Live NWS + SPC + geolocation
Read the sky before it speaks.
Weather Coverage Network uses your coordinates to look up the official National Weather Service point forecast, nearby observation station, active alerts, and Storm Prediction Center outlook risk that intersects your exact location.
Section 1
Right now, in plain English.
A station snapshot, a quick sky read, and the official zone metadata for your exact point.
Waiting for a location fix.
Loading observation station...
Station text and forecast summary will appear here.
The next few named NWS periods will render here.
Local pulse
Point metadata
Manual coordinates
Section 2
Storm Prediction Center risk at your exact point.
Day 1 through Day 8 SPC outlooks are queried against your latitude and longitude.
Waiting for SPC polygon lookups.
Primary severe risk
Pending
The Day 1 severe-weather summary will appear here.
Short range
Days 4 through 8
Section 3
Official NWS forecast, styled like a control wall.
Daily cards, an hourly temperature arc, and a concise short-range narrative.
Waiting for forecast data.
Hourly trend
Forecast notes
Section 4
Alerts stay louder than vibes.
Active NWS products are queried for your point first, then backed up with zone-based lookups.
Waiting for active alerts.
Hazard load
This panel will summarize whether your point is quiet, under an advisory, or under something stronger.
Active products
Section 5
A practical weather briefing for actual plans.
The final section turns the observation, forecast, alerts, and SPC signal into decisions.
Waiting on the full weather picture.
Local briefing
This paragraph will summarize the current feel once the station data arrives.
This paragraph will connect the forecast and SPC signal into a plan.
This paragraph will add alert-driven guidance when needed.
Playbook
When thunder is audible, move inside.
Avoid water-covered roads, especially at night.
If SPC risk is elevated, decide where you would shelter before storms arrive.
High dew points make outdoor work feel harder than the raw temperature suggests.
Make sure critical alerts can wake you during active-weather nights.