Playing the Weather Game

Why I check the weather multiple times a day every day all summer long.

My main business — my bread and butter and steak and potatoes — is using my helicopter to dry cherries. I’ve written about this numerous places and even have YouTube videos about it, so I’m not going to go into detail here. You can find some of my blog posts about it by clicking the cherry drying tag.

Being a serious cherry drying pilot means watching the weather incessantly so you can be close to the helicopter when called out to fly. I watch the weather three ways:

  • National Weather Service Forecast. I don’t care what anyone says about their favorite source of weather information. In the U.S., all weather data comes from NOAA and is made available on the NWS website. That’s Weather.GOV, not Weather.COM. I have point forecasts set up for the three areas that interest me most: Malaga, Quincy, and Mattawa. I have bookmarks set up for all three on my laptop computer, desktop computer, iPhone, and iPad. Throughout the day, I consult them numerous times. When there’s rain forecasted for the near future, I also look at the hourly forecast to see what time of day the rain might come.

    Weather for this Week
    The forecast icons make it easy to see the weather at a glance.

  • Radar Image
    Of course, there’s nothing on radar now, but if there was, this image would be full of gray, green, yellow, orange, or even red shading to show storm severity.

    Weather Radar. Again, I use a NOAA product to check the radar for the area. In this case, it’s the RadarUS app on my iPhone or iPad. When there’s rain in the area, I want to know where it is, how heavy it is, and which way it’s moving. This app can give me all of that information. I can even zoom in with a satellite image overlay to see how close it’s coming to the orchards I’m under contract to cover.

  • Sky watching. Wherever I am — although I’m usually at home this time of year — I watch the sky. Are there clouds? Do they look threatening? Is rain falling from them? What does that look like on radar? Which way are they moving? While I can’t see the Quincy or Mattawa areas from here — and they do both have different weather than we do locally — I can get a good idea of what’s going on in my immediate area where I have the most acreage to cover. I can also often see large storm cells over the Waterville Plateau that might be headed for Quincy.

    Sky Watching from Home
    This is the view from my house. I have a mostly unobstructed view from the southwest to the northeast so I can literally see the weather coming — unless it’s coming from the south. The view in this shot is looking mostly northwest.

The crazy thing is that the short term forecast changes every day. For example, last night, when I went to bed, the forecast showed a 20% chance of rain after 11 AM today (Tuesday). But this morning, as you can see in the above forecast image, that rain prediction is completely gone.

But it can just as easily come back.

Or rain without rain being in the forecast.

That’s what I call the Weather Game. You do everything you can to stay on top of the weather and the forecast is neither consistent nor reliable. I sometimes wonder why I bother.

In any case, this is part of my life until August when I’m done with cherry drying season. And even then, it’s hard to turn off the habit of checking the weather so often — I’m usually checking it regularly well into September.

Winter Helicopter Flight to McMinnville Part 2

Another video from the Flying M Air YouTube channel.

Here’s the second part of my March 2021 flight to McMinnville, starting west of Ellensburg, WA and running to the Yakima Reservation. This flight has both nosecam and instrument cam views, as well as cockpit narration and radio chatter. I’ll release additional parts of this flight throughout the summer.

Note: This is the 1080 HD version of this video. A ad-free 4K UHD version without the animated subscribe button is available to MEMBERS at the Access Premium Content level. That’s my thanks for their financial support to this channel.

Helicopter Flight Over Wenatchee

Another video from the Flying M Air YouTube channel.

Join me for a 20-minute flight from the maintenance hangar at Wenatchee Pangborn Memorial Airport to the Columbia River, up to the Rocky Reach Dam, and back down to Malaga. Along the way, I’ll tell you about what you’re seeing and tell you about my helicopter maintenance and ground handling wheels.

Note: This is the 1080 HD version of this video. A 4K UHD version without the animated subscribe button and Member Wall that also includes landing at my summer base is available to members at the Sponsor level or higher.