Weather for where you live
Hearth translates forecasts into household guidance. When to mow the lawn, when to cover the plants, when to skip the sprinklers. You hear from us when something needs attention, and silence when it doesn't.
Weather apps tell you the forecast.
They don't tell you what to do with it.
You have to do the translation
Should you mow today or wait? Do the plants need covering tonight? Every weather-dependent decision requires you to check the forecast, figure out what it means for your situation, and remember to act in time.
Good timing isn't obvious
When's the best time to paint the deck? When should you actually run the sprinklers? These questions have weather-dependent answers, but "partly cloudy, high of 72" doesn't give you much to work with.
It never stops
The grass grows back. Frost comes every spring and fall. Wind gusts happen year-round. Each time, you're doing the same mental work: notice the weather, figure out what it means, decide when to act.
Covers the stuff you actually worry about
Hearth knows what you have at home and watches for weather that affects it. When something needs attention, you'll know.
Lawn Care Timing
Tells you when to mow based on recent rain, what's coming, and how fast the grass is growing. No more mowing right before a downpour.
Plant Protection
Frost alerts before temperatures drop. You'll know when to cover your plants or bring them inside, with enough time to actually do it.
Wind Alerts
Heads up before wind gusts that could knock over your patio furniture, umbrellas, or trash cans. Not severe weather, just annoying weather.
Sprinkler Smarts
Don't water your lawn the day before it rains. Hearth tells you when to skip the sprinklers and save the water bill.
Project Windows
Planning to paint the deck or seal the driveway? Hearth finds stretches of dry days with the right temperature so you can actually finish.
Property Protection
Hard freeze coming? You'll know to drip your faucets. Big storm on the way? Time to bring in the grill and secure the patio umbrella.
This is what Hearth actually says
Not data. Not forecasts. Just what you need to know and when you need to know it.
"Mow today or tomorrow. Rain arrives Thursday and the ground will be wet through the weekend."
"Temperatures dropping below freezing overnight. Cover tender plants or bring them inside by 8pm."
"Wind gusts up to 35mph expected tomorrow afternoon. Secure patio furniture and umbrellas."
"Skip the sprinklers today. About an inch of rain expected overnight."
"4-day dry window starting tomorrow. Good conditions for exterior painting through Sunday."
"Hard freeze tonight. Leave faucets dripping and open cabinet doors under sinks."
"Good mowing conditions through Friday. Dry stretch continues."
"Heat advisory through Thursday. Container plants may need extra watering."
"Mow today or tomorrow. Rain arrives Thursday and the ground will be wet through the weekend."
"Temperatures dropping below freezing overnight. Cover tender plants or bring them inside by 8pm."
"Wind gusts up to 35mph expected tomorrow afternoon. Secure patio furniture and umbrellas."
"Skip the sprinklers today. About an inch of rain expected overnight."
"4-day dry window starting tomorrow. Good conditions for exterior painting through Sunday."
"Hard freeze tonight. Leave faucets dripping and open cabinet doors under sinks."
"Good mowing conditions through Friday. Dry stretch continues."
"Heat advisory through Thursday. Container plants may need extra watering."
Set it up once, then forget about it
Hearth learns what you have at home and watches the weather for you. You only hear from us when something actually matters.
Tell us what you have
A few quick questions: Do you have a lawn? Plants? Outdoor furniture? Sprinklers? That's basically it.
Hearth watches
We keep an eye on the forecast and figure out when weather will actually affect your stuff.
You get a heads up
When something needs your attention, we tell you. When nothing's going on, we stay quiet.
Hearth gets smarter
If you tell us when you mowed or watered, future suggestions get better. But this part's optional.