


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Louisville, KY
Issued by NWS Louisville, KY
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014 FXUS63 KLMK 181823 AFDLMK Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Louisville KY 223 PM EDT Mon Aug 18 2025 ...Updated Aviation Discussion... .KEY MESSAGES... * Hot and humid today and Tuesday. Heat index values of 100-105 are likely mainly along and west of the I-65 corridor. * A cold front will likely bring relief from the heat, along with increasing thunderstorm chances, by the middle of the week. * Below normal temps on the horizon, expected by late this coming weekend. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... Issued at 300 AM EDT Mon Aug 18 2025 Pretty quiet morning across the area with some variable upper sky cover and a few patches of fog. Most of the fog should stay contained to the river valleys, but will continue monitor through the early morning. Upper ridging extends eastward and establishes more in our region today. As a result, looking for a hot and dry day with max temps surging into the low and mid 90s for many. Skies should be mostly sunny, with the only slightly limiting factor for max heating being a light NE surface wind. Won`t give those light winds much credit, and went between the 50-90th percentile NBM for most locations. Dew points will be highest (low to mid 70s) west of I-65 and this is where we could yield a few hours of max heat indices around 105 this afternoon. Decided to go ahead with a Heat Advisory headline along and west of a line from Scottsville, KY up through Jasper, IN. Will have to keep an eye on our NW CWA this afternoon where some lingering surface convergence along a boundary may exist. Forecast models mostly suggest any activity would be NW of our area across the Wabash River Valley and into northern IL. As a result, will keep a dry forecast going but will also monitor that boundary. Overnight tonight also looks quiet. Looking for more mild conditions with lows bottoming out in the upper 60s and low 70s for most. Will have more potential for fog, perhaps a bit more widespread east of I- 65. && .LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... Issued at 300 AM EDT Mon Aug 18 2025 Tuesday - Thursday... Upper ridging will begin to lose a bit of influence over our area by Tuesday as shortwave energy and a weak surface low move through the Great Lakes region. Looks like we stay warm and dry for most of the day ahead of an approaching cold front, but do like the idea of isolated to widely scattered shower and storm chances across our NW CWA by Tuesday PM, especially the evening hours. Given the expected mostly dry or dry conditions through peak heating Tuesday, we should see another hot afternoon with max T`s in the low to mid 90s. Best chance for dew points above 70F will be along and west of I-65, where some 100 to 105 max heat indices will be possible. Chance for a Heat Advisory headline somewhere across our western third to half of the CWA, but will likely take a wait and see approach as values look fairly marginal for a headline. Any t-storms developing early could also play spoiler, but again expecting development to be fairly late in the day. The shortwave pushes into New England by Wednesday, with the weak cold front trailing into our region by this time. This will likely continue to serve as a triggering mechanism across our area, carrying over from Tuesday PM. Will continue to carry scattered chances for the whole CWA on Wednesday. Overall, deep layer shear looks to be very weak both days, so not expecting any organized severe threat. Bigger concern would be locally gusty winds from collapsing storms, and high rainfall amounts given efficient rainfall and slow storm movement. The good news is that this feature does provide some "relief from the heat as highs settle back down into the upper 80s and low 90s. The frontal boundary is slow to move through, but should be mostly dry across the area by Thursday. A few showers and storm chances will have to continue across our SE CWA closer to the front, but overall not as active as Wednesday. Looking for highs mostly in the upper 80s by this time as we are more established on the "cooler" side of the boundary. Friday - Sunday... The Friday forecast should be fairly similar to Thursday as we continue to hold onto some small shower and storm chances across our SE CWA both from the stalled frontal boundary hanging up down there, and from a very weak mid level disturbance hanging out across the TN/mid MS River Valley. By Saturday and Sunday, broad troughing looks to envelope much of the eastern CONUS, helping to drag a secondary and much more effective cool front through our region. Possible that we see a few showers or storms ahead of this feature as it passes, but overall it looks to be a fairly quiet fropa, with the benefit of cooler temps behind it. By Sunday, highs look to top out in the low to mid 80s. Sunday morning lows should feel nice in the low and mid 60s for most. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z WEDNESDAY/... Issued at 221 PM EDT Mon Aug 18 2025 VFR conditions are expected through most of the forecast period. For the rest of today, few to scattered cumulus will last into the evening before clear skies return tonight. Winds will continue to be on the lighter side, but somewhat variable. Tomorrow morning, light fog is possible with the best chances being at RGA. && .LMK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... KY...Heat Advisory until 7 PM CDT this evening for KYZ023-026-061- 070>073. IN...Heat Advisory until 8 PM EDT /7 PM CDT/ this evening for INZ083-089. && $$ SHORT TERM...BJS LONG TERM...BJS AVIATION...KDW