>>1971120I had to study this as part of a guiding course.
There’s a shit ton to learn. We did it for a few hours a week plus a few 1 week block courses.
You’ll need to learn about iso- and topo- maps and their interactions, humidity and temp in relation to altitude, cloud types and what they mean, heaps of shit. Plus you need to follow the weather daily to track patterns and predict.
Also, if you don’t do it all the time, you’ll quickly forget it all like me and 90% of the people I studied with.
I just dug out a manual to try and find a source for you, but I never quoted it sorry.
This is page 1 of many, it just gets complicated after this.
(I didn’t go much for introductions and preambles, this was just a resource for me to refer back to if required.)