About the data

Where our observations come from and how we handle them.

Primary source

Real-time observations come from the NOAA National Data Buoy Center (NDBC). Alaska Buoys ingests NDBC's active station inventory and standard meteorological real-time files (roughly 45 days of recent observations per station). We convert every timestamp to UTC internally and display Alaska local time by default.

Freshness

  • Current — observation within the last 90 minutes.
  • Delayed — 91 minutes to 6 hours.
  • Stale — older than 6 hours.
  • No data — no recent valid observation.

Missing values

NDBC uses sentinel values (like MM, 999.0, or 99.00) for missing readings. We render these as em dashes — never as zero. Zero is a real, valid measurement we preserve.

Terminology

Significant wave height
Average of the highest one-third of waves observed during a sampling period.
Dominant wave period
Period with the maximum wave energy.
Wind direction
Direction the wind is blowing from, in degrees clockwise from true north.
Pressure tendency
Change in atmospheric pressure over the last three hours.

Disclaimer

Alaska Buoys organizes observations from third-party public data providers. Marine conditions can change rapidly, and stations may be delayed, unavailable or unrepresentative of conditions between reporting locations. This service is informational only and is not a substitute for official forecasts, warnings, nautical charts, navigation equipment, VHF weather radio, local knowledge or professional maritime judgment. Always verify critical information through official sources before making marine decisions.