England

Long Whatton Wind Forecast

Leicestershire — Speed, Gusts & Direction

Long Whatton Wind Outlook

In Long Whatton today, a moderate wind is the defining feature, moderate winds that may affect exposed locations.

For the period ahead, winds in Long Whatton are likely to follow a theme of moderate winds, brisk at times, without reaching any particular extreme. Exposed locations — including hilltops, coastal headlands and open farmland — will see the strongest gusts.

Current Wind

Speed

28.8 km/h

Gusts

40.6 km/h

Direction

SSW
Degrees210°

Today’s Hourly Wind

14-Day Wind

Thu
4 Jun
30 km/h
SW
Fri
5 Jun
22 km/h
W
Sat
6 Jun
23 km/h
SE
Sun
7 Jun
24 km/h
SW
Mon
8 Jun
32 km/h
S
Tue
9 Jun
32 km/h
WSW
Wed
10 Jun
32 km/h
S
Thu
11 Jun
18 km/h
S
Fri
12 Jun
31 km/h
SW
Sat
13 Jun
24 km/h
SSE
Sun
14 Jun
29 km/h
WNW
Mon
15 Jun
23 km/h
WNW
Tue
16 Jun
25 km/h
SSW
Wed
17 Jun
21 km/h
S

Wind & Gust Trend

This page focuses on practical interpretation for Long Whatton. When the guidance becomes mixed, it is usually a regime question first, rather than a single hourly detail.

How to interpret confidence

For how forecast reliability changes with lead time, see Forecast Confidence. For transparency on how WeatherEngland sources and updates data, see Methodology.

Background guides

Glossary support

Start with the Weather Glossary. Useful terms for this page include Pressure Gradient, Isobar, Gust, Wind Direction, Depression, and Anticyclone.

FAQ

How windy is Long Whatton today?

In Long Whatton today, wind speeds are around 29 km/h. Gusts can be higher, especially in exposed spots and during passing fronts.

What are the wind gusts in Long Whatton today?

Gusts are brief peaks above the sustained wind. Use the wind panel to compare sustained speed versus gust potential through the day.

What wind direction is forecast for Long Whatton?

Wind direction can shift with passing systems. The wind section shows direction and changes over time, which can affect feel and exposure.

Why does Long Whatton feel windier at times?

Wind is driven by pressure differences. Stronger gradients and showery/frontal weather typically produce more frequent gusts.

What is the difference between wind and gusts?

Wind is the sustained speed; gusts are short-lived surges that can be significantly higher, particularly in unstable or frontal conditions.