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A patchy record of DIY satellite imagery and weather notes since 2020. The open-weather public archive is open to everyone willing and able to contribute.

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Automatic Ground Stations are local, semi-permanent stations that record and upload satellite transmissions automatically once per day. Manual ground stations are DIY and often mobile; operators manually record and upload satellite transmissions.
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The archive contains Automatic Picture Transmissions (APT) by US weather satellites NOAA-15, NOAA-18 and NOAA-19.
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Collective earth-sensing events led by open-weather, co-produced by a network of contributors around the world.
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859 archive entries × Clear Filters
2024-01-20 20:32:35
Soph Dyer
Inside my bedroom! Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
It's clear but cold. I'm still feeling unwell (again!) that I think it feels colder to me than it actually is. I stayed inside during the satellite pass.
2024-01-21 11:08:40
Sasha Engelmann
Downs Road, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
Storm Isha has been sweeping across the UK this weekend, with amber weather warnings issued by the Met Office in many parts of Wales, Scotland and Western England. Though the conditions weren't that bad in London, I stayed in the back garden of our flat to keep sheltered from wind. A curious cat named Dylan came padding quietly up behind me to check out what I was doing.
2024-01-21 20:19:49
Soph Dyer
The balcony of my flat, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
Frosty, slowly defrosting. This morning, I woke to a blackbird singing. There is still snow on the ground in the woods. Sasha and I have been receiving NOAA satellite imagery everyday for one month!
2024-01-22 10:57:26
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
Wind has changed the surface of the park and neighbourhood overnight, leaving large piles of torn leaves, knocking down branches, ripping coverings off parked motorcycles and bending 'for rent' signs on their axes. Whistles and howls echo through the streets and across the downs, joined by the sirens of ambulances and fire trucks. On local radio this morning there was mention of wifi and phone service cuts. This is London in the aftermath of Storm Isha, which has swept across the southeast overnight. Its long arm is dramatically visible in the satellite image I captured today – curving over France, Germany and the continent, and spiralling toward Sweden and Norway.
2024-01-22 20:08:39
Soph Dyer
Leaning out of the Northeast facing window of my flat, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
I have been inside most of today. The weather inside is stuffy.
2024-01-23 21:33:09
Soph Dyer
On the North West corner of Diepold Park, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
I think heard a Great Tit calling this morning. It rained today and feels milder. I was meant to be on a night train to the Netherlands this evening but German train drivers have walked out. They will be on strike until Monday. I have cancelled my trip. Life feels turbulent at the moment.
2024-01-24 10:32:45
Sasha Engelmann
Royal Holloway University of London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
In comparison to the windy and wet weather of Storms Isha and Jocelyn over the last few days, today feels calm, even balmy. I walked to 'Founder's Field', the highest point on the university campus, to set up my spare V-Dipole and test a new dongle (RTL-SDR V4). The atmosphere of the university is also calm, as if the machines of departments, university managers and administrators are hibernating.
2024-01-24 19:06:51
Soph Dyer
Augarten, Wiem, Austria
Austria
NOAA-15
It almost feel warm today. In the afternoon, it rained but I was inside the studio so didn't notice until I saw the wet pavement. My body also feel springy-ier, the migraine and stiffness I've had since Saturday is receding.
2024-01-25 10:21:30
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
Today the park was spontaneously drizzly and I hunched over my laptop to keep it dry for the ten minutes of the pass. As I was crouched so low to the ground for most of the time, I experienced the weather of the park at the height of a small child or animal.
2024-01-25 21:31:00
Soph Dyer
My bedroom, Wien, Austria
Austria
Silent migraine.
2024-01-26 10:10:04
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
The sky is a deep cerulean blue today – cloudless, and slightly purple in hue. I spent part of the satellite pass lying on my back looking up. The grass was so wet and cold that I didn't stay on the ground long, but the feeling of being engulfed in a January blue has stayed with me.
2024-01-26 19:06:51
Soph Dyer
Augarten, near the gun towers, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
Today, the bird song was louder than the beep-beep of the satellite. Gardeners in the park were clearing the dead leaves into piles. I heard that it's better to leave them to decompose and return their nutrients to the trees from which they fell – they don't kill the grass. The temperature is mild and there is no wind, but there is a heavy blanket of cloud. Although it is nearly midday, the cars have their headlights on. This evening I willl go to the 'Defend democracy' protest outside the Austria Parliment.
2024-01-27 11:34:33
Sasha Engelmann
Abney Park Cemetery, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
Abney Park Cemetery was muddy, wet, and full of dog walkers and strollers on this Saturday Morning. The density of the winter trees and the humidity of the air created a mist that felt appropriate to the vine-covered tomb-stones, monuments and crosses. I thought of the way early radio enthusiasts heard 'something in the static' that spoke of other spaces and times of the past and future. I pointed my antenna at the moist ground, wondering if the static would pick up frequencies underneath.
2024-01-27 22:26:10
Soph Dyer
On my balcony, freezing my ass off, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
Cold, but only because I didn't expect to stand outside, so I didn't have my coat, hat and gloves on. More bird song today. I was around 7 Centigrade. Clear, clear skies. So many stars.
2024-01-28 11:20:46
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
Today is an unusually warm Sunday in London in January. Although the weather has been overcast, the clouds feel veil-like and thin, and the Sun either burns them up or pushes them away by midday. As I was due to make a Sunday lunch for some friends, I spent most of the pass alternating between looking up recipes on my phone and checking the satellite signal. By the end of the pass I had both a long WAV file and a list of ingredients.
2024-01-28 20:35:07
Soph Dyer
Inside with the antenna strapped to a curtain rail, tied to my balcony in Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
Beautifully sunny. The woods are free of snow and ice, and full of walkers. I went on a solo hike in the Wienerwald, stopping for lunch at Toiflhütte, and breathing plenty of Waldluft. The birds continue to sing. I heard blackbirds, crows, wood peckers, a jay, and small song birds. The temperature is a frosty 5 degrees centigrade, with no wind.
2024-01-29 11:14:13
Sasha Engelmann
Downs Road, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
The weather of my body today is turbulent and choppy. Though I am usually able to remain calm on the surface, today is proving difficult. I am surprised when my bodily, emotional weather bursts out into the conversations I have with students and colleagues throughout the morning. I have begun to edit apology notes (probably unnecessary) to be sent later over text and email.
2024-01-29 20:20:46
Soph Dyer
Entrance of Augarden, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
It's clear and cold again, when I left for work this morning the rooftops were frosted white. Frost always takes me back to childhood. When there was a heavy or hoarfrost, I would go out before school to slide down the field opposite our house on a tray. Sledging on frost felt more risky, edgy, than on snow – the frozen ground could easily inflict bruises. It was also a sport no one else seemed interested in, so I had the field to myself – bold and alone.
2024-01-30 10:57:24
Sasha Engelmann
Lesoco Building, Goldsmiths University of London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
Low, gloomy clouds hung over London as we gathered in the middle of a green circular lawn outside of the LESOCO building in which Goldsmiths design students study for their masters degrees and work in their studios. Deptford creek gurgled just a few metres away, though it was closed for access by a tall metal fence. A highway overpass arced to our east and a six lane intersection around the corner made a constant soundscape of motorbikes and car engines. In this context we huddled around my turnstile radio antenna and attempted to orientate our bodies in relation to the satellite orbiting overhead and the series of urban infrastructures around us. A constant interference pattern caused audible distortion to the satellite signal and produced regular and oblique lines in the image, like counter-currents of wind or a graphical anti-pattern.
2024-01-30 21:46:34
Soph Dyer
Dornerplatz, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
I worked from home so didn't leave my flat until the evening. Today was dry, clear and cold, but not too cold – you could take your gloves off without your fingers hurting. The stars were bright.
2024-01-31 11:45:19
Soph Dyer
Gefechtsturm Augarten, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
Open skies and bird song – almost spring like. I did not weather my thermal leggings under my trousers today! At first I thought that I'd made a mistake but quickly I warmed up and enjoyed the free feeling of air on my legs.
2024-01-31 20:38:08
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
The weather of Hackney Downs park close to 9pm at night on a Wednesday was surprisingly calm. A whispy wind blew blades of grasses but didn't manage to move dry leaves on the ground. I caught the wrong satellite – I had intended to capture an image from NOAA-19, and tuned to NOAA-18 instead – and unexpectedly started recording a 30 degree eastward pass. This first felt inconvenient because a line of Victorian houses blocked my 'line of sight' to the east. But the signal came through anyway, and this accident meant that I captured a dramatic cyclone swirling over eastern Europe and Russia. Seeing the image startled me- a dramatic disconnect from my experience of mild weather in the park.
2024-02-01 10:33:13
Sasha Engelmann
College Green, Goldsmiths University of London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
+ 1 more photo
I met the Centre for Research Architecture students on the top of College Green at Goldsmiths University on a brilliantly sunny morning of the 1st of February. I introduced the DIY satellite ground station we would use to capture an image from NOAA-18, and immediately there were about a dozen questions. Melodie held the antenna first, tracking the satellite from the southern horizon to a maximum elevation of 43 degrees. Excited chatter was constant throughout, and laughter rang out as Melodie and later Penelope tried different poses and antenna orientations. The atmosphere was joyful and lively, but as the pass came to a close, the group was happy to return inside to warm up and look at the image in darker / calmer conditions.
2024-02-01 11:30:57
Soph Dyer
Beside the round flowerbed in Augarten, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
Wet! I have just come back inside from the satellite pass, dripping. I stood in Augarten park, in the intensifying rain, my laptop inside a small bin bag tent. From the warmth of my shared studio, I decoded the image. A huge white arc of water sweeps across my screen from North from Spain to Norway. Is this what it feels like to be at sea – to orientate by waves of water and light? Sometimes Sasha and I joke that open-weather is a queer, feminist space agency. Right now, I feel less like an astronaut and more like an aquanaut.
2024-02-02 10:28:19
Sasha Engelmann
Downs Road, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
London is gray and cold today, with a haze that feels like a soft blanket. On my way to buy bread this morning, the air made street corners, cars and shops look a little fuzzy. Being inside a bakery, and back in my flat with a warm loaf of bread and a coffee, was deeply comforting. It feels like good weather to be tidying up the house, changing sheets and watering plants.
2024-02-03 13:29:01
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
Today I attempted to receive a satellite image from a pass that I assumed would be 'out of the sensible range' of my ground station. The maximum elevation of the pass was 13 degrees to the West, and I hadn't previously tried to receive anything under 30 degrees. Expecting to get nothing, I found a spot in the middle of Hackney Downs and held my antenna as high as possible to catch whatever radio waves could bend around the curve of the Earth as the satellite barely crested the horizon. Surprisingly, the signal was already visible at 13:28 and I had a reasonably strong signal by 13:30. As I watched the image load line by line, I realised I was seeing cloud patterns over Greenland and the north Atlantic, so far to the west that no coastlines of Europe were visible. Meanwhile in Hackney Downs a group of dogs played around me and the gray clouds hung low. There was something incredibly strange about seeing the North Atlantic so many kilometres to the west, while Saturday morning life kept unfolding in London.
2024-02-03 18:10:42
Soph Dyer
Near Pontebba, Friuli, Italy
Italy
NOAA-15
We are in the mountains but it is above freezing. A thin layer of water covered the last of the melting snow. In Vienna last night, the wind was so strong it crashed against the bedroom windows, keeping me awake. After working on open-weather during the day, I was too excited too sleep deeply anyway.
2024-02-04 11:36:07
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Marshes, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
A cold wind slowed me down on my cycle ride out to Hackney Marshes. Once in the marshes, I weaved between Sunday strollers, kids on bikes, canal boaters and athletes to find a corner of the marshes to set up my ground station. At first the NOAA-18 signal was drowned out by the characteristic signal of the Meteor satellite fleet, which caused a 'mound' of energy extending around 80hz to either side of the NOAA-18 signal. I started recording during this noisy occlusion, thinking NOAA-18 was about to pierce through (helped by Automatic Gain Control) but it took a couple more minutes for the signal to make it through the surrounding energy and noise. The wind continued to bluster as the pass progressed. A kind looking man with long gray curly hair and headphones stopped nearby and offered to take a photo of me. We spoke briefly about radio and satellites before he continued on his windy walk.
2024-02-04 19:08:31
Soph Dyer
In a field by the motorway, somewhere outside Klagenfurt, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
Today I swam in an alpine pool next to melting ice. I am recieving this image a dark hill, by a motorway, under the stars.
2024-02-05 11:23:11
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
There is high wind today, it feels like gusts are slicing across the surface of the city, though it is hard to tell from what precise direction. The clouds are patchy and partial, like a fast-moving lattice, and sun pierces through in very quick beams that meet earth's surface and disappear again. I imagine that from the position of the clouds, it might be like a high-speed game of shadow puppets. What shapes they must be casting!
2024-02-05 20:36:24
Soph Dyer
At home, on the window ledge., Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
Turbulence: outside, between me and my partner, in my body. I saw on a forecast map that the jet stream is between me and Sasha. The winds leaving London appear to arrive in Vienna. I like this thought, that we are asynchronously sharing the same air. I imagine messages, aeroplankton (Luftplankton), and water vapour moving between us.
2024-02-06 09:35:09
Sasha Engelmann
Russell Square, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
The westerly wind was so strong this morning that, on my bike ride from East London to Bloomsbury, I felt at times that the strength of my body wouldn't manage to move my bike forward, and I regretted my choice to cycle in the first place. I was sweating so profusely inside my green puffer jacket that, once I arrived in the square, I risked the cold air and took off my coat to try to air myself out. I coudl tell that passerby were wondering what a person in nothing but a thin shirt and blazer was doing holding a metal object to the sky at half past nine, but no one approached me. On my cycle home in the evening, the wind, as I hoped it would, practically carried me forward, so that the roads felt glossy and smooth.
2024-02-06 10:32:11
Soph Dyer
Children's play area in Diepoldpark, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
Blustery, blue and spring-like. The wind was so string this morning, it almost blew me off my bike.
2024-02-07 09:22:06
Sasha Engelmann
Founders Green, Royal Holloway University of London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
Today is wet, cold, soggy and muddy. A storm swept through London last night, and pattered the windows of my flat for most of the night. Most commuters early this morning had an air of being half-asleep and were hunched down into their scarves and woolly hats, like sea urchins. Founder's field, where I collected the satellite pass, was empty except for me with my V-Dipole antenna and laptop.
2024-02-07 21:47:26
Soph Dyer
On my balcony, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
I was buffeted by mild but squally weather through the satellite pass. When I looked behind me the sky was ominously dark. For a moment, I thought that I should put down my antenna in case an electrical storm was coming, but none was forecast so I kept recording. It has been a tough day and I am feeling tired.
2024-02-09 10:46:17
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
Rain pattered on the windowsills all morning. Water pooled and ran down the glass, and mist seemed to hover in between the three story houses on either side of our one-way street, like a wet cloud trapped in a crevice of our neighbourhood. I contemplated staying inside with my antenna held out the window, but ended up braving the rain with a big broken umbrella and a long insulated raincoat. Once outside, I propped the umbrella over a bench and set up my laptop and dongle under its shelter, with the antenna and cables curling out. At one point during the pass, the wind moved the umbrella and its flimsy, broken side sent pools of water splashing onto the keyboard of the computer- which I hurriedly brushed off with the sleeve of my coat, hoping no damage would be done. A man in full high-vis weather gear with a wheelbarow that looked like a recycling collection stopped next to the bench and asked what it was I was doing out here.
2024-02-09 17:58:13
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-15
A break in the rain allowed me to duck outside to catch a NOAA-15 pass. The sun had set already, and very few people were out in the park and nearby streets. I searched for a bench near a streetlamp and assembled my ground station. I sat on the bench in the orbit of light provided by the streetlamp and extended the antenna, its metal dipoles glinting.
2024-02-10 10:26:48
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
My ground station merged with the wet grass and mud of Hackney Downs field this morning. Mud was everywhere- attaching itself to my antenna bag, on the RF cables, the antenna dipoles, my coat and shoes. Nearby a young boys' soccer team was playing a morning match, egged on by a very loud coach who kept yelling at players by name and asking them 'who are you playing for?!'. I had forgotten my phone so I took photos of my ground station with my laptop camera. They were dark and gloomy but they somehow captured the atmosphere of the field, the game and the intermittent storm clouds.
2024-02-11 11:48:14
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
After a weekend of rain and mist, this Sunday morning is glorious, with bright sun coming through very soft clouds. The local Baptist church is in full swing and fragments of choir music and raucous laughter echo into the park from the church's open door. A small group of teenagers gather on the street corner in between the church and the park, angling their faces to the sun. As I recorded the satellite pass I was visited by a small grey curly-haired dog with a red collar who then sped over the wet grass in circles around me. I think about 'dog satellites' and speculate on what they might transmit.
2024-02-12 11:40:06
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
I counted the seconds in the pass I captured this morning. Though the pass was of good elevation, and the weather is beautifully sunny and uncharacteristically warm, I truncated my recording and practically ran home with my antenna still assembled and my cables and laptop dangling. I was worried I would miss saying goodbye to my partner as she finished packing up and left for the airport.
2024-02-13 09:43:50
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
As I hurried out the door and toward the park, I realised that an invisible drizzle had become a light rain. I grabbed one of the broken umbrellas by the front porch and went to the park anyway. Crouching under the makeshift shelter on a park bench, I assembled my ground station and tuned to the frequency of NOAA-18. I knew the pass would be very low in elevation – only 19 degrees to the East – but I was hopeful. After a few minutes of weak signal as the satellite struggled to crest the horizon, a clear image began to appear- showing what I thought were Nordic glaciers and reflective lake surfaces. Only a minute or two later, the unmistakeable 'mound' of Meteor M N2-3 appeared surrounding and engulfing NOAA-18. Though the NOAA signal was strong, it was simply drowned out by the much wider and more powerful digital signal of the Meteor satellite, like someone trying to whisper in a crowded bar. I stopped the recording early, reasonably drenched by the rain, and returned with the glinting shapes of Nordic lakes in my mind.
2024-02-13 10:44:38
Soph Dyer
On my balcony, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
QFH antenna test.
2024-02-14 17:29:33
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-15
Ashen, cinereal, dusky, smoky, slated, drab, grey: this is how I would describe my experience of the weather today. It is in many ways unremarkable weather, as it is not very cold, nor very wet, nor stormy or very windy. It is simply grey- a matte feeling of the colour like it surrounds you everywhere, inside and outside, dampening even your thoughts.
2024-02-21 08:09:54
Sasha Engelmann Soph Dyer
Wave Farm, Acra, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-15
2024-02-21 08:10:33
Sasha Engelmann Soph Dyer
Wave Farm, Acra, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-15
Wave Farm was quiet on this Wednesday morning in February except for the 'whoosh' of sometimes-passing cars on route 23, and the chirping of finches and other birds. The grass outside the Wave Farm building was white and crunchy with frost. We were late to set up for the NOAA 15 pass , but as both our ground stations launched, NOAA-15's signal virtually lept into the waterfall displays on our laptops. We shuddered with cold as the pass progressed. The image captured from the V-dipole antenna I was using shows the outline of the east coast of the US and the impressively large fingerprints of the great lakes.
2024-02-22 11:25:02
Elliott Engelmann
Classon Ave, Brooklyn, United States
United States
NOAA-18
Freezing air, but cotton-ball like clouds hovered over Prospect heights today. We noticed how the satellite signal came through, bouncing around nearby highrises and possibly affected by the elevated hill of prospect park to our West.
2024-02-22 22:05:16
Soph Dyer
Reaching out of the door, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
2024-02-25 10:44:07
Elliott Engelmann
New York City, United States
United States
NOAA-18
Sunny day at Jacob Riis park in New York, about 2 degrees C, bit of wind from the southwest. I see mostly clear skies all the way up and down the east coast of the U.S. with a few clouds in mainland Canada and a weather system over the Atlantic. I'm noticing very little snow cover in the northeast U.S. until Maine, which is not typical for this time of year.
2024-02-26 12:05:23
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
All night the wind howled around our flat. It caused unusual squeeks and whistles in different rooms. As a worked alone at my desk in the living room, the smaller, more random sounds made me imagine other people in the house, so much so that I went into the bedroom and studio to check! The wind had calmed by the time I went outside to catch the satellite pass, but I kept thinking of the wind-people.
2024-02-27 11:51:48
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
This is the first day that feels a little like spring in London. The air has that shimmer that happens when it is misty but also bright. The green of the grass of Hackney Downs is vivid, an invitation to lie down (which I did) though I quickly learned it was also very soggy underneath. The satellite image I captured has a small cyclone curling over the North Sea, its long tail curving and sweeping all the way to the coast of Morocco.
2024-02-28 10:08:55
Sasha Engelmann
West Field, Royal Holloway University, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
I was aware today that a meadow has its own weather. As I captured the satellite pass, I was conscious of the way the air in 'West Field' at Royal Holloway, surrounded by oak and plane trees, seemed denser than it had felt on my walk up the hill to campus. The open sky over the meadow seemed closer than it had when I woke up in London.
2024-02-29 09:57:27
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
There weren't clear signs of rain when I left my house to go to the park, but as I arrived in the open I could feel a sideways blowing mist of very fine droplets. Once my laptop was out for a matter of minutes it was complete coated in water. I debated the risks of completing the pass vs laptop damage, and decided to keep going, though huddled over the computer with my body. I imagine I looked quite strange to passerby- a hooded person bent over a small screen, trying to hold an antenna with one oustretched arm.
2024-02-29 18:41:05
Soph Dyer
Augarten, Austria
Austria
NOAA-15
Leap day.
2024-03-01 11:15:14
Sasha Engelmann
Munro Fox Lab, Royal Holloway University, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
My socks and shoes were already damp from weathering my morning commute to campus, and they got even wetter as I traipsed around the university grounds trying to find a good place for the satellite pass. The field to the back of Queens Building (where the Geography department is based) was virtually spongy with water. I decided to try to set up on a picnic table in the middle of two science laboratories. In full view of biological sciences researchers fiddling with pipets and samples through a bungalo window, I set up my ground station and hand-held the V-dipole. I was lucky that the first eight minutes were rain-free, but toward the end I had to lean my body over the laptop to protect it from drowning.
2024-03-01 22:06:11
Soph Dyer
At home, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
2024-03-02 12:45:48
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
This was a social day in Hackney Downs! I was approached by two men and their dogs, and speaking to them took up most of my attention during the pass. The first was an older, very large man named Bill and his dog nutmeg, a medium sized, curly haired deep brown dog, maybe a kind of terrier. The second was a younger man with a very big and wide laborador. Bill told me stories of his father who had used radio during WWII to listen to the Germans, and later erected aerials at racecourses across the UK (for reasons I didn't entirely understand). He also told me about a lecture he had attended by someone called Chris Lintott that was about microwaves and radio astronomy. The second man whose name I didn't catch had set up an antenna on the roof of his second floor flat to listen to ADSB. He mentioned he had gotten a dipole and tried capturing a satellite image but was unsuccessful. He also asked if I was into amateur radio and when I said yes, he said 'you and about five other people in the world, right?'
2024-03-03 11:00:47
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
The bulbs and magnolias in Hackney Downs have been blooming in wild and 'spontaneous' groups. Across the UK, magnolias and camellias are blooming four weeks earlier than last year. As if in counterpoint to the conversations I had yesterday, today two older women and their dogs came up to me as I was kneeling by the daffodil beds in the park. One of their dogs, a terrier with huge whiskers, had come over to check out my antenna. The women were both wearing dark sunglasses and wool coats, and apologised for being 'nosey' before asking what I was doing. One of them remarked, 'there must be a whole group of people like you out here, I have seen them around'. I replied I didn't know who this group was, but that perhaps she was seeing me, as I had been in the park with my antenna almost every day (though the possibility of a secret Hackney Downs satellite group stayed with me). A younger woman then ran up to us, apparently having gotten confidence from the older women, and asked more questions with a lot of excitement- she had assumed I was tracking 'geotagged' animals, like birds.
2024-03-03 20:39:23
Soph Dyer
Diepoldpark, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
2024-03-04 12:19:32
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
My allergies have been horrible today- so bad that none of my emergency allergy medications and measures are working. While capturing the satellite pass, my eyes watered so much that I couldn't read the frequencies clearly; once back inside the symptoms didn't let up. When this happens I find myself desperately searching for the cause, but the thing about allergies is that sometimes there isn't one that is clearly defined. I am speculating about dust, springtime pollen, a low immune system, or lack of sleep- but none of these feel like the obvious source.
2024-03-04 21:28:15
Soph Dyer
At home, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
2024-03-05 11:27:55
Soph Dyer
On the balcony, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
2024-03-05 18:57:46
Sasha Engelmann
Windowsill on Downs Road, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-15
Today is the first day I felt a slight note of spring in the air. When I woke up at 7am there was already plenty of light in the garden. On my cycle ride to Bloomsbury, my hands didn't feel the bite of cold on my handlebars. I was overdressed for the temperature, and had to unzip my coat halfway through the ride. Later in the evening I perched on our flat's back windowsill holding my radio antenna in full exposure to the night air.
2024-03-05 22:09:44
Soph Dyer
Tyršův sad, Brno, Czechia
Czechia
NOAA-18
2024-03-06 10:25:49
Sasha Engelmann
Founders Field, Royal Holloway University, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
The university campus is coated and swathed in fog today. I set up my ground station on the near-end of Founders Field and could barely make out a group of students smoking (or just breathing in the cold) on the picnic table on the other side of the field. I met some colleagues in the local cafe afterward and they mentioned the fog to me too: 'it must be nice to see out of the fog today'...
2024-03-06 19:34:04
Soph Dyer
At home, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
2024-03-07 10:11:22
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
A cold mist is hovering over Hackney today. Fewer people seemed to be out with their dogs, though it could also have been the timing of the satellite pass. However a group of people had gathered on the far side of the open field near Downs Road, bikes fallen sideways on the grass. They were stood in a wide circle doing slow movements with their arms and legs. As they were mostly dressed in long puffer coats and thick scarves, and because of the blurring fog, they looked like people made of cushions or marshmallows, moving slowly in coordination.
2024-03-07 10:59:59
Soph Dyer
Augarten by the trees, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
2024-03-08 13:10:12
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
I am writing this weather note on a laptop that has been stepped on by a dog. I can almost see the outline of a paw on the lower right hand side of my laptop keyboard! While I was out in the field this afternoon, a man came up to me and asked what I was doing. He said he was following groups on Facebook doing similar things, but had never tried himself. He seemed genuinely interested in learning about open-weather and as we spoke his dog circled us several times, getting in the midst of the ground station and possibly changing the frequency I was tuned to...
2024-03-09 11:17:08
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
A golden light has suffused the whole morning. The grass of the downs feels warmer, like the earth has heated up underneath. Near where I had set up my ground station, purple crocuses were pushing up through the weeds.
2024-03-10 11:08:28
Sasha Engelmann
Downs Road, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
A light rain is forecast to fall all day today. It is coating the street, parked cars, trees, bricks and asphalt in a layer of water that is perpetually replenished from the sky. In weather like this, I wonder how the bugs and creatures of the soil are doing. As water logs the pores between grass roots and humus, do the smaller creatures begin to swim? do they breathe underwater?
2024-03-11 12:40:03
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
This Monday in London in early March is grey and dark. I had the living room lamp on for most of the morning while I was on zoom calls. I was several minutes late for the low-elevation NOAA-18 satellite pass at lunchtime but I'm still glad I went out to the park, as I met a young mom pushing a stroller, who stopped by to ask what I was doing. I showed her the clouds slowly forming over the South Atlantic, and we spoke briefly about the weather 'above and below'.
2024-03-12 10:43:42
Sasha Engelmann
Downs Road, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
The darkness of yesterday has bloomed into spring rain today. Sitting by the open kitchen window, I could hear the pigeons cooing on the roof, perhaps making use of the partial cover of the chimney wall. Many people walked by on Downs Road, though their umbrellas and quick paces meant that they kept their eyes on the sidewalk, oblivious to a strange metal object being held out of a third floor window.
2024-03-13 09:00:48
Sasha Engelmann
Royal Holloway University of London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
I went for a very low pass today – only around thirty degrees over the horizon – but thought I could get something from the top of the fire escape at the back of Queens Building where the Geography Department is situated. Unfortunately there wasn't much of a signal, and for several minutes at the height of the pass, bursts of interference blocked any chance of clear reception. Still, standing at the top of the fire escape gave me an amazing view of the residential neighbourhoods to the East of the university campus, and I could clearly see airplanes taking off and landing at Heathrow Airport, just over the reservoirs.
2024-03-14 11:15:08
Soph Dyer
Augarten by the flowers, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
I did not press 'stop recording' before closing SDR++, and so corrupted the file.
2024-03-14 11:55:01
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
I wanted to field the ground today, so I laid onto the grass of Hackney Downs while capturing the satellite image. It was wet, yes, and musty too, and it smelled a little like unhealthy compost and dogs, but it was nice to feel my whole body flat against the surface of the ground. The air was cool and mild and lots of people were out in the park, some staring at me as they passed a safe distance away.
2024-03-15 09:32:12
Soph Dyer
Augarten, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
This is the first weather note I write in almost a month. The pansies have been planted out in Augarten. I rested my bike on the stone of circular flowerbed and used a mobile phone and my v-dipole antenna to receive a long image. I took with me a cooked painted egg, which I dropped in the gravel when peeling and had to throw away. It is a clear, sunny day.
2024-03-15 09:32:12
Soph Dyer
Augarten, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
This is the first weather note I write in almost a month. The pansies have been planted out in Augarten. I rested my bike on the stone of a circular flowerbed and used a mobile phone and my v-dipole antenna to receive a long image. I take with me a painted cooked egg, which I drop in the gravel when peeling and have to throw away. It is a clear, sunny day.
2024-03-15 11:42:52
Sasha Engelmann
Greville Court Park and Playground, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
An animated wind is bending tree branches, ripping petals off magnolia trees and making waves in the deep green grass that has sprung up in parks, squares and pavement-free soil around Hackney. En route to a pharmacy, I stopped in a small park in between the Greville and Rogate estates. A tower block, wrapped in blue fabric, was being constructed (or refurbished) at the far side of the park, sending drilling and hammering sounds into the wind.
2024-03-16 11:29:32
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
The sun came brightly through our windows this morning. Hackney Downs was brimming with activity, including the usual small persons' soccer practice on the open field. I set up a good distance away from the soccer, but still two balls came my way, kicked high into the air by players whose fluorescent jerseys came down over their knees.
2024-03-16 18:33:56
Soph Dyer
Diepoldplatz, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-15
Experimental copper tube v-dipole antenna.
2024-03-17 11:17:21
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
A gentle rain fell for the first half of the morning but conveniently began to let up before I headed outside to the park. The grass felt warm somehow, even though it was slick and waterlogged. As I stood with my antenna in the usual field, reflecting on the horizon, a jogger passed close by and in the space of twenty seconds we had a brief exchange. As he ran off he remarked 'the things you can do in the local park!'
2024-03-18 09:35:45
Sasha Engelmann
, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
Last night, while sitting in the corner of the park on a bench under a streetlamp, an older, long-beareded man on a bike stopped, circled around, and told me I was 'too far into the park'. He advised me to go to the edge of Downs road to be safe, and added 'you are my daughter too'. This encounter stayed with me as I went back to the park this morning for a satellite pass, and looked at the distance between the bench and the streetcorner – a matter of metres – but in the dark, perhaps much more than that.
2024-03-18 10:30:30
Soph Dyer
Augarten, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
I enter the radio frequency incorrectly and only discover half way through the satellite pass. My bike is leant against a Yew bush. The park is full of children and adult carers, sat on benches in the sun. In my usual spot there was an older woman talking animately to herself, I decide not to risk interupting her. The temperature has dropped, but the sky remains clear. I will call Sasha to discuss this project.
2024-03-19 09:23:53
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
In today's satellite image, the the rivers Garonne and Dardogne are very prominent, carving a dark line into the west coast of France and joining into a delta meeting the Atlantic. In the High North, Lake Onega is a pale white, suggesting it is entirely frozen.
2024-03-19 21:44:25
Soph Dyer
Leaning out of the window, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
I catch the last satellite pass of the day, dog tired. I am still waiting for a medical intervention to relive me of the pain that comes in night, preventing me from sleeping soundly. It is cold but clear out. I have given into the warmth of my flat and am leaing out of out the window. This morning on my way to the studio, I a man cycles past me carrying a full-sized bow and arrow.
2024-03-20 09:12:20
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
I perched my ground station on a forked tree trunk that lies on the grass in Hackney Downs. The bark and most of the trunk is wet but, unlike fallen trees that I've seen in forests, it doesn't feel like its decomposing. I wondered whether this tree has been preserved in some way, or whether its decomposition is slowed by the relative bareness of its surroundings.
2024-03-20 18:26:26
Soph Dyer
Augarten, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-15
It's so peaceful in the park. The air is rich and still. Dusk has always been my favourite time of day. I need this moment of stillness after working on a project about the war in Gaza. I feel a familiar combination of profound gratitude and guilt. The sky is clear, it helps me.
2024-03-21 11:26:48
Soph Dyer
Flowerbed, Augarten, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
My phone says that it's 3C but it feels warm in the heat of the sun. I take off my coat and sit on the edge of the stone flowerbed, taking in the bulbs that have sprouted, listening to the satellite's signal, and offering a polite smile to the people who stare as they walk past. I mostly get blank looks, but one older man returns a scowl. It is not just the rise in temperature that makes it feel like spring is here, the air is scented.
2024-03-21 12:10:23
Sasha Engelmann
Russell Square, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
On my bike ride to central London this morning, I noticed a cherry tree in full pink bloom in the courtyard of a church, and several magnolias in either late bloom or already dropping their oversized white petals. Yesterday was the spring equinox, but it feels like the singularity of spring happened some time ago. In Russell Square there were cordoned-off gatherings of bright yellow daffodils (though I wondered why it was necessary to ring these with black spokes and wire).
2024-03-22 11:59:02
Sasha Engelmann
Downs Road, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
A weather system tremulous and noisy between walls
2024-03-22 19:38:12
Soph Dyer
Leaning out of the window at home, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
2024-03-23 11:44:08
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
The temperature dropped by at least five degrees and a cold wind is sweeping over London. I was excited to 'see the wind' from above in the cloud fronts over the North Atlantic, but my laptop died within two minutes. In the sliver of an image that I managed to capture the white fingers of Iceland are just about visible. I remembered a conversation I overheard in a hair salon earlier this week about someone's upcoming trip to Iceland. They said 'we're going now as it's so volcanic, it might not be safe soon... then again, it's such a big destination, I'm sure 'they' will figure it out'
2024-03-23 18:50:46
Soph Dyer
Pítko Letenské sady východ, Prague, Czechia
Czechia
NOAA-15
The cold wind cuts through the light clothes that I packed. N and I are staying in Prague's old town but have spent the evening in Holešovice district. There are lots of Ukrainian and Czechia flags in the windows and on buildings. I was reluctant to go on holiday and leave work but I'm glad I came. The writing block I have had is softening with conversation, reading time, and thoughts about unrelated things. I am unsticking myself.
2024-03-24 11:30:45
Sasha Engelmann
Springfield Park, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
I realised as I left the flat today that I was wearing all-blue: old blue denim jeans from Uniqlo, a faded blue denim jacket with a warm lining that was my Mom's and has always smelled faintly of cigarettes, a striped navy blue jumper from my partner, royal blue socks, and a blue backpack and antenna bag. In Springfield Park in North Clapton I set up my ground station in a pool of daisies. A young couple asked me if I would take photos of them with their new baby. After I did so I asked for the favour in return, ending up with about twenty very skewed photos of me crouching over my ground station. When I explained what I was doing, the man who took the photos remembered seeing a string of Starlink satellites, which for him was 'weird' and 'frightening'. We had a brief chat about satellite resistance before they continued on their stroll.
2024-03-24 18:26:50
Soph Dyer
Tyršův sad, Brno, Czechia
Czechia
NOAA-15
I saw people carrying palms leaves and realised that its Palm Sunday. I am stood a well kept park at dusk. There is cut grass, old trees, and a goats in a petting zoo. Local dogs and their owners gather nearby. Its a full moon and the satellite transmission clear. The air feels moist, cool, spring-like.
2024-03-25 11:17:59
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
The grass in Hackney Downs has been freshly mowed either last night or this morning, and the smell is all-pervasive and enveloping, and feels even more potent given the relatively low wind. I could hear snippets of conversations across the downs (a dog walker asking another dog walker: 'poodle?!' 'no, labradoodle!'). A man walked nearby and when I smiled, he asked in an eastern european accent 'what is it'? When I replied, he asked 'are you a meteorologist'? I was surprised by my hestitation in answering, though I eventually confirmed 'no'.
2024-03-25 22:09:44
Soph Dyer
Diepoldpark, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
It is still but cold. I receive the image in our local park, standing by the toilets. Earlier in the day, on the train platform in Brno, I see a man dressed like a cattle herder, in full leathers, carrying tall boots. At the vegetable market, I buy a woven fruit basket from aother burly man who shows me and N a photo of him dressed as Obelix the Gaul. Tomorrow is meant to be sunny.
2024-03-26 19:32:35
Sasha Engelmann
Downs Road, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
The sound of the satellite, low and noisy over the nighttime horizon, mixed with the sizzling of a frittata and the slicing of salad leaves.
2024-03-27 09:26:58
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
The last twenty four hours have been rainy in a nonstop, relentless kind of way. Today, shadows chase each other across the grass of the park as clouds give way to bright sun. My observations of shadows were interrupted by a squeeling bundle of dogs leaping by. One of the owners got upset that his dog had nipped another. For the next few minutes the park echoed with loud cry: 'Bruce!! that's THREE dogs today!!!'
2024-03-27 21:42:54
Soph Dyer
Malzgasse bus stop, Wien, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
"And this is how it sees storms!" I write to Michaela, sharing a vividly coloured enhancement of the satellite image that we had received earlier, standing at the bus stop outside our shared studio space. "That’s just another name for us", she replies with the wit of the screenwriter she is. I like this thought – that we are storms. Robert, standing next to me, looking at my laptop screen, points out the Gaza Strip. I dismissed his observation because the the section of image beneath the map overlay appears to be only noise. Later, when I turned off the map overlay, to my surpsie Gaza's coastline was still visible – noisy but indisputably present in the image. How many times has Gaza been visible, only for me to not see it? I have spent the day working remotely with colleagues in London on digital platform for investigations into Gaza War. And now, somehow, without realising, from my local bus stop I have formed an indirect yet unbroken line-of-sight with the Palestinian territory.