This wind climatology is based on historical data from NOAA’s
        			Unrestricted Mesoscale Analysis (URMA). See here. The dataset provides hourly wind speed and
        			direction for CONUS, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico on a horizontal
        			grid-spacing of 2.5 km for all domains except Alaska (3 km) and
        			Puerto Rico (1.25 km). URMA is based on the same system that provides
        			the Real Time Mesoscale Analysis (RTMA). Both RTMA and URMA are 2DVar
        			analysis systems that provide analyses of National Digital Forecast
        			Database parameters. While RTMA is considered for situational
        			awareness, URMA is considered for verification/validation. URMA also
        			serves as a critical component in the National Blend of Models (NBM)
        			program, as it is used for calibration and validation. URMA is a
        			modeling system based on 2-dimensional variational analysis of
        			surface sensible weather fields. Thus, users of this product should
        			be aware the outputs are modeled and not direct observations. 
 
        			CONUS data is compiled into monthly averages for 10 meter wind speed
        			with frequency using hourly data to bin direction and speed used in
        			wind rose charts. Gust hours are totaled for each month. 
 
        			Time periods for the tool were expanded to include Seasonal and El
        			Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Seasonal are averaged over a 3
        			month period: Winter (December, January, Febraury), Spring (March,
        			April, May), Summer (June, july, August), and Fall (September,
        			October, November). ENSO periods can span months and years (Episodes by Season). Monthly wind data over each
        			episode is averaged, similar to seasonal, and catagorized based on
        			warm (El Niño) and cold (La El Niña) designation based on the Oceanic
        			Niño Index (ONI). Neutral episodes are not currently available. 
        			
 High/Low wind months are calculated by taking the mean 10 meter
        			wind speed for each grid point over the entire climatology
        			(1985-2022) and ranking them. Find the 10th and 90th percentile of
        			the point and compare it with each month and year. The result is the
        			number of months for each year that is above/below these percentiles.
        			
 
 To learn more about the charts you can take the tutorial here.