How do predictions work?
Our predictions combine multiple factors to calculate a score (0-100%) for spotting opportunities:
- Weather: Cloud cover, wind, precipitation, and visibility
- Time of day: Peak activity hours vary by category
- Historical patterns: Past activity data for your location
- Real-time signals: Live aircraft, recent sightings, current conditions
- Location factors: Proximity to bases, ranges, reserves, hotspots
- Seasonal factors: Time of year, holidays, seasonal patterns
Each prediction shows a confidence level (High/Medium/Low) based on data quality and historical accuracy.
Detailed Calculation Process:
1. Weather Analysis: We analyze current and forecasted weather conditions including:
- Cloud cover percentage (lower is better for most spotting)
- Wind speed and direction (affects visibility and comfort)
- Precipitation (rain/snow reduces visibility and comfort)
- Visibility distance (meteorological visibility from weather stations)
- Temperature and humidity (affects equipment performance and comfort)
2. Spotters Visibility Calculation: For all guides, we calculate how well you can see based on:
- Distance: How far away the target is (exponential decay - closer = much better)
- Habitat/Environment: Open areas (900m base scale) vs woodland (220m) - affects detection range
- Weather Visibility: Actual visibility from weather data (0.2-20km range)
- Wind Effects: High wind (>15mph) reduces hearing detection by 10-25%
- Precipitation: Rain reduces visibility and comfort (0.1-0.8mm = 15% reduction, >0.8mm = 30%)
- Time of Day & Light Conditions:
- Night time (8pm-5am): Significant visibility reduction
- Nocturnal species: Wildlife (badgers, foxes, hedgehogs) and birds (owls, nightjars) are active at night, but still have a 20-point penalty since you need equipment (torch/red light) to spot them
- Diurnal species: Daytime-active wildlife and birds have a 45-point penalty at night - they're inactive AND hard to see
- Dusk/Dawn (5-7am, 6-8pm): Moderate visibility reduction (10 points) - binoculars/torch recommended
3. Category-Specific Factors:
- MOD/Military: Range activity, NOTAMs, historical patterns, proximity to bases
- Commercial Plane Spotting: Only calculated near commercial airports (see below)
- Birding: Seasonal migration, dawn/dusk activity, habitat suitability
- Wildlife: Tide times (for coastal), habitat, seasonal behavior
- Stargazing: Light pollution, moon phase, cloud cover, darkness hours
- Trains: Station proximity, service patterns, rush hour timing
4. Commercial Plane Spotting - Airport Proximity Requirement:
Commercial aircraft predictions are only calculated near commercial airports (typically within 30-50km). This is because:
- Altitude Visibility: Commercial aircraft cruise at 30,000-40,000 feet. At this altitude, they are only visible when near airports during takeoff/landing (below ~10,000 feet)
- Distance Limits: Even with perfect weather, commercial aircraft at cruising altitude are too small and too far away to spot from most locations
- Airport Activity: We calculate predictions based on airport traffic patterns, time of day (morning/evening peaks), and weather suitability for spotting (not flight operations)
- Low-Altitude Traffic: We prioritize aircraft below 10,000 feet (takeoff/landing phases) which are actually visible to spotters
If you're far from an airport, commercial predictions will be low or unavailable - this is intentional and honest. We don't show false opportunities for aircraft you can't actually see.
5. Data Fusion: All factors are weighted and combined:
- Weather typically 25-45% of the score
- Time/activity patterns: 30-40%
- Location factors: 15-25%
- Real-time signals: 10-20% (when available)
- Historical patterns: 5-15% (varies by data availability)
Transparency Note: We show confidence levels because predictions are probabilistic, not guarantees. High confidence means we have good data and strong patterns. Low confidence means limited data or unusual conditions. We're honest about uncertainty to build your trust.
Why can scores differ between pages?
Scores are always 0–100, but different pages answer slightly different questions (for example: “your area right now” vs “a specific place”).
Nature Radar is designed so its map, list, and hotspot sheet use a unified Spot Score for consistency. Hourly windows and calendars will change through the day by design.
How do MOD Activity predictions work?
Our MOD Activity predictions use a 3-tier system to give you the most accurate and useful information:
🎯 Tier 1: Overall Predictions (MOD Activity Page)
The main MOD Activity page shows aggregate predictions combining activity from all bombing ranges across the UK, Isle of Wight, Scotland, Ireland, and expanded regions.
- Shows overall "big picture" activity across all ranges
- Helps you understand general training patterns
- Combines signals from multiple ranges for a comprehensive view
- Useful for deciding which region to visit
Values: Range activity (overall), Training probability (aggregate), Spotting score (combined)
- UK-wide: The MOD Activity page is not based on your current location. It uses a national (UK) overview.
- All-day memory: Activity is “remembered” using stored prediction ticks written throughout the day (cron scans), not just a short in-memory window.
- Ranges vs bases: Bombing ranges follow GOV.UK opening/closing schedules; RAF bases are treated as 24/7 and tracked for busyness.
- Why 0% can happen: If no military aircraft are detected near ranges (or all current ticks are
none), the overall activity value can be low. - Baseline: When ticks are present but no active ranges are detected yet, the overall activity meter may show a small baseline to avoid a “dead” dashboard.
Training probability is not a live “GO NOW” meter. It’s a planning score: based on patterns, schedules, and intelligence signals, it estimates how likely training is today.
This is still useful (and reliable) for planning because training often comes in windows. But it can stay elevated even when activity has paused or moved elsewhere.
For “is something happening right now?”, use MOD Activity — it’s driven by detected activity near bombing ranges and RAF bases and is remembered through the day via ticks.
🎯 Tier 2: Individual Bombing Range Predictions
When you tap on a specific bombing range (e.g., "Donna Nook Range"), you see predictions specific to that exact range only.
- Uses that range's exact coordinates and schedule
- Fetches GOV.UK training schedules for that specific range
- Monitors NOTAMs (Notices to Airmen) for that range's airspace
- Detects live aircraft within that range's operational radius
- Accounts for seasonal factors (e.g., seals on beaches)
- Uses historical activity patterns for that specific location
Values: Range activity (for this range), Training probability (range-specific), Spotting score (location-specific)
🛡️ Tier 3: Individual RAF Base Predictions
When you tap on a specific RAF base (e.g., "RAF Coningsby"), you see predictions specific to that base only.
- Uses that base's exact coordinates and operational data
- Monitors aircraft activity from that specific base
- Tracks squadrons stationed at that base
- Accounts for base-specific training schedules
- Detects live aircraft near that base
- Uses historical patterns specific to that location
Values: Base activity (for this base), Training probability (base-specific), Spotting score (location-specific)
💡 Why This System?
This 3-tier approach gives you:
- High-level overview: See overall activity patterns across all ranges
- Specific intelligence: Get detailed predictions for the exact location you're visiting
- Accurate data: Each tier uses location-specific schedules, weather, and activity data
- Better planning: Compare overall activity vs. specific range/base conditions
🔍 How to Use Each Tier:
- Start with Tier 1: Check the MOD Activity page to see overall activity levels
- Drill down to Tier 2/3: Tap on a specific range or base for detailed predictions
- Compare values: If overall activity is high but a specific range is low, there might be better options nearby
- Check schedules: Individual predictions show GOV.UK schedules and NOTAMs for that exact location
What adds and deducts from prediction scores?
Prediction scores (0-100%) are calculated by combining multiple factors. Here's what increases and decreases your score:
📈 Factors That INCREASE Scores:
Weather Conditions (25-45% weight):
- Clear skies: Low cloud cover (<20%) = +30 points
- Good visibility: High visibility (>10km) = +15-20 points
- Light wind: Wind <8mph = +10 points
- No precipitation: Dry conditions = +10-15 points
Time & Activity Patterns (30-40% weight):
- Peak hours: Historically active times = +20-30 points
- Weekdays: For MOD ranges, weekdays = +15-20 points
- Optimal season: Time of year with high activity = +10-15 points
Real-Time Aircraft Detection (10-35% boost):
- Live aircraft present: 1 aircraft = +7 points, up to +35 points for 5+ aircraft
- Multiple aircraft: 3+ aircraft = additional boost (suggests active training)
- Low altitude: Aircraft below 10,000ft = higher visibility = better score
Location Factors (15-25% weight):
- Near active range: Close to MOD training range = +15-25 points
- Near RAF base: Proximity to active base = +10-20 points
- Historical hotspots: Locations with past activity = +5-15 points
📉 Factors That DECREASE Scores:
No Real-Time Aircraft (MOD-specific):
- No live aircraft detected: -25 points from range activity probability
- Range likely inactive: If seals on beach or range closed = significant reduction
- Confidence penalty: -30% confidence when no aircraft found (minimum 30%)
Poor Weather (25-45% weight):
- Heavy cloud cover: >80% clouds = -30 points
- Rain/snow: Precipitation >0.8mm = -20-30 points
- High wind: Wind >25mph = -15-20 points
- Poor visibility: Visibility <2km = -25 points
Time of Day Penalties:
- Night time (8pm-5am): -20% confidence for MOD (harder to spot visually)
- Off-peak hours: Outside historical activity windows = -10-15 points
- Weekends/holidays: MOD ranges less active = -10-20 points
Spotters Visibility Reduction:
- Distance: Exponential decay - further away = much harder to see
- Night time: -25% detection probability (unless using specialized equipment)
- High wind: >15mph = -10-25% hearing detection
- Rain: 0.1-0.8mm = -15% visibility, >0.8mm = -30%
- Habitat: Woodland (220m range) vs open areas (900m range)
🎯 MOD/Military Prediction Example:
Let's say you're at RAF Donna Nook at 9pm with no aircraft detected:
Base Score Calculation:
- Weather (good): +70 points × 30% = +21
- Time (off-peak): +40 points × 25% = +10
- Location (near range): +80 points × 20% = +16
- Historical: +60 points × 15% = +9
- Subtotal: ~56 points
Penalties Applied:
- No live aircraft detected: -25 points
- Night time (9pm): -15 points (visibility reduction)
- Final Score: ~16-31 points (Low probability)
Confidence Calculation:
- Base confidence: 0.7 (70%)
- No aircraft penalty: -30% = 0.4 (40%)
- Night penalty: -20% = 0.2 (20%)
- Minimum floor: 35% (we don't go below this)
- Final Confidence: LOW (35%)
✅ Confidence Thresholds (Updated):
- High confidence: 75%+ (was 70%) - Very reliable, good data available
- Medium confidence: 50-74% (was 40-69%) - Some uncertainty, moderate data
- Low confidence: <50% (was <40%) - Limited data or unusual conditions
We made thresholds more conservative to be honest about uncertainty. If confidence is low, it means we don't have enough real-time data or conditions are unusual.
💡 Key Takeaways:
- Real-time aircraft presence is critical for MOD: No aircraft = significant score reduction
- Time of day matters: Night reduces both score and confidence
- Weather is always important: 25-45% of the final score
- Location proximity helps: Being near active ranges/bases boosts scores
- Confidence reflects data quality: Low confidence = we're being honest about uncertainty
How does visibility affect predictions and what equipment do I need?
Visibility is critical for all spotting activities. Our predictions account for both environmental visibility (weather) and your ability to see (time of day, distance, habitat).
How Visibility Affects Predictions:
- Night Time (8pm-5am): Reduces prediction scores by 15-30 points depending on category. Nocturnal wildlife (badgers, foxes) have less penalty, but you still need equipment.
- Dusk/Dawn (5-7am, 6-8pm): Moderate visibility reduction (8-10 points). Binoculars or torch recommended.
- Poor Weather Visibility (<5km): Additional 12-15 point reduction. Heavy rain, fog, or mist significantly limits spotting.
- Moderate Weather Visibility (5-8km): Small reduction (6-8 points). Still usable but not ideal.
- Good Visibility (>10km): No penalty. Optimal conditions for spotting.
Suggested Equipment by Visibility Conditions:
🌙 Night Time / Poor Visibility:
- Torch/Headlamp: Essential for all night spotting. Red light preferred for wildlife (less disturbing).
- Binoculars: 8x42 or 10x42 recommended for birding/wildlife. Higher magnification (10x50) for distant targets.
- Spotting Scope: For train numbers, distant wildlife, or detailed bird identification.
- Camera with Good Low-Light Performance: For documenting sightings in poor light.
- Warm Clothing: Night temperatures drop significantly.
🌅 Dusk/Dawn / Moderate Visibility:
- Binoculars: Highly recommended for birding and wildlife identification.
- Torch (optional): Useful for reading train numbers or finding your way.
- Camera: Standard equipment should work, but faster lenses help.
☀️ Daytime / Good Visibility:
- Binoculars: Still recommended for birding and wildlife, but not essential for trains.
- Camera: Standard equipment works well.
- Sunglasses: Protect your eyes, especially near water or snow.
Category-Specific Visibility Considerations:
- Birding: Dawn/dusk are peak activity times, but visibility is reduced. Binoculars essential. Night time (except for owls) is very poor.
- Wildlife: Nocturnal species (badgers, foxes, hedgehogs) are active at night - bring red light torch. Diurnal species (deer, seals) are best at dawn/dusk.
- Trains: Daytime is best. Night time makes reading train numbers difficult - bring powerful torch.
- MOD/Military: Daytime preferred. Night reduces confidence significantly (harder to spot aircraft visually).
- Stargazing: Requires complete darkness - daytime visibility is 0%. Visit dedicated pages for Planets, Moon phases, and Astronomical Events.
Remember: Our predictions show the opportunity for activity, but your ability to see and identify what's there depends on visibility conditions. Always check the visibility factor in your prediction details.
How accurate are predictions?
Accuracy varies by location and category:
- High confidence: 75-90% accurate (good weather data + strong historical patterns)
- Medium confidence: 60-75% accurate (some data available, moderate patterns)
- Low confidence: 45-60% accurate (limited data, new location, or unusual conditions)
We show confidence levels so you know how reliable each prediction is. Predictions improve over time as we collect more data and user feedback.
Tip: Locations with more historical data and user reports tend to be more accurate.
Why are scores different from other apps?
Most apps show "what's there now" — current activity, live aircraft, recent sightings. We show "when to go" — predictions for the best spotting opportunities.
Our scores combine:
- Future conditions (weather forecasts, not just current weather)
- Historical patterns (what usually happens at this time/location)
- Multiple data sources (weather + real-time + historical + location intelligence)
- Category-specific factors (different rules for birds vs aircraft vs stars)
This means our scores predict opportunity, not just current activity. A high score means "good conditions coming up" not just "something happening now."
How do I use this app?
1. Set your location: Tap "Use location" or search for a place. Predictions are location-specific.
2. Choose a category: Browse guides (MOD ranges, Birding, Wildlife, Stargazing, etc.) or see all opportunities on the home page. Stargazing includes dedicated pages for Planets, Moon, and Events.
3. Check predictions: Look for high scores (70%+) with high confidence. Tap "Why this score?" to see the breakdown.
4. Plan your session: Use "Best times today" to see hourly predictions. Arrive 10-15 minutes before peak times.
5. Report accuracy: After your session, let us know if the prediction was accurate. This helps improve future predictions.
Why don't I see activity when the score is high?
A high score means good conditions for spotting, not guaranteed activity. Factors that affect this:
- Weather: Excellent conditions increase chances, but don't guarantee activity
- Time: Peak hours have higher probability, but activity varies day-to-day
- Holidays: Military ranges are less active on holidays (we account for this)
- Unpredictable events: Weather delays, schedule changes, operational needs
Confidence levels help: High confidence = more reliable. Low confidence = less data, more uncertainty.
Think of scores as "chance of good conditions" rather than "guaranteed sightings." Even with perfect conditions, nature and operations can be unpredictable.
How can I improve predictions?
Report accuracy: After each session, tap "Was this accurate?" on predictions. Your feedback helps us learn.
Log your sessions: Use the Logbook to track what you see. This builds historical data for your locations.
Share sightings: Report what you spot (if available in your category). More data = better predictions.
Be patient: Predictions improve over time as we collect more data for your specific locations.
Check confidence: Focus on high-confidence predictions for more reliable results.
What's included in free vs Premium subscriptions?
SpottersGuide offers both free and Premium subscriptions. Here's what's included in each:
🆓 Free Tier:
- Core tools & all categories: Access to all spotting guides (MOD, Birding, Wildlife, Stargazing, Commercial, Trains)
- 20 logbook entries/month: Track your spotting sessions
- 7 days historical data: View predictions and activity from the past week
- Basic filters & maps: Standard search and filtering options
- Community features: Access to shared sightings and community content
- Basic predictions: Weather and activity-based predictions
⭐ Premium (Master Spotter) - £4.99/month or £49.99/year:
- Everything in Free, plus:
- Unlimited logbook entries: Track as many sessions as you want
- 30+ days historical data: Access extended historical data and patterns
- Advanced filters: Filter by type, squawk code, score, rarity, and more
- Heat maps & analytics: Visualize activity hotspots and spotting patterns
- Full live aircraft intel: Real-time aircraft tracking and identification
- Data export: Export your data in CSV/JSON formats
- MOD push alerts: Get notified of training activity
- Ad-free experience: Enjoy the app without interruptions
- Enhanced predictions: All 6 prediction factors with advanced ML insights
Save 17% with annual billing! Annual plans are £49.99/year vs £59.88 if paid monthly.
💡 Why Premium?
Premium features help serious spotters get the most out of their sessions. Real-time aircraft tracking, advanced analytics, and unlimited logging make it easier to find rare aircraft, track patterns, and improve your success rate. Heat maps show you exactly where the action is, and extended historical data helps you plan better.
What areas are covered?
SpottersGuide currently covers "Phase 2" regions, which includes:
- United Kingdom: England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland
- Ireland: Republic of Ireland
- Isle of Man
- Channel Islands: Jersey and Guernsey
This coverage includes predictions, location data, nature reserves, car parks, and all spotting categories within these regions.
Note: We're working on Phase 3 (worldwide coverage) but don't have a timeline yet. Some features (like stargazing car parks and nature reserves) may work globally through OpenStreetMap, but full prediction coverage is currently limited to Phase 2 regions.
What is the Heatmap feature? (Premium)
The Heatmap is a Premium feature that visualizes spotting activity and hotspots across the covered regions.
What it shows:
- Activity hotspots: Areas with high spotting activity (weighted by recency and frequency)
- Top hotspots: List of the most active locations with scores and details
- Category filtering: Filter by MOD, Wildlife, Birdspotting, Stargazing, Commercial, or Trains
- Visual heat: Color-coded map showing activity intensity (green = high activity)
- Sidebar details: Click hotspots to see scores, distances, and last activity
How to use it:
- Access via the "Heatmap" link in navigation (Premium subscribers only)
- Select a category tab to filter by spotting type
- Zoom and pan to explore different regions
- Click on hotspots in the sidebar to see details
- Use it to discover new spotting locations and understand activity patterns
The heatmap helps you find the best spots for spotting across the UK, Ireland, and Channel Islands. It's particularly useful for discovering new locations and understanding where activity is most concentrated.
Where does the data come from?
We use multiple trusted data sources to provide accurate predictions and information:
Data Sources:
- Weather: Official weather services and meteorological data
- MOD Activity: GOV.UK training schedules and NOTAMs (Notices to Airmen)
- Aircraft Tracking: Live ADS-B data from aircraft transponders
- Location Data: OpenStreetMap for car parks, nature reserves, and points of interest
- Historical Patterns: Aggregated user feedback and spotting history (anonymized)
- Stargazing: Astronomical data for moon phases, planet positions, and visibility. Dedicated pages available for Planets, Moon, and Events.
Privacy & Data Usage:
- Location: Your location is used to provide predictions for your area. We don't share individual location data.
- Feedback: Your feedback helps improve predictions for everyone. It's aggregated and anonymized.
- Logbook: Your logbook entries are private and only visible to you.
- No tracking: We don't sell your data or use it for advertising.
We're committed to transparency and privacy. All location data is processed to provide predictions and is not stored long-term or shared with third parties. Your feedback helps improve the system for everyone while maintaining your privacy.
How do I manage my subscription?
Managing your subscription is easy:
Upgrading:
- Visit the /subscribe page from the navigation
- Select Premium (£4.99/month or £49.99/year)
- Complete checkout through our secure payment system
- Premium features activate immediately after payment
Changing Billing:
- Monthly to Yearly: Cancel your monthly plan and subscribe to the yearly plan (saves 17%)
- Yearly to Monthly: Wait for your yearly plan to expire, then subscribe monthly
- We recommend yearly plans for the best value
Cancelling:
- You can cancel at any time from your account settings
- Monthly plans: Cancel before the next billing cycle to avoid charges
- Yearly plans: You keep access until the end of your paid period
- After cancellation, you'll revert to the free tier
- Your logbook and data remain, but Premium features become unavailable
Need help with your subscription? Contact us at helpdesk@spottersguide.co.uk
What are the limits for free vs Premium?
Here are the key limits for each tier:
📊 Free Tier Limits:
- Logbook entries: 20 entries per month (resets monthly)
- Historical data: Last 7 days only
- Feedback submissions: Once per week per location (prevents abuse, applies to all tiers)
- Features: Basic predictions, filters, and maps only
⭐ Premium Limits:
- Logbook entries: Unlimited
- Historical data: 30+ days (extended history)
- Feedback submissions: Once per week per location (same as free - protects our prediction engine)
- Features: All features unlocked
💡 Why Feedback Limits?
Feedback limits apply to everyone (free and Premium) to protect our prediction engine from abuse. We limit feedback to once per week per location because:
- It prevents spam or malicious feedback that could corrupt our ML models
- It ensures feedback represents genuine spotting sessions, not test clicks
- It helps maintain prediction accuracy for all users
- One feedback per location per week is sufficient for legitimate use
What is the MOD Portal and how does it work?
The MOD Portal is a Premium feature that provides real-time bombing range activity detection and tracking across all UK military training ranges.
How It Works:
- 5-minute scans: Every 5 minutes, the system scans all military aircraft in UK airspace to detect training activity
- 3-tier radius system: Each bombing range has inner (red) and outer (yellow) radius zones for accurate detection
- Status detection: QUIET → MONITORING → ACTIVE → TRAINING based on aircraft proximity, altitude, speed, and flight patterns
- Altitude filtering: High-altitude activity (refueling, transit) is distinguished from low-altitude bombing range training
- Confidence scores: Each range receives a 0-100% confidence score based on multiple detection factors
Status Meanings:
- QUIET: No aircraft activity detected near this bombing range
- MONITORING: Aircraft approaching range (heading aligned, ETA <45min)
- ACTIVE: Training pattern detected — aircraft inside/near range showing training behavior
- TRAINING: Strong evidence of active range training activity (low altitude, patterns, speed)
Recent Improvements:
- Faster updates: Scans now run every 5 minutes (was 15 minutes) for more responsive tracking
- Improved decay: Confidence scores decay at 4% per 5 minutes (was 3%) to reflect rapid aircraft movement
- Accuracy enhancements: Confidence is capped at 30% when no aircraft are detected, preventing misleading "MONITORING" statuses
- Skip redundant writes: System skips unnecessary database writes when no activity is detected, improving efficiency
- Military futuristic theme: Redesigned interface with HUD-style displays for better readability and visual appeal
Using the MOD Portal:
- Access via /mod-portal (Premium subscribers only)
- View radar board to see all ranges at a glance
- Tap any range dot to drill down and see detailed scan history
- Use filters to show ranges only, or include RAF bases
- Tap confidence meters to flip between current score and change/delta values
- Check the INFO page for detailed explanations of how everything works
The MOD Portal is designed for serious military aircraft spotters who need real-time, accurate information about training activity. It's the only system in the world that provides this level of bombing range activity detection.
What are Spotter Car Parks and how do I use them?
Spotter Car Parks are verified, dedicated parking locations specifically for aircraft spotters at RAF bases, MOD ranges, and military airfields across the UK.
Features:
- Verified locations: All car parks are verified for safety, accessibility, and suitability for spotting
- Detailed information: Each car park includes address, coordinates, parking notes, and safety information
- Intel sheets: Tap any car park to see detailed information including directions to Google Maps
- Safety notes: Important safety information and access guidelines for each location
- Distance-based: Shows car parks near your location or UK-wide if location is disabled
Using Spotter Car Parks:
- Access via /mod-training/car-parks from the MOD Activity page
- Car parks are automatically sorted by distance from your location
- Tap any car park card to open the detailed intel sheet
- Use the "Directions" button to get turn-by-turn navigation via Google Maps
- Always check safety notes before visiting any location
Safety & Access:
- Curated list: Only verified, safe locations are included (no user submissions to prevent unsafe locations)
- Respect private property: Always follow parking notes and respect surrounding areas
- Stay safe: Read safety notes carefully - some locations have specific requirements or restrictions
- No trespassing: All car parks are public access areas - never enter restricted military property
Spotter Car Parks help you find safe, legal parking locations for military aircraft spotting. We maintain a curated list to ensure safety and accuracy. If you know of a verified spotter car park that should be added, contact us at helpdesk@spottersguide.co.uk.
How do I report issues or give feedback?
We love feedback! Here's how to reach us:
- Email: helpdesk@spottersguide.co.uk
- In-app: Use the "Was this accurate?" buttons on predictions
- Logbook: Add notes to your entries — we review feedback regularly
Whether it's a bug, feature request, or accuracy feedback, we read everything and use it to improve the app.
