Red Dirt And Round Bales

The Towers Watching Oklahoma’s Weather


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In Oklahoma, weather is never just small talk — it can shape crops, cattle, roads, fire risk, and rural safety in a matter of minutes.

In this episode of Red Dirt and Round Bales, Dave Deken takes listeners inside the Oklahoma Mesonet, the statewide weather monitoring network that has helped Oklahoma watch, learn, and prepare for more than 30 years. Built through a partnership between Oklahoma State University and the University of Oklahoma, the Mesonet collects weather and soil data from stations across the state, giving farmers, ranchers, emergency managers, fire managers, teachers, and local communities information they can use close to home. The Oklahoma Mesonet is operated as a joint project of OU and OSU, with quality-assured observations reported every five minutes.

Key takeaways:

  • The Oklahoma Mesonet was commissioned in 1994 and now serves as a statewide weather decision tool.
  • Mesonet stations help track wind, rain, humidity, temperature, soil moisture, soil temperature, solar radiation, and more.
  • Farmers and ranchers use Mesonet data for spraying decisions, cattle comfort, soil conditions, and weather planning.
  • Emergency managers and fire officials rely on Mesonet tools for storm response, wildfire risk, prescribed fire, and public safety.
  • The Mesonet combines Oklahoma’s long tradition of reading the sky with real-time, local, quality-checked weather data.
  • Timestamped rundown

    00:00–01:15 — Dave Deken introduces the episode and frames the Oklahoma Mesonet as a quiet but powerful tool serving rural Oklahoma.
    01:16–01:41 — The episode explains why weather in Oklahoma is more than small talk: it affects business, livelihoods, crops, cattle, roads, and safety.
    01:42–02:30 — Dave introduces the Mesonet’s origin story, noting its 1994 commissioning and the unusual but important collaboration between Oklahoma State University and the University of Oklahoma.
    02:31–03:35 — The episode describes the network’s reach: 120 stations, at least one in every county, measuring air, soil, rain, wind, humidity, pressure, solar radiation, and more.
    03:36–04:25 — Dave explains why the Mesonet is considered a gold-standard weather network: density, consistency, maintenance, calibration, and quality control.
    04:26–05:15 — The episode highlights major Mesonet weather records, including Oklahoma’s all-time low temperature at Nowata, extreme wind at El Reno, and other remarkable heat, rainfall, and solar-radiation observations.
    05:16–06:25 — The episode turns toward practical use: teachers, ranchers, farmers, emergency managers, and fire managers all use Mesonet data to make decisions.
    06:26–07:38 — Dave reflects on the Mesonet as both science and public service, connecting universities, technicians, meteorologists, taxpayers, and landowners.
    07:39–08:19 — The episode closes by placing the Mesonet in Oklahoma’s larger story of watching, learning, preparing, and helping one another.

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    Red Dirt And Round BalesBy Dave Deken