Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Wilmington, OH

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627
FXUS61 KILN 171831
AFDILN

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Wilmington OH
231 PM EDT Thu Jul 17 2025

.SYNOPSIS...
Stalled frontal boundary draped across the upper Ohio Valley will
result in episodic shower and thunderstorm activity today and through
the weekend. While storms may be strong to severe at times, the
repeated rounds of efficient rainfall will increase the potential for
flooding, especially as we progress into the weekend.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
Coverage in showers and thunderstorms beginning to increase this
afternoon with the help of diurnal heating. Cold frontal boundary is
currently draped around the I-71 corridor, with majority of
convection expected SE of this interstate. Moderate MLCAPE values of
1000-1500 J/kg have developed, but overall shear values remain
marginal at best. This will result in mainly single cell or mult-cell
clusters today, with damaging straight-line winds being the primary
severe threat. However, DCAPE values appear to remain capped at
~700-900 J/kg, so the downburst environment isn`t overly impressive.
Thus, severe storm potential will be limited, but a handful of
storms may still produce localized gusts of 40-50 mph.

The primary concern with these storms will shift to flash flood
potential. Synoptic/mesoscale environment remains conducive to
flooding through this period, along with the next couple of days
given the quasi-statoinary front, humid air mass, anomalous PWATs of
1.75"-2.00" and the signal for repeated rounds of thunderstorms.
Locations that receive multiple rounds of storms will have their
soils primed to shorten the amount of rainfall needed to cause flash
flooding. Best flooding potential for this period will be through the
late evening hours, although this threat still remains fairly
isolated today.

A bit of a lull in convective activity is expected during the middle
of the night, but there is a signal in CAMs to show a complex of
storms developing near the Tristate region early Friday morning.

&&

.SHORT TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/...
Complex of storms expected near/south of the OH River Friday morning
as the cold front sinks southward. Eventually, this boundary will
stall near or just south of the river and remain there for majority
of the daytime hours. This will result in a relative minimum in
convective activity for our CWA. However, keep in mind that isolated
showers/storms may still develop during the daytime hours, but
coverage should be lower. Daytime highs trend a couple degrees
cooler in the lower to middle 80s.

The quasi-stationary boundary will begin to shift back northward as
a warm front Friday night. This will bring renewed chances for
shower and thunderstorm activity, especially near the Ohio River. Severe
storms are not expected Friday night, but we will have to keep an
eye on any training storms or efficient rainfall over hard hit areas.

&&

.LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/...
Extended period starts with pretty good ensemble agreement of high
convective precip potential and PWs at 2.0+ Sigma anomalies/above
the 99th percentile across much of the area, creating a more focused
flood threat through the weekend. Where the uncertainties lie are
where any MCS activity sets up/tracks, as this would affect latter
convective system initiation and further prime ground conditions
for additional rounds of convection.

While Saturday begins with overall zonal flow, ridging across the
southern plains sets the region up for NW flow and, combining with
the high PWATs, sets up a ridge rider pattern with the potential for
bouts of repeated heavy rain. Still fairly modest confidence in
where this sets up. While potential for localized flooding and some
areas of flash flooding exists area-wide, current thinking is the
greatest risk will be especially across IN/Southern Ohio/Northern KY
Saturday and Sunday.

While Monday could bring a relative lull in convective activity with
the convective focus further south of the Ohio River, still
potential for at least scattered showers and storms especially
across the southern forecast area.

Beyond Monday, increasing convergence on a ridge building solution
with 590+ H5 heights pushing into the forecast area, which could
increase heat indices toward 100 in the Tue/Wed timeframe.

&&

.AVIATION /19Z THURSDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/...
Thunderstorms will develop during the day. Vsbys will be reduced at
times with the thunderstorms. Additional thunderstorms will be
possible near the end of TAF period. MVFR cigs will be possible at
times, especially at the end of the TAF period.

OUTLOOK...Thunderstorms are likely through Monday.

&&

.ILN WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
OH...Flood Watch until midnight EDT tonight for OHZ073-074-077>082-088.
KY...Flood Watch until midnight EDT tonight for KYZ089>100.
IN...Flood Watch until midnight EDT tonight for INZ075-080.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...Clark
NEAR TERM...Clark
SHORT TERM...Clark
LONG TERM...JDR
AVIATION...Clark