Hike Duration (End Date) and Expected Weather Extremes

Choose a direction and northern terminus, a start month/day, and your expected miles per day. If you plan to take an alternate route instead of the primary path, select it below — the total mileage will adjust automatically. You will receive an estimated hike duration and end date, along with a map showing where the expected highest and lowest temperatures will be encountered.

Lake Okeechobee Alternate Routes
Ocala-Orlando Loop Alternate Routes

Weather Planner

Weather data provided by Open-Meteo.com under the 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license.

Select a region, then a trail section within that region. Enter a section mile (miles from the southern end of that section) and choose a planning date. You will receive current conditions at that location, a 5-day forecast, and a recent 7-year average of weather conditions for that date.


Notes on Weather and Map Data

Notes on Weather Data

This site uses average daily apparent maximum and minimum temperature data from the last seven years, along with average actual temperatures. So why both?

In many areas you can rely on straight high and low temperatures to gauge comfort and safety. Even on the AT, where the main cold-weather concerns (freezing nights in the Smokies, New England shoulder seasons) dominate planning, a simple temperature metric is sufficient.

The Florida Trail is different. One of the primary concerns for FT hikers is the combination of heat and humidity that can create genuinely dangerous conditions at certain times of year — particularly in August in the Big Cypress swamplands. To ensure hikers are properly prepared, this planner provides information on both actual temperature and heat index.

For heat index this planner uses the Steadman methodology, which handles both heat index (humidity-driven) and wind chill at very low temperatures. The extreme cold scenarios are less of a concern for most FT hikers, but building a flexible tool now also eases development of future planners for the PCT and CDT where both extremes matter greatly.

Notes on Map Data

Mapping data used on this site was pulled from as many official sources as possible, but even these official sources often differed on some of the details. Some define regions differently, there are multiple side trails and spurs, and some alternate trails split in different ways. So for those who are interested (or confused!) I thought some additional notes would be helpful.

My two gold standards for the official route were the Florida Trail Association (FTA) regional definitions, ArcGIS mapping data, and the US Forest Service. I also pulled data from the OpenStreetMap database, as well as websites of various state and local parks the FT runs through. Some specific issues:

Additional Resources

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