The wind is allways the way it is blowing from not to.Check out the link below and it will explain how to read a METAR repart.
http://www.met.tamu.edu/class/METAR/quick-metar.html And you will want to land and take off from a runway that is facing the wind as much as possiable. so in your case use runway 100 because a 10 degree wind means in order to head into the wind you will have to face allmost due south. Rember the runway number tells you which way you will face so runways 10 and 1 would have you facing allmost due north which means the wind will be behind you not in front of you. For runway 25 you would have a cross wind and have to figure out if there is to much of a tail wind factor. 8-)
I'm lost, but nevertheless I understood some of the stuff you've said :) Thanks for that !
However, I just realized that my previous answer was wrong concerning the number of the runway: I forgot that the last digit of the direction is not written on the runway
Soooo.... the wind comes from 10 degrees cap, that is, almost North (which is 0 degrees, or more commonly, 360 degrees).
You must face the wind to land or takeoff.
So you must take a runway which is facing the wind.
If the wind comes from 10 degrees, you must be on a runway which is as close at 10 degrees as possible. In your case, this is runway 1 (meaning 10 degrees).
What is said above, about using runway 100, is wrong:
- there is no runway 100, only two digits ;)
- maybe you wanted to say "runway 10", which is oriented at 100 degrees, that is almost facing EAST -> this would make you land/takeoff at full crosswinds :/
- you said that you needed a runway heading south... you would go in the same direction as the wind, not facing it. This is dangerous as you would need a much greater landing/takeoff speed.
Facing a wind which comes from 10 degrees direction means using runway 1.