When Can I Be Outside?
Hour-by-hour windows for outdoor time — heat and air quality read together on the NWS and EPA scales, framed for practices, paseos and summer evenings.
Hour-by-hour windows for outdoor time — heat and air quality read together on the NWS and EPA scales, framed for practices, paseos and summer evenings.
Summer plans here get made in hours — a practice, a paseo walk, a canyon trail, a Saturday concert. This page reads the hourly heat and air forecasts together and names the easier windows.
Best windows today: before 9 am, and after 8 pm.
Air in those windows is Moderate, not Good — acceptable for most people by the EPA’s scale, but anyone unusually sensitive to air pollution may want to take it easier.
As of June 12 at 3:18 PM. Modelled forecast for the area around central Santa Clarita, refreshed about every half hour.
UV peaks near 9 today. On the EPA’s UV index scale, 1–2 is low; 8 and above is very high to extreme and calls for extra sun protection.
| Day | Best windows | Peak feels-like | Peak air |
|---|---|---|---|
| Saturday, June 13 | before 10 am, and after 8 pm | 92°F | 81 · Moderate |
| Sunday, June 14 | before 11 am, and after 6 pm | 88°F | 58 · Moderate |
Some hours in this outlook reach the “Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups” band (AQI 101–150). The EPA’s guidance for that band: members of sensitive groups — including people with asthma — may experience health effects, while the general public is less likely to be affected.
Guidance, not a medical call
Heat uses the National Weather Service’s heat-index categories, applied to the modelled feels-like temperature: Caution 80°F–90°F, Extreme Caution 90°F–103°F, Danger 103°F–124°F, Extreme Danger 125°F and up.
Air uses the US EPA air quality index: Good 0–50, Moderate 51–100, Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups 101–150, Unhealthy 151–200, Very Unhealthy 201–300, Hazardous above that. The number here is that same EPA index, computed by Open-Meteo from the Copernicus CAMS model.
Each hour takes the harder of the two constraints, and the strip says which one. A “best window” means hours where the feels-like temperature stays below 80°F (below the NWS Caution band) and the air is no worse than Moderate — the EPA’s general-population activity cautions start at 101. No thresholds on this page are ours.
Practice times don't move, but the windows do. In summer the morning hours are usually the easiest ones; by mid-afternoon the feels-like temperature is typically the binding constraint. Hart district and league schedules set the when — this page only says how hard that hour will be.
The paseo network and the canyon trails are the valley's most-loved outdoor habit, and the least forgiving at midday. Out on an exposed stretch, treat the area-wide number on this page as a floor, not a ceiling — and read the strip against the whole walk or ride, not just the start. The early window usually wins.
The 2026 Concerts in the Park season runs Saturday evenings, July 11 through August 29, at Central Park. Evenings here shed heat slowly — the feels-like number can hold the Caution band well after sunset — so check the strip for the hours you'll actually be on the lawn.
The Santa Clarita station's all-time high is 118°F, set in July 2024. Typical summer afternoons run in the 90s — so the question most days isn't whether it gets hot, but which hours are easier. On the genuinely extreme days, no hour is good, and this page will say so.
Source: Los Angeles Almanac, record temperatures, checked 2026-06-12
Ground-level ozone forms when pollution reacts in sunlight, and the EPA notes it is most likely to reach unhealthy levels on hot sunny days — so the hottest afternoons often carry the harder air too. One honest limit: the air number here is a regional model, and it may not capture the Chiquita Canyon landfill odors that Castaic and Val Verde report. Air Today, linked below, tells both of the valley's smoke stories properly.
Source: US EPA, ground-level ozone basics, checked 2026-06-12
For the fuller air picture — pollutant by pollutant, with the local context — Air Today — the valley's two smoke stories — wildfire and landfill — told straight, with the official monitor links.
Fetched June 12 at 3:18 PM. These are modelled estimates for the area around central Santa Clarita, not measurements — a shadeless trail at 3 pm runs hotter than the area-wide number. Weather and air-quality data by Open-Meteo (CC BY 4.0); air quality based on Copernicus CAMS. Heat categories from the National Weather Service; air bands from the US EPA.