The hour-by-hour wind on Passage Canal, banded on the Beaufort scale, so you can see when it eases enough to be out in a small boat off Whittier — today and tomorrow.
About these tools
Town Tools builds free, public tools for Whittier and towns around the world. A team of agents researches each place from local sources and keeps the tools up to date; residents suggest new ones and report corrections.
From Town Tools. For the current version, visit https://www.town.tools/whittier-alaska-us/passage-canal-wind
Passage Canal funnels the wind. This reads the forecast for the water off Whittier and shows, hour by hour, when it eases enough to be out in a small boat — today and tomorrow.
Today, Sunday, July 5
The wind eases after 3 pm.
gusts 38 km/h (Beaufort 5 · Fresh breeze), sustained 7 km/h.
As of July 5 at 6:38 AM. These are modelled winds for the area, not a reading on the water — the channel funnels the wind harder mid-channel than it feels at the docks.
This is a weather model for the water, not a reading out on the canal — and it is not about the tunnel. Wind does not close the Anton Anderson Tunnel; that closes for the train's turn, a crash, or a slide on the approaches, never for a blow on the water. Before you cast off, the marine forecast and the harbor below have the final word.
Hour by hour · Today
3 am–3 pmStrong windGusts up to 45 km/h (Strong breeze).
3 pm–midnightBreezyGusts up to 38 km/h (Fresh breeze).
Hour by hour · Tomorrow, Monday, July 6
midnight–2 amLightGusts up to 18 km/h (Gentle breeze).
3–5 amLightGusts up to 17 km/h (Gentle breeze).
5 am–noonBreezyGusts up to 24 km/h (Moderate breeze).
noon–midnightLightGusts up to 20 km/h (Gentle breeze).
Day
Wind eases
Peak gusts
Monday, July 6
before 2 am, and after 3 am
24 km/h · Breezy
How this page decides
Each hour is banded on the published Beaufort wind scale, read off the gusts — gusts are what build the chop and make a small boat hard to handle. Light: gusts under 20 km/h (Beaufort 0–3). Breezy: 20–38 (4–5). Strong wind: 39–61 (6–7, whitecaps and spray). Gale: 62–88 (8–9, dangerous for small craft). Violent: 89 km/h and up (10+). An easy window means daytime hours where gusts stay under about 38 km/h. No thresholds on this page are ours.
Reading it for your plans
Reading it for a skiff or kayak
A “strong wind” hour or worse means whitecaps and building chop, and the blow runs hardest east–west down the middle of the canal, not at the docks. Wait for an easy window, keep near shore, and tell someone ashore your plan and when you’ll be back.
If something goes wrong on the water
Call the Coast Guard on VHF Channel 16 (Sector Western Alaska, 866-396-1361). The Whittier harbor office monitors VHF 16 and 68 and answers on 907-472-2327. A marine VHF radio or a NOAA weather radio (KXI29, 162.475 MHz) carries the same forecast and any Small Craft Advisory when you’re away from a phone.
Worth knowing
The wind here runs along the canal
Alaska DOT&PF’s marine summary for Whittier puts the mean hourly wind at 10–15 mph, but winds are commonly 40–60 mph in the area, strongest blowing east and west along the axis of Passage Canal, and can build waves of 4–6 feet in the centre of the canal.
When the wind or seas cross the threshold, the National Weather Service flags a Small Craft Advisory in the Passage Canal zone forecast (PKZ723). This page only bands the modelled wind on the Beaufort scale so you can see the shape of the day; the advisory in the official forecast is the line to respect.
NWS marine forecast — Passage Canal (PKZ723)The National Weather Service forecast for the water off Whittier, including any Small Craft Advisory — the call on whether it’s too rough to go out.
NWS Anchorage — all marine zonesThe full set of Prince William Sound coastal-waters forecasts if you’re heading beyond the canal.
Fetched July 5 at 6:38 AM. These are modelled winds for the area, not a reading on the water — the channel funnels the wind harder mid-channel than it feels at the docks. Open-Meteo — Wind data by Open-Meteo (CC BY 4.0). Bands from the Beaufort wind scale.