Cloud levels is a well-known weather parameter for outdoors enthusiasts who engage in various wind sports in the air — for example, paragliders but not only them. If you haven’t tried this or other air sports yet but want to do it, this article is right for you. Learn what the cloud layers are, why you may need it, how else do we measure clouds, and how to use it all for your outdoor activity.
Let’s start with the clouds themselves. A cloud as a weather phenomenon is tiny liquid particles of water vapor, frozen water crystals, and other particles suspended in the air. Clouds form in the sky because the air becomes saturated with moisture when it cools to the dew point, or when much water evaporates from the earth’s surface and water vapor forms.
Cloud level is the altitude at which the clouds are located according to cloud base, expressed as a range, for example, between 2 and 5 km (6,561 and 16,404 ft) above sea level. The latter is also known as the meteorological parameter called the cloud base or the height of the lowest visible part of the cloud, that is, it can be measured. It is measured with an instrument called “ceilometer” or a type of atmospheric lidar, the working principle of which is based on the laser. The unit of measurement is meters (feet) above the groupd for surface observations or above the sea level for aircraft observations.
The levels of clouds depend on their type. There are three main cloud levels: 1. Low clouds or low cloud leel, with the cloud base below 2,000 m (6,500 ft); 2. Middle clouds or middle cloud level located between 2,000 and 6,000 m (16,500 and 20,000 ft); and 3. High clouds or high cloud level above 6,000 m (20,000 ft).
The low level is formed by clouds of such types as cumulus, cumulonimbus, stratocumulus, and stratus but also lenticular, virga clouds, and mammatus clouds. The middle level is filled with altocumulus, altostratus, and nimbostratus clouds types. The high level includes cirrus uncinus, cirrocumulus, and cirrostratus but also noctilucent, nacreous, and anvil clouds.
A separate line should also be added for so-called multi-level clouds or clouds with extensive vertical development — cumulus and cumulonimbus, that is, with a high cloud height or thickness or depth (the difference between cloud base and cloud top), so they occupy several levels or even all three existing levels at once. These are real giant clouds up to 20 km (65,616 ft) in height! But, as you can see, there are just two types of these clouds — much smaller than in the three separate levels.
Just like with all other cloud parameters, knowing cloud levels, including both their height and their number, is useful for anyone who practices various wind sports and outdoor activities in the air, such as different types of general aviation, as well as paragliding, parachuting, air ballooning, and others. It helps you navigate and avoid loss of visibility, which is a vital weather element in the air. The cloud layers is also useful for everyone on the ground to know just how cloudy and rainy the day is or will be.
Ashim d Silva / Unsplash
Clouds are measured not only by this weather parameter but by several others. Here we will mention them very briefly, and later we will talk more about each of them in the separate articles. But if you see a link, there is already one, so go to learn more about it:
How do we measure clouds. Valerya Milovanova / Windy.app
The forecast of clouds is one of the main types of forecasts in the Windy.app, along with the wind speed and direction, air and water temperatures, precipitation, and others. Of all the above types of cloud measurements, you can find two of them in the app: cloud base and cloud cover (clouds).
You can find the cloud base parameter in a special weather profile for all wind sports in the air called the same — "Air". To do so:
1. Open your favorite or nearest spot from the Home Screen of the app or from the Weather Map. Let's take the Monte Avena paragliding spot located in the Dolomites mountains in Veneto region in Italy, as an example. It is a fairly flat mountain that is easy to jump from. The height of this mountain is 1,450 m (4,770 ft) above sea level.
Monte Avena paragliding spot in the Dolomites, Italy, in the Windy.app for iOS
2. Select the Air Weather Profile using the icon to the right of the weather models:
Air Weather Profile in the Windy.app for iOS
3. Get a cloud base forecast for today as well as for the next 10 days. You can also change the forecast step from 1 to 3 hours.
On the date of the writing of this particular text, in the forecast we see that the maximum cloud base on Monte Avena in the next three days will be 3,200 m (10,498 ft) on Friday, November 12 at 7 am, and the minimum cloud base will be 1,100 m (3,608 ft) on Saturday, November 12 at 08 am.
Maximum cloud base for Monte Avena in the Dolomites, Italy, in the Windy.app for iOS
Minimum cloud base for Monte Avena in the Dolomites, Italy, in the Windy.app for iOS
This means that at the minimum cloud base the clouds will cover the highest point of the mountain, so jumping on that day and at that time may be problematic.
Looking at the forecast for many days, you can also calculate the average base of clouds for the spot by yourself. This is somewhere around 1500–2000 m (4,921–6,561 ft).
The cloud cover is available in the same Air Weather Profile, as well as in all other 10 weather profiles according to all 10 weather models in the app under the general name “Clouds”.
Cloud cover in the Windy.app for iOS
In contrast to the common expression of the parameter in percentages or oktas on weather maps, in the Windy.app you see a graph with layers of clouds. It can be one layer, two layers, or three layers — but no more, or no layers at all.
The number of layers also literally shows how many layers of clouds are in the sky in a system of three main layers, which refers to the clouds layers parameter.
Pay attention also to the color and thickness of each layer itself, I mean, the line. The darker it is and the thicker it is, the more clouds are in the sky and the denser the layer. And vice versa: the lighter and thicker the line, the thinner the layer, and the fewer clouds in the sky.
In any case, before you get in the air to do your favorite wind sport, check the forecast by different models, as well as just visually on the day of your trip.
Last but not least, you can select the Clouds forecast as a separate item and add it to your Custom Weather Profile using the Customization feature. To do this, go to the Weather Profiles Screen and select it in one of the models. Then check the forecast.
Adding cloud cover on the Weather Profile Screen in the Windy.app for iOS
Learn more about clouds in the Windy.app Meteorological Textbook.
Text: Ivan Kuznetsov, an outdoor journalist, editor and writer from the Dolomites, Italy, and Karelia, Finland, with 10 years of professional experience. His favorite sports are cycling, hiking and sauna. Read his other articles
Cover photo: Pavel Anoshin / Unsplash
What is cirrus uncinus clouds. Simple explanation