Right now, I can’t see your exact location or live weather feeds, so I can’t tell you precisely how fast the wind is blowing where you are at this moment. However, I can give you a clear way to find out in seconds and explain what those numbers mean.

Quick Scoop: How to check it right now

Use any of these methods (they auto-detect or let you set your location):

  1. Weather apps and sites
    • Search “current wind speed” in:
      • Your phone’s default Weather app
      • Major apps (The Weather Channel, AccuWeather, Windy, Windy.app, Windfinder, etc.)
 * Most will show:
   * Sustained wind (e.g., “13 mph”)
   * Gusts (e.g., “gusts 25 mph”)
  1. National/official weather sites
    • In the U.S.: the National Weather Service “Current Conditions” page for your nearest city or airport shows live wind speed and direction.
 * Similar services exist in most countries via national meteorological agencies.
  1. Map-style wind tools
    • Websites and apps like Windy.app or Windfinder show a live wind map where you can tap your exact spot to see speed and gusts.
  1. DIY estimate by eye
    If you’re outside and curious, you can roughly estimate:

    • Light breezes: leaves rustle, you feel it on your face (around 5–10 mph).
 * Moderate: small branches move, flags straighten (around 15–25 mph).
 * Strong: whole trees sway, walking against it feels hard (above 25–30 mph).

What “how fast is the wind blowing” really means

When you see wind data, you’ll usually get:

  • Sustained wind speed
    • An average over a short period (often 2–10 minutes at weather stations).
* Example: “Wind 15 mph from the southwest.”
  • Wind gusts
    • Short spikes higher than the sustained wind, often important for boating, aviation, or tall buildings.
* Example: “Gusts to 30 mph.”
  • Direction
    • Given as where the wind is coming from , e.g., “SW 9 mph” means blowing from the southwest.

Typical numbers you might see today (as an illustration)

I can’t see your location, but here’s how different forecasts look:

  • A marine forecast might say:
    • “South winds 20–25 knots, increasing to 25–30 knots with gusts to 40 knots.”
  • A city forecast might say:
    • “Wind 9–16 mph, gusts up to ~30 mph.”

To convert:

  • 1 knot ≈ 1.15 mph.

Quick reference: wind speed and “feel”

Here’s a simple guide to what the numbers you’ll see mean:

html

<table>
  <tr>
    <th>Wind speed</th>
    <th>What it feels/looks like</th>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>0–5 mph</td>
    <td>Very light; smoke drifts, flags hang limp. [web:10]</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>5–15 mph</td>
    <td>Leaves rustle; you feel a steady breeze. [web:10]</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>15–25 mph</td>
    <td>Small trees sway; it can feel blustery. [web:10]</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>25–40 mph</td>
    <td>Large branches move; difficult to bike or walk into the wind. [web:1][web:10]</td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td>40+ mph</td>
    <td>Strong winds; can be hazardous, especially near water or high places. [web:1][web:10]</td>
  </tr>
</table>

Mini FAQ and storytelling-style example

You open a forum and someone asks: “How fast is the wind blowing where you are?”

You could reply:

  1. Check a weather site/app, note “Wind 18 mph, gusts 30 mph from WSW.”
  1. Look outside: trees are swaying and it feels tough to bike against it.
  1. Post back:

“About 18 mph here with gusts near 30; trees are really moving and it’s a bit of a battle walking into it.”

That’s usually what people mean in casual conversation: the mix of the number plus the feel.

TL;DR

I can’t read your local instruments directly, but you can find out how fast the wind is blowing right now by checking a weather app/site or a live wind map for your location, then combining that number with how it feels outside.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.