PeakScout aggregates data from NOAA, USGS, CAIC, CDOT, CPW, MDT, FWP, GNFAC, WCMAC, FNAC, Open-Meteo, and SNOTEL to produce trail, river, lake, weather, and activity forecasts. This page explains the accuracy limitations of those forecasts, what our confidence ratings actually measure, and the risks you assume when making recreation decisions based on forecast data.
1.1 What "Forecast" Means in PeakScout
PeakScout produces forecasts by combining public data feeds — federal agency APIs, USGS gauge readings, SNOTEL snowpack stations, NWS grid point weather models, and state agency publications — into synthesized outputs: trail condition scores, river flow predictions, wave height estimates, campsite Go Scores, avalanche loading indicators, and activity condition ratings.
These outputs are the product of automated data aggregation and mathematical modeling. They are not issued by trained meteorologists, hydrologists, or field inspectors. They reflect the state of the public data at the time of computation — not ground-truth conditions at your specific location.
1.2 Known Sources of Forecast Error
1.3 What PeakScout Forecasts Do Not Include
PeakScout assigns confidence ratings to forecasts based on the proximity and recency of the underlying data source — not on the inherent predictability of the weather or conditions being forecast.
A direct measurement or forecast from a station within approximately 10 km of the target, updated within the last 2 hours. Data source is likely representative. Still subject to terrain extrapolation error and model uncertainty.
Station or forecast grid within 10–30 km, or data updated within the last 6 hours. Reasonable proxy for conditions but terrain differences may be significant. Exercise additional caution.
Station beyond 30 km, data older than 6 hours, or multiple model outputs diverging significantly. Treat as a general indicator only — conditions at your location may differ substantially.
2.1 What Confidence Ratings Do Not Measure
Always treat Low confidence forecasts as planning hints, not planning inputs. When confidence is Low, verify directly with the managing agency, local guide services, or other recent on-the-ground reports before committing to the activity.
3.1 USGS Gauge Data Lag
PeakScout river intelligence is built on USGS stream gauge data, polled at regular intervals. The USGS National Water Information System (NWIS) typically reports instantaneous values every 15–60 minutes. Actual flow conditions at your access point may be 15 to 60 minutes ahead of what PeakScout displays. In rapidly rising flow events, this lag can represent the difference between safe and dangerous conditions.
3.2 Dam Release Variability
Many rivers in Colorado and Montana are regulated by upstream reservoirs operated by the Bureau of Reclamation (BOR), US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), irrigation districts, or water utilities. Dam release schedules are not published in a machine-readable format that PeakScout can integrate programmatically.
3.3 Snowmelt Model Uncertainty
PeakScout's river intelligence incorporates snowmelt-driven runoff models based on SNOTEL snowpack data and temperature forecasts. These models estimate peak runoff timing and magnitude for seasonal planning — they are not real-time flow sensors.
3.4 Flash Flood Risk
Convective thunderstorms can spike tributary flows and raise mainstem river levels within minutes — well before any upstream gauge can register the event and far before PeakScout can reflect it. Flash flood risk is highest in slot canyons, canyon bottoms, and at river crossings. Monitor NWS flash flood watches and warnings independently. Do not enter flood-prone river corridors when thunderstorms are in the upstream watershed, regardless of current gauge readings.
3.5 Wading Safety Classifications
PeakScout's wading safety classifications (safe / use caution / dangerous / impassable) are generated from USGS CFS readings cross-referenced against species and reach-specific flow thresholds. These thresholds are generalizations:
4.1 Bretschneider Wave Model
PeakScout estimates wave height on mountain lakes using the Bretschneider wave model, which calculates significant wave height from wind speed, wind duration (fetch), and water body geometry. This is a standard oceanographic approximation method adapted for inland lakes.
Known limitations of this model on mountain lakes:
4.2 Cold Water Immersion Risk
PeakScout estimates water temperature and cold-water hypothermia incapacitation times on lake pages. These estimates use USGS gage height and temperature sensor data where available, supplemented by seasonal models and adjacent river gauge temperatures.
4.3 Craft Safety Ratings
PeakScout's lake craft safety ratings (favorable / marginal / hazardous) are derived from the modeled wave height and wind speed relative to general small-craft thresholds. They do not account for:
5.1 Planning Tool, Not Safety System
PeakScout is designed to help you plan outdoor activities more effectively — not to replace the judgment, skill, and situational awareness required to execute them safely. Using PeakScout to decide when and where to go is appropriate. Using PeakScout as a substitute for reading actual conditions when you arrive is not.
The following decisions are yours alone to make, based on conditions you observe directly:
5.2 Inherent Risks of Outdoor Recreation
Outdoor recreation carries inherent risks that exist regardless of forecast accuracy or data quality. These risks include but are not limited to: rapidly changing weather, terrain hazards, wildlife encounters, equipment failure, human error, flooding, avalanche, rockfall, lightning, hypothermia, and dehydration. PeakScout's forecasts do not eliminate these risks and do not reduce the likelihood that you will encounter them.
By using PeakScout to plan or conduct any outdoor activity, you acknowledge that:
5.3 Tie to Existing Assumption of Risk Framework
This assumption of risk disclosure supplements the existing typed-signature assumption of risk in PeakScout's Federal Land Liability Disclaimer. Users who have completed that disclaimer have explicitly acknowledged assumption of risk for federal land activities. This forecast accuracy disclaimer extends that acknowledgment to the specific limitations of PeakScout's automated forecast outputs — including river flow predictions, wave height estimates, trail condition scores, and weather forecasts across all activity types.
State-specific assumption of risk statutes that apply to forecast reliance in PeakScout's coverage areas are identified in Sections 8 (Colorado) and 9 (Montana) of this disclaimer.
6.1 Scope of This Limitation
This limitation applies to all forecast outputs produced by PeakScout, including:
6.2 Relationship to Master Terms
This limitation supplements and is consistent with the full limitation of liability in PeakScout's Master Terms of Service (Section 8). The aggregate cap on PeakScout's liability — the greater of amounts paid in the prior 12 months or $100 — applies equally to forecast-related claims.
7.1 Known Reliability Issues by Source
7.2 PeakScout's Response to Data Degradation
When PeakScout detects that a data source is unavailable or returning anomalous values, it will typically: display a reduced confidence rating, show a data availability warning on the affected page, or fall back to the next-best available data source. These degraded-state displays are intended to be transparent about data limitations — they are not a guarantee that all degradation is detected or communicated.
If you notice a forecast that appears wildly inconsistent with observed conditions, treat the observed conditions as authoritative and report the discrepancy to peakscout@polsia.app.
8.1 CAIC — Avalanche Forecast Data Accuracy
Colorado avalanche forecasts displayed in PeakScout are sourced from the Colorado Avalanche Information Center (CAIC), a program of the Colorado Department of Natural Resources. CAIC forecasts are the authoritative source for Colorado avalanche danger.
8.2 CDOT — Road Condition Forecast Accuracy
Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT) road condition data displayed in PeakScout is sourced from CDOT public feeds and APIs. PeakScout is not affiliated with CDOT and is not an authorized issuer of road closure or traction law status determinations.
8.3 CPW — Fishing, Campsite, and Wildlife Data
Colorado Parks & Wildlife (CPW) data referenced in PeakScout — including state park campsite availability, fishing regulation summaries, and wildlife management area status — is sourced from CPW public data feeds and publications.
8.4 Colorado Recreational Use Statute
Colorado CRS 33-41-101 et seq. (Recreational Use Statute) limits landowner liability for injuries sustained by recreational users on land made available without charge. By using PeakScout forecast data to plan activities on Colorado state or federal lands, you acknowledge that applicable recreational use immunity may apply to landowners, and that your reliance on PeakScout forecasts does not alter this allocation of risk. See the Federal Land Liability Disclaimer for the full liability framework.
9.1 GNFAC / WCMAC / FNAC — Avalanche Forecast Data Accuracy
Montana avalanche forecasts displayed in PeakScout are sourced from three regional centers: the Gallatin National Forest Avalanche Center (GNFAC), the West Central Montana Avalanche Center (WCMAC), and the Flathead Avalanche Center (FNAC) (also referenced as FAC).
9.2 MDT — Road Condition Forecast Accuracy
Montana Department of Transportation (MDT) road condition data displayed in PeakScout is sourced from MDT public feeds. MDT does not always publish structured API data for all routes — PeakScout may not display closures for lower-volume Montana routes.
9.3 FWP — Fishing, Campsite, and Wildlife Data
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks (FWP) data referenced in PeakScout — including state park campsite availability via ReserveAmerica, fishing access site status, river flow advisories, and hunting regulation summaries — is sourced from FWP public data and publications.
9.4 Montana Recreation Responsibility Act
Montana MCA 27-1-736 (Recreation Responsibility Act) allocates assumption of risk to recreational users for the inherent risks of outdoor activities. By using PeakScout forecast data to plan activities on Montana state or federal lands, you acknowledge that this statute applies to your activity, and that your reliance on PeakScout forecasts does not alter the risk allocation established by Montana law. See the Montana Avalanche Disclaimer for the full framework.
This disclaimer supplements PeakScout's Master Terms of Service — specifically Section 1b (Forecast Services), Section 7 (Disclaimer of Warranties), and Section 8 (Limitation of Liability). In the event of any conflict, the Master Terms control.
State-specific addenda in Sections 8 (Colorado) and 9 (Montana) supplement but do not replace the Master Terms. The Master Terms limitation of liability (§8), indemnification (§9), and dispute resolution (§10) provisions apply in full to all forecast features, condition ratings, and data displayed on PeakScout pages.
This disclaimer is one part of PeakScout's legal framework. Related disclaimers:
For questions about this disclaimer, contact peakscout@polsia.app.