Skip to Content

What RVers need to know: Weather lingo

| Updated Dec 1, 2015

All the winter storm advisories, alerts, watches and warnings that we'll soon start seeing can be confusing.

The National Weather Service does a great job of disseminating weather predictions but sometimes it can be hard to know just what is what.

So, for your future reference, here's a weather lingo tutorial:

Weather watches

A watch means conditions are right for dangerous weather. In other words, a “watch” means watch out for what the weather could do, be ready to act.

  • For events that come and go quickly, such as severe thunderstorms, tornadoes or flash floods, a watch means that the odds are good for the dangerous weather, but it's not yet happening.
  • For longer-lived events, such as hurricanes or winter storms, a watch means that the storm isn't an immediate threat.
  • For either kind of event, a watch means you should keep up with the weather and be ready to act.

When a severe thunderstorm, tornado or flash flood watch is in effect, it means you should watch the sky for signs of dangerous weather. Sometimes a severe thunderstorm, a tornado or a flash flood happens so quickly that warnings can't be issued in time. Many areas don't have civil-defense sirens or other warning methods. People who live near streams that quickly reach flood levels should be ready to flee at the first signs of a flash flood.

Hurricane or winter storm watches mean it's time to prepare by stocking up on emergency supplies and making sure you know what to do if a warning is issued. For those who live near the ocean, a hurricane watch may mean it's time to prepare for evacuation.

Weather warnings

A warning means that the dangerous weather is threatening the area.

For severe thunderstorms, tornadoes and flash floods, a warning means the event is occurring. Since tornadoes are small – a half-mile wide tornado is considered huge – a tornado will miss many more buildings that it hits in the area warned.

Still, a tornado warning means be ready to take shelter immediately if there are any indications a tornado is approaching. Severe thunderstorms are larger, maybe 10 or 15 miles across.

A hurricane warning means either evacuate or move to safe shelter.

A winter storm warning means it's not safe to venture out. If traveling, head for the nearest shelter.

How alerts are issued

Before watches and warnings are issued, the National Weather Service, private forecasters, newspapers, radio and television normally try to alert the public to potential weather dangers.

Often, forecasters begin issuing bulletins on hurricanes and winter storms three or four days before the storm hits.

But forecasters can't issue alerts for the danger of severe thunderstorms, tornadoes and flash floods that far ahead. Usually, the Storm Prediction Center sends out alerts the day before dangerous weather is likely. Most television weathercasters highlight these alerts on the evening news the day before threatening weather.

Weather radio

nwsA weather radio is one of the best ways to stay tuned-in to dangerous weather. These radios receive broadcasts from the National Weather Service. The broadcasts are from weather service offices.

Broadcasts include ordinary forecasts of several kinds, including for boating, farming, traveling and outdoor recreation as well as general forecasts for the area.

The stations immediately broadcast all watches and warnings. Some weather radios have a feature that turn on the radio automatically when a watch or warning is broadcast. Such “tone alert” weather radios are highly recommended for places where large numbers of people could be endangered by tornadoes or flash floods. These include schools, nursing homes, shopping center security offices, hospitals, and recreation areas such as swimming pools.

Mike Wendland

Published on 2015-12-01

Mike Wendland is a multiple Emmy-award-winning Journalist, Podcaster, YouTuber, and Blogger, who has traveled with his wife, Jennifer, all over North America in an RV, sharing adventures and reviewing RV, Camping, Outdoor, Travel and Tech Gear for the past 12 years. They are leading industry experts in RV living and have written 18 travel books.

2 Responses to “What RVers need to know: Weather lingo”

January 09, 2014at12:03 pm, Cathy R said:

I like the Weather Channel’s phone app too. The temperature color icon turns orange for a watch and red for a warning with an explanation point for emphasis pertinent to your exact location. Not as good as a radio, but helpful none the less.

January 09, 2014at7:53 am, Campskunk said:

when you get one of those NOAA tone alert radios, you have to program it to tell it where you are. that’s the reason i don’t have one – i’m in a different place every week. some places, though, it might be worthwhile to go to the trouble, like tornado alley. i remember checking into the Amarillo KOA and being told diplomatically by the staff there that if i heard the sirens, i needed to head to the bathhouse, which was the only masonry structure on this big flat open expanse of north Texas prairie. they were nice about it, but i definitely took the hint.

Comments are closed.

Back to top
Share
Tweet
Share
Pin
Email