YoloAres
homenewscalendarpreparedlinksabout Yolo ARESLogin
Categories
List all new links
  
ANTENNAS
ARES Procedures
ARES/RACES Groups
ARRL
Be Prepared- Earthquake
Be Prepared- Fire
Be Prepared- Flood
Callout Equipment
CW
Disaster Preparedness
Disaster Relief
Emergency Communications
Emergency Equipment
Emergency Information
Emergency Preparedness
FCC
First Aid
General Information
Ham Radio
Hardware
Nets
NTS radiograms
Radio Clubs
SKYWARN
Training
Weather Information
Yolo County


LinksRSS
Learn about our
XML/RSS Feeds.

 

Links
Newest links

Search for:

Click on a Category to view links for that Category.
Records 11 to 20 of 257

Date Category Description
 12/9/2003 Weather Information NOAA Weather Radio Page- Sacramento
NOAA Weather Radio
As the "Voice of the National Weather Service," NOAA Weather Radio provides a continuous broadcast of the latest weather information from the National Weather Service Forecast Office (NWSFO) in Sacramento. Personnel at NWSO Sacramento are responsible for three separate NOAA Weather Radios - one for the Northern Sacramento Valley area, one for the Southern Sacramento Valley and Northern San Joaquin Valley area, and one for Alameda and Contra Costa Counties.
Listeners up north can tune in WXL88 at 162.55 MHz for broadcasts transmitted from a tower on top of South Fork Mountain in Shasta County. Listeners in the Southern Sacramento Valley, the Northern San Joaquin Valley and surrounding areas can choose between two frequencies. People residing in the Sacramento area northward to Oroville can tune in WWF67 at 162.40 MHz, which is transmitted from Wolf Mountain in Nevada County. A simulcast transmission on KEC57 at 162.55 MHz is broadcast from Jackson in Amador County, and can be heard from Sacramento southward to Modesto. Listeners in Alameda and Contra Costa Counties and the West Delta can tune to KZZ75 on 162.425 MHz which is broadcast from Mt Diablo in Contra Costa County.
 12/9/2003 Weather Information
Be Prepared- Fire
FIRE WEATHER FORECAST FOR CALIFORNIA
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SACRAMENTO CA
 12/9/2003 SKYWARN What is Skywarn?
What is SKYWARN?
(Note: This article is a compilation of oral histories from several sources with years of experience in SKYWARN. The only well documented source is Galway, 1989. Gropper, 1993 had no citations so may also be of the oral tradition.

SKYWARN is the National Weather Service (NWS) program of trained volunteer severe weather spotters. SKYWARN Spotters support their local community and government by providing the NWS and there local emergency managers with timely and accurate severe weather reports. These reports, when integrated with modern NWS technology, are used to inform commmunities of the proper actions to take as severe weather threatens.
 12/9/2003 Ham Radio QRZ Ham Radio Practice Tests
Practice tests for technician, general, and extra.
 12/9/2003 Ham Radio Morse Code Practice Java Applet
Practice cw. Lots of options for practice.
 12/9/2003 Ham Radio Amateur Radio World-Wide - NW7US
Lots of links and resources.
 12/9/2003 Emergency Equipment American Red Cross- Disaster Supplies Kit
There are six basics you should stock for your home: water, food, first aid supplies, clothing and bedding, tools and emergency supplies, and special items. Keep the items that you would most likely need during an evacuation in an easy-to carry container
 12/9/2003 First Aid Welcome to the Yolo County Red Cross
Yolo County Red Cross serving Davis, Esparto, Knights Landing, Winters, Woodland, and surrounding communities.
 12/9/2003 Disaster Preparedness FEMA: Are You Ready? A Guide to Citizen Preparedness
Are You Ready? A Guide to Citizen Preparedness brings together facts on disaster survival techniques, disaster-specific information, and how to prepare for and respond to both natural and man-made disasters
 12/9/2003 Disaster Preparedness FEMA- Family Disaster Supplies Kit (PDF)
Family Disaster Supplies Kit (PDF) to last for at least 3 days, including drinkable water, non-perishable food (including pet food), first aid supplies, other emergency supplies like flashlights and batteries, clothes and bedding, and specialty items. Disaster Supply Kits should also be prepared for your car and workplace.
First Previous Next Last


Return to YoloARES.org