PAGASA's flood and rain advisories for Mountain Province, the wind in Sagada right now, and the official channels for typhoon warnings and the road.
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From Town Tools. For the current version, visit https://www.town.tools/sagada-mountain-province-ph/rain-flood-advisories
PAGASA issues flood and rain advisories for the Cordillera when the rivers and slopes are likely to be affected. This page reads those advisories for Mountain Province — the ones that matter for the low-lying barangays and the mountain road — alongside the wind in Sagada right now. When a typhoon is tracking in, the wind signals and the storm bulletins come from PAGASA directly; the official channels below are where to watch for those.
No weather advisories for Mountain Province right now.
PAGASA has no advisories in force for Mountain Province, as of Sun 5 July at 22:33.
The wind at Sagada town
Light air (about 4 km/h, gusts to 12), out of the east.
Strongest gusts forecast over the next 24 hours: about 27 km/h. Wind words follow the Beaufort scale. This is a weather model’s forecast for the hour, not a measurement — exposed ground above town will see more.
Where the warnings come from
PAGASA is the national authority for weather warnings — flood advisories, heavy-rainfall warnings and tropical-cyclone wind signals. This page is not an alert service. When a storm is coming, watch PAGASA and the provincial disaster office, and check the road channels before you travel.
Where to check, before and during
PAGASA — typhoon & rainfall bulletinsThe national weather authority: tropical-cyclone wind signals, heavy-rainfall warnings and forecasts for the Cordillera.
Mountain Province PDRRMOThe provincial disaster office: 0920-946-3373 (Smart) or 0977-834-6308 (Globe). In a life-threatening emergency call 911.
DPWH – Cordillera on FacebookRoad-cut and clearing updates, storm by storm — heavy rain can close the Halsema with little warning.
The wet months run roughly June to October — typhoon season — when heavy rain swells the Chico's tributaries and loosens the slopes above the road. A flood advisory for Mountain Province is the cue to check the low-lying barangays and to expect the Halsema and the Sagada spur to run slower, or to be cut.
Rain here is a road question too
One mountain corridor connects Sagada to Bontoc, Baguio and Banaue, and it is landslide-prone in the wet. When PAGASA flags flooding, pair it with the road channels and neighbours' reports before a long trip — a clear morning in town says nothing about a slide two hours down the road.
Alert data: Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA), from the official public alert feed at publicalert.pagasa.dost.gov.ph, licensed CC BY 4.0. Advisories are shown unaltered; this page reads the products PAGASA has posted for Mountain Province. Wind forecast: Open-Meteo (CC BY 4.0). This page is not an alert service — sign up to the official channels above.