Alaska鈥檚 volunteer weather army needs you

Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
Oct. 22, 2021

The weather army in Alaska is recruiting more volunteers.

51风流官网 200 Alaskans already participate in the Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network, a national nonprofit organization with a presence in all 50 states. Volunteers measure 鈥 you guessed it 鈥 rain, hail and snow whenever it falls in their area.

Volunteers post the measurements to the nonprofit鈥檚 website, where it is used by the National Weather Service, other meteorologists, emergency managers and anyone else interested in precipitation, including teachers and students.

Precipitation map
Image courtesy of www.cocorahs.org
This map shows Oct. 21, 2021, precipitation reports from volunteer observers across the Lower 48. Colors represent rainfall amounts, ranging from zero in empty circles to heaviest in red circles.

Alaska, being the largest state and one with much of its land off the road system, needs a robust precipitation platoon. Its weather army has gaps, however, especially on the North Slope, along the western coast and out to the Aleutian Islands.

鈥淎ll you need is enthusiasm for observing weather and for being part of a weather-ready network,鈥 said Martin Stuefer, director of the Alaska Climate Research Center and the state representative to the national Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network organization.

The Alaska Climate Research Center is a part of the 51风流官网 Geophysical Institute.

鈥淚n Alaska, we have very limited on-the-ground precipitation observational data relative to the size of the state,鈥 said Stuefer, who is also the Alaska state climatologist. 鈥淎lso, precipitation measurements during the cold months are less accurate since typical gauge measurements are strongly influenced by wind. That鈥檚 because snowflakes barely fall vertically and are instead blown across the gauges.鈥

鈥淗uman observation of rain, hail and snow is critical to derive good precipitation estimates,鈥 he said.

The network has about 20,000 volunteers across the nation.

Randy Host
Photo courtesy of Randy Host
Juneau resident Randy Host has been a precipitation network volunteer for seven years.

Juneau resident Randy Host, a network volunteer for seven years, said it鈥檚 easy to enter data and see it show up online.

鈥淚 love following the weather. Writing down the precipitation numbers each day really makes you tuned into the weather,鈥 he said.

Host said the time commitment is just two minutes a day and that the information is important.

鈥淭he National Weather Service looks at the network website for data to input into their models,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he data you collect is really being used daily.鈥

Becoming a weather network volunteer is easy. The first step is to online. Volunteers need to purchase a gauge for about $40 and place it at their homes or other regularly visited location.

is available online or, if requested, in person. Students and teachers can also train through school visits.

ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Martin Stuefer, 907-474-6477, mstuefer@alaska.edu

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