Hoytsville, Utah Weather
Pikas hayfeeding in granite peaks. Day 76 of spring. Read this microseason across nine climate regions →
Hoytsville weather forecast — hour by hour, 7-day outlook, NOAA radar
- TodayJun 3Overcast——83°43°—
- ThursdayJun 4Overcast——80°58°-3°
- FridayJun 5Clear——80°54°0°
- SaturdayJun 6Overcast——82°59°+2°
- SundayJun 7Overcast15%—76°49°-6°
- MondayJun 8Overcast——75°45°-1°
- TuesdayJun 9Overcast——75°52°0°
Ozone at AQI 58 — peak already passed at 1 PM under clear skies. AQI up 14 over the last 6 hours (gradual rise). Levels should ease through evening.
OK No precautions needed for the general population; unusually sensitive individuals may consider limiting prolonged outdoor exertion.
What's driving it
Ozone × UV × Sky
Ozone at AQI 58 — peak already passed at 1 PM under clear skies. Levels should ease through evening.
- Present
- AQI 58
- UV peak
- 4.8 at earlier today
- Sky at peak
- clear
- Projected peak
- AQI 58
PM × Wind × Precip
PM2.5/PM10 ratio 0.46 with 14 mph wind — characteristic of long-range haze transport rather than a local source.
- PM2.5/PM10
- 0.46
- Wind
- breezy
- Recent rain
- 0h in last 6h
- Pattern
- transport
Trends
Seven days of AQI and PM2.5.
Hourly air-quality data from the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service, charted across the past and next several days. Dashed lines mark the AQI breakpoints at 50 (Good → Moderate) and 100 (Moderate → Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups).










































The higher the clouds, the finer the weather.
- Moonrise
- 5:23 AM
- Moonset
- 2:24 PM
- In sign
- ♑︎ Capricorn
Pikas hayfeeding in granite peaks
Hoytsville at a glance
- Today vs. normal: 9°F above the seasonal normal for this latitude
- Last frost: April 21 (climatological average for this latitude)
- Microseason: Jun 1–5
- Planting window: Harvest spring lettuce before it bolts. Sow heat-tolerant greens.
Right now in the garden
Warm-season window is open
As of June 3, the last spring frost has passed for most years. Transplant tomatoes, peppers, eggplants, basil, and cucurbits (cucumbers, squash, melons) now. Direct-sow beans and corn into warm soil.