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Let it glow, let it glow, let it snow

Christmas comes but once a year - and so might a good snowfall. With these weather predicting baubles you'll never miss out on the chance to make a snowman

snow forecaster cartoon

Let it glow, let it glow, let it snow…

Christmas comes but once a year – and for some of us, so does a good snowfall. Here’s how to make sure you don’t miss it

“I love building snowmen, but the neighbourhood kids snatch up every flake for their snowball arsenal,” writes Jack F. “My wife gives me an icy stare if I keep flicking to the weather channel, and I can’t stay glued to the window when we’re entertaining relatives. How can I make sure I don’t miss out?”

I may be dreaming of a white Christmas, but I’m not changing out of my PJs unless the odds of a snowman are favourable. But what if I could deck my hall with a personalised snow predictor? It’s time to hack the Christmas tree…

I grabbed a pack of clear baubles and sprinkled in some glitter and polystyrene beads. This does a good impression of snow, and I slapped on some adhesive snowflakes for good measure. LEDs slipped into the top of each bring real sparkle, and trailing wires can be cunningly disguised with tinsel.

Now for the clever part – connecting the baubles to my Adafruit Feather, a circuit board that can talk to my home Wi-Fi. I programmed it to contact the Dark Sky weather service, which collates data from different sources to give a forecast for your GPS location – or the local tobogganing hill’s. To build excitement, the lights function like a progress bar – each extra tier illuminates as the chance of snow increases.

When the snow starts falling, my baubles send flurries of light cascading down the tree, simulating a mini blizzard. The tree updates every minute, so you can tell whether it’s just a sprinkle or something more. In my flat, we’ve agreed we won’t brave the elements for anything less than 10 minutes of continuous snow.

The snow tracker should be an easy project even after a couple of sherries, although my prototype had me dashing out in my snow boots to blue skies – it thought I was in Iceland.

You can also connect the lights to Google’s open source Santa Tracker, which plots St Nick’s course on Christmas Eve. Get to sleep before the top bauble illuminates or he’ll skip your house. Now there’s no need to keep checking weather apps, Jack. But you might want a second set of lights for the tree – just in case it’s a mild year.

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Topics: weather