southwest to west — a high pressure is building, clearing conditions follow. A sudden calm after a period of wind often precedes a storm passage. :PATH Watch the Rate of Cloud Change Rapidly developing clouds mean fast-changing weather — slowly means gradual change. | :INFO Watch the Rate of Cloud Change How fast conditions change matters as much as the conditions themselves. Cumulus clouds growing vertically at a visible rate in mid-afternoon indicate afternoon thunderstorm risk. Cirrus thickening slowly over 6 hours suggests a slow-moving warm front. A sudden darkening from the horizon in less than 30 minutes suggests a squall line — seek shelter immediately. :CHECKLIST Reliable Field Signs [ ] Halo around the Moon: cirrostratus present, rain within 24 hours [ ] Red sky at morning: storm system to the east, weather moving in [ ] Red sky at evening: clear high pressure to the west, good weather coming [ ] Dew on grass at dawn: clear overnight sky, fair morning [ ] No dew at dawn: cloud cover retained heat, possible rain coming [ ] Insects flying low: low pressure suppressing flight, rain likely :NOTE The Forecasts Work Best When Combined No single sign forecasts reliably alone. A halo around the Moon plus cirrus thickening plus a backing wind gives very high confidence of incoming rain. One sign alone is suggestive. Three confirming signs together are actionable. Build the habit of checking multiple indicators simultaneously. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The clouds have been telling the same story for ten thousand years. Learn to read it. :LINK https://www.mountainsafety.co.nz/weather-forecasting-without-a-forecast Mountain Safety NZ — Field Weather Forecasting Without Technology