About The Desk

Weather guidance for ordinary rooms.

Stormy Casa was built around a simple observation: many people receive weather information in fragments. A radar image appears in a group chat, a warning banner flashes across a phone, a neighbor repeats a headline, and a household still has to decide what to do next. The site gives those fragments a practical frame.

Our writing is educational rather than alarmist. We explain why a line of storms can weaken after sunset, why training rain cells can be more dangerous than a single dramatic downpour, and why the same wind forecast has different consequences for a balcony, a mobile home, a tree-lined street, or a basement apartment.

Stormy Casa is also deliberately home-scale. The best checklist is the one a person can act on before anxiety takes over: charge lights, know the shelter room, keep shoes nearby, secure outdoor objects, identify drainage risks, and decide how the household will confirm everyone is safe. We respect official alerts and local emergency guidance, then add the plain-language context that helps readers respond with less confusion.