🐾 Paw Check by Wyndo
Is it too hot to walk your dog in Colorado Springs right now?
Hot pavement and humid heat hurt dogs faster than people. Here's the live read for Colorado Springs, CO — never a green light, always with the reasoning and the hand-test backstop.
🐾 Good for a walk right now
Conditions look good for paws — and most walks are on sidewalk concrete or grass, which run cooler than dark asphalt anyway. Give the ground a quick hand-test and head out.
Do the 7-second hand test — press the back of your hand to the pavement. If it feels too hot for your hand, treat it as too hot for paws. (A backstop, not a measurement — when in doubt, wait or walk on grass/shade.)
This reads a typical concrete sidewalk. Dark asphalt and parking lots run ~10–15°C (≈20–25°F) hotter — hand-test those before you cross; turf, metal and sand can run hotter still, while shade and grass are cooler.
An informational estimate, not veterinary advice. We apply human thermal-injury data conservatively (no validated dog-specific curve) and default to a healthy-but-vulnerable dog — your dog may need more caution. Always do the physical check.
Live read as of 10:50pm in Colorado Springs — conditions can change quickly; re-check before you leash up.
Today's better windows in Colorado Springs
- Recommended window: 10:50pm–11:20pm
Never miss a good walk window — get a Paw Window alert
Set a Paw Window alert and we'll email you each time a good walk window opens in Colorado Springs, CO — and stay quiet when it isn't.
Get a Paw Window alert
A Paw Window is a stretch when conditions ease into a better time to walk your dog. We'll email you the moment one opens in Colorado Springs, CO — something we can't do for guests.
New or returning — we'll email a code, no password needed.
How the pavement-heat check works
This is never a green light — only a concern-based read. Asphalt and dark concrete can run ~10–15°C (≈20–25°F) hotter than the air in full sun, so a warm, sunny afternoon in Colorado Springs gets flagged before paws get hurt. Wyndo also checks whole-dog heat (dogs cool almost only by panting, so humid heat is a heatstroke risk even on grass), plus severe cold and icy footpaths in winter.
The 7-second hand test is the backstop: press the back of your hand to the pavement. If it's too hot for your hand, it's too hot for paws. Weather is an estimate — your hand and your dog are the final word.
An informational estimate, not veterinary advice. Wyndo defaults to a healthy-but-vulnerable dog; yours may need more caution. Always do the physical check.