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Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Jackson, KY
Issued by NWS Jackson, KY
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572 FXUS63 KJKL 230005 AAA AFDJKL AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED National Weather Service Jackson KY 705 PM EST Sat Feb 22 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - A significant warming trend will last through mid-week, with most places forecast to top 60 degrees on Wednesday. - A cold front is forecast to move through Wednesday night with our next good shot at rain (50-60% probability), followed by a modest downturn in temperatures. && .UPDATE... Issued at 640 PM EST SAT FEB 22 2025 23Z sfc analysis shows high pressure centered just south of Kentucky and this is keeping the winds light and variable. The earlier sunshine, that helped warm temperatures from chilly morning lows, was impacted by a deck of clouds arriving around 7k feet AGL. This band has not been well captured by the models and had to be moved through the forecast grids manually into the late evening hours. Temperatures are currently varying from the low 30s north to the lower 40s in the far southeast. Meanwhile, dewpoints are generally in the upper teens and low 20s. Have updated the forecast principally to add in the latest obs and trends for the T/Td/Sky grids. These minor adjustments have been sent to the NDFD and web servers. && .SHORT TERM...(This evening through Sunday night) Issued at 235 PM EST SAT FEB 22 2025 Above freezing temperatures have finally returned to most of eastern Kentucky this afternoon! Thermometers are registering values in the mid 30s in the north to the lower and middle 40s over the south after being below freezing since last Sunday/Monday for most locations. The sunshine has been filtered by fairly extensive mid- level cloud cover at times. The thickest cloud cover at mid- afternoon is over the Upper Cumberland Basin and is actually generating some weak returns on radar. While the low-level air mass is dry, and no precipitation has yet been reported, a few sprinkles or flurries could be occurring with this activity. Today`s cloud cover is due to a positively-tilted shortwave trough current crossing the Lower Ohio and Lower Tennessee Valleys. This shortwave will continue to propagate eastward late this afternoon and evening with areas of mid-level cloud cover. While this system is moisture-starved, cannot entirely rule out a trace of precipitation over the Upper Cumberland River basin this afternoon (ie. in the vicinity of places such as Williamsburg, Middlesboro, and Harlan). As the shortwave pulls away this evening, heights will generally rise. A relatively thin mid-level cloud deck is noted in the wake of the shortwave where 850mb CAA is occurring under 700mb WAA but these clouds not well captured by the model guidance. In general, anticipate this cloud deck to shift eastward and further thin/diminish as an weak forcing wanes. As a result, expect patchy mid-level clouds to wane tonight over eastern Kentucky while surface high pressure becomes re- established over the Central/Southern Appalachians and lingers overhead on Sunday. Another moisture-starved upper level disturbance crosses eastern Kentucky Sunday evening/night with another uptick in mid-to-high cloud cover but no precipitation. In sensible terms, look for partly sunny to mostly cloudy skies through the remaining daylight hours with late afternoon highs in the 36F to 46F degree range outside of Big Black Mountain. A few sprinkles or a few flakes are possible through 5 PM EST southeast of an imaginary line from Whitesburg-to-Corbin-to-Whitley City. This will give way to a seasonably chilly and partly cloudy night with lows ranging from the mid 10s in colder valleys to the mid 20s on thermal belt ridges. On Sunday, mostly sunny skies prevail, sending temperatures soaring into the mid and upper 40s. A few more clouds return for at least the first half of Sunday night, before skies trend mostly clear. Expect temperatures to settle back into the lower 20s valleys to upper 20s ridges. .LONG TERM...(Monday through Saturday) Issued at 335 PM EST SAT FEB 22 2025 The long-term period will feature a progressive weather pattern with several relatively weak and moisture-starved systems. Multiple days of primarily southwesterly flow will continue our warming trend to well above normal temperatures through Wednesday after which temperatures get knocked back down closer to normal for late in the work week. Another quick warmup is anticipated heading into next weekend. The 22/12z model suite analysis beginning Monday morning shows upper-level heights rebounding slightly as surface high pressure ridging extends from the Western Gulf Coast northeastward to across the Central Appalachians and beyond to off the coast of Nova Scotia. The ridging will be short-lived however as another upper level disturbance drops southeast from western Canada into the Great Lakes on Monday Night and early Tuesday, dropping a weak cold front into the Eastern Kentucky Coalfields. With very little available moisture, anticipate little more than an increase in cloud cover. Max PoPs with this system range from around 15% far northeast to around 5% near Lake Cumberland. Shortwave ridging aloft and surface high pressure nudging in from the south bring placid conditions Tuesday night and Wednesday morning. A more substantial system, a weak clipper low from the Montanan/Albertan prairies, then dives into the Great Lakes by Wednesday afternoon/evening. The aforementioned weak cold front will lift back north as a warm front as this low approaches, allowing the highest moisture of the period (PWATs surging toward 1 inch) to briefly return. There will also be some synoptic scale lifting from the left exit region of a 300 mb jet streak passing through the Deep South. This system brings the greatest opportunity for rainfall during the entire forecast period -- 50 to 60 PoP for most locations -- on Wednesday evening/night. Widespread rainfall amounts on the order of 0.1 to 0.25 inches are currently forecast. Reasonable high-end scenarios (90th percentile of the LREF) are generally around 0.5 inch and ensemble maximum values are up to ~1.0 inch. This should not be enough rainfall to cause any notable hydro issues. The system`s trailing cold front works its way through the area Wednesday night and should be clear of our CWA by around sunrise Thursday. Temperatures will drop off noticeably once the front passes as mean LREF 850mb temperatures fall from 5 to 7C ahead of the boundary to -1 to -3C in the wake of the boundary on Thursday. Another quick-moving disturbance originating high in northwest Canada then dives southeast toward the Great Lakes and sweeps a reinforcing cold front across eastern Kentucky on Thursday night. Temperatures behind this front may become marginally cold enough to support a tad of upslope snow or "snizzle" by Friday morning, primarily over higher elevations. Any accumulation should be minimal to nil. Heights start to spring back up by late Friday as that disturbance departs only to fall once again on Saturday as a stronger clipper low dives out of northwestern Canada and into the Great Lakes on Saturday. Milder air surges back into eastern Kentucky on Saturday but much of the guidance suggests that we will receive only a glancing nudge from this system in the form of a dry or mostly dry cold front and only modest drop in temperatures. In sensible terms, look for mostly sunny skies and temperatures rising into the lower and middle 50s on Monday. Cloud cover becomes a little more widespread Monday night and Tuesday morning with milder lows in the 30s for most spots. Any stray light showers on Tuesday morning(more probable northeast) give way to increasing amounts of sunshine and once again warm temperatures with highs in the upper 50s to lower 60s for most locales. Continued mild temperatures can be expected under partly cloudy skies on Tuesday night and Wednesday with lows in the 30s and highs in the low/mid 60s, respectively. The threat for a wetting rain returns late Wednesday and persists in to early Thursday with temperatures settling back into the upper 30s to lower 40s. Cooler conditions with periodic rain and higher elevation snow chances follow later Thursday night and Friday. Daytime maximum temperatures retreat to the 45 to 55F range while nighttime lows fall to near freezing. Looking ahead of Saturday, temperatures surge back to above normal levels in the 50s to around 60 under partial sunshine after morning lows in the 30s. && .AVIATION...(For the 00Z TAFS through 00Z Sunday evening) ISSUED AT 705 PM EST SAT FEB 22 2025 VFR conditions will hold through the period. A deck of clouds at ~7K ft AGL is crossing the area this evening amid some clouds at 10k. With no model support for their presence, forecaster confidence is low on how well those lower clouds hold together. For now have allowed them to move through eastern Kentucky into the first part of the night. Any residual mid-level cloud cover should gradually yield to more sustained clearing on Sunday. Winds will be less than 10 kts through the period. && .JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NONE. && $$ UPDATE...GREIF SHORT TERM...GEERTSON LONG TERM...GEERTSON AVIATION...GEERTSON/GREIF