


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Wilmington, OH
Issued by NWS Wilmington, OH
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435 FXUS61 KILN 171425 AFDILN Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Wilmington OH 1025 AM EDT Sat May 17 2025 .SYNOPSIS... Low pressure will track through the Great Lakes and a trailing cold front will push through the area this morning. In the wake of this front drier, cooler, and breezy conditions will be observed today. High pressure building across the Ohio Valley will offer dry weather and near normal temperatures Sunday. Rain chances increase toward mid week as an upper level low tracks across the area. && .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 PM THIS EVENING/... Cold front bisecting the area will continue east through the day. A narrow line of showers has developed along the front. These showers will mainly impact parts of central Ohio. Skies will be partly to mostly cloud. Gusty winds will persist. Forecast highs look reasonable. && .SHORT TERM /6 PM THIS EVENING THROUGH 6 PM SUNDAY/... The low will track east into southeast Canada and New England overnight with a northwest flow developing. Surface high pressure will begin to nose into the southwest late tonight and across the region Sunday. Winds will decrease and cumulus clouds will give way to partial clearing with some high level clouds spilling into the area overnight. Lows tonight to drop into the lower and middle 50s. Under the influence of high pressure expect more sunshine on Sunday. This will lead to warmer temperatures with highs near normal between 70 and 75. && .LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/... On Mon, upper level ridging in the region will see s/w energy top the ridge and then slide se in the mean nw flow. These storms are likely to affect sw CWA early in the day. NAM is showing a w-e stationary front over CWA as a focus for thunderstorms to develop and track east during the day, affecting nrn CWA. NAM is the outlier attm and the early sw storm threat has been carried by a few models through the past several model runs. Overnight, the ridge axis crosses the region and storms enter wrn CWA before daybreak, firing along a nwd moving warm front. This front sets the stage for a surface low to track ene overnight Tue, from near Louisville in the evening to near Pittsburgh by daybreak. Widespread thunderstorm activity is expected over the CWA during this time. A l/w upper trough passes east through the Ohio Valley early Wed, and cooler northerly flow behind it could promote some cold pool instability showers on Wed, which appears to be over- forecast. Again, the over-done precip forecast lingers overnight, where any showers during the day should end before nightfall for a relatively dry overnight period. The trend is shown, but decreasing chances through time is not the likely end result - any showers should cease relatively quickly with nightfall. This trend of putting pops in where a dry forecast is more likely continues through Thurs evening. Although there is a good upper s/w crossing the CWA, the dry post- frontal airmass will overpower any cold air overturning on Thurs. Even if it didn`t, having pops should only be relegated to the few hours of max heating and be closer to the upper low - ne CWA. This daytime peak with pops persist on Fri and Sat, spurred what looks to be entirely CAA processes. At best, a few sprinkles or a light afternoon shower should be the worst of the weather starting on Thursday and lasting through the end of the fcst. Highs in the upper 60s-low 70s Mon will drop to the 60s on Tue and linger there for Wed. On Thurs after nw flow sets up, highs will only be around 60, then moderate to the mid 60s Fri and upper 60s Sat. Lows in the upper 40s-low 50s will be found through Tues night, then drop to the upper 40s Wed night and mid 40s Thurs night. By Fri night, temps will moderate some and drop to near 50 with building heights. && .AVIATION /14Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... Mid and upper level low pressure to track thru the Great Lakes today. A trailing surface cold front moving into western Ohio will push through the region this morning. Expect only a short period of mid level clouds with this front - mainly across the northern TAF sites. In developing CAA in the wake of a cold front, expect gusty west winds in the 25 to 30 knot range during the day and allow scattered to broken VFR cumulus clouds through the day. The winds and cumulus clouds will dissipate as we head into this evening. OUTLOOK...No significant weather expected. && .ILN WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OH...None. KY...None. IN...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...AR NEAR TERM... SHORT TERM...AR LONG TERM...Franks AVIATION...AR