Your favorites:

Chenoa, Kentucky Weather Forecast Discussion

134
FXUS63 KJKL 061940
AFDJKL

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Jackson KY 340 PM EDT Mon Oct 6 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

- A cold front will bring an area of showers and perhaps some thunderstorms to the area Tuesday and Tuesday night, followed by cooler weather to finish the week.

- There is a slight risk of excessive rainfall Tue through Tue night, with isolated amounts of 2 to 3 inches of rain possible if storms move repeatedly over the same areas.

- Cooler and dry conditions are expected from Wednesday afternoon through the weekend.

&&

.SHORT TERM...(This evening through Tuesday night) Issued at 340 PM EDT MON OCT 6 2025

As of mid afternoon, an upper level ridge was centered along portions of the eastern seaboard while the axis of an upper level trough extended from Hudson Bay into the Northern Plains to Great Basin region. At the surface, high pressure was centered off the coast of New England and extended back toward the Southern Appalachians while a sfc frontal zone extended from Quebec to the Great lakes to Southern Plains to Four Corners region. Return flow in between these two systems was ushering much more moisture air into the OH and TN Valley, with PW analyzed in the 1.3 to 1.65 inch range from east to west across the JKL CWA with PW analyzed near or in excess of 2 inches from far western KY south through the MS Valley. Temperatures were mild across the region at 3 PM EDT, generally in the upper 70s to mid 80s. Some cumulus have developed across the region with some mid and high clouds also passing overhead.

The upper level trough axis is expected to advance to Ontario to the Upper MS valley to parts of the Central Plains/Four Corners by early on Tuesday. Moisture will continue to advect into the Commonwealth and spread from west to east. On Tuesday, the axis of the upper trough should advance to the Ontario/Quebec border to the Great Lakes to mid MS Valley with this trough axis moving to a Quebec to Lake Ontario to Lower OH Valley line late Tuesday night. The preceding cold front will approach the lower OH Valley tonight and cross western KY and move into central KY by late Tuesday evening and then across eastern KY during the overnight hours Tuesday night.

Moisture advection into the region will allow for PW peaking in the 1.6 to 1.9 inch range ahead of the front Tuesday afternoon into portions of Tuesday night. These values are above the the percentile climatologically and not far from the record values for October 7th. Instability will be limited, but isolated to scattered storms are possible near and in advance of the front. 12Z HREF LPMM rainfall ranges from the 0.50 to 0.75 inch range in some of the rainshadowed areas downwind of Pine and Black Mtns to as much as 2 to 3 inches in some areas nearer to Lake Cumberland and north of the Mtn Parkway. Guidance varies with some of the max amounts and locally higher totals of 4 to 6 inches were present in a narrow corridor along sections of I-64 in the Bluegrass region. 3 hour 12Z HREF max rainfall across parts of the Commonwealth reach as high as 2 to 3 inches while 6 hour 12z HREF max rainfall values are a tad higher. If thunderstorms trained or moved repeatedly over an area the high end values could be realized and would be near FFG values in some places, leading to a risk of high water and flash flooding. In general, much of the region has been dry over the past week or more and the residence time of the higher PW airmass in eastern KY will be less than in central KY and would appear to be a limiting factor or at least lead to less than average confidence at this time range. The potential for heavy rain is highlighted in the HWO and the key messages above and will also be highlighted in Weatherstory posts on social media and the JKL webpage.

Temperatures will remain mild tonight with increasing clouds and moisture as well as areas of showers arriving from the west. The clouds and convection will result in cooler and nearer to normal high temperatures on Tuesday as compared to what has been observed over the past few days. Tuesday night will be rather mild as well with anticipated cloud cover, convection, and the front passing. However, colder and drier air will be ushered in behind the front.

.LONG TERM...(Wednesday through Monday) Issued at 250 PM EDT MON OCT 6 2025

Showers/thunderstorms end late Tuesday night into early Wednesday morning as a cold front and upper trough move across from the west and northwest. This will leave us with west-northwest flow aloft and surface high pressure passing east over the Great Lakes on Wednesday, sending us noticeably cooler and drier air.

Multiple shortwave troughs are expected to move southeast in the flow aloft late in the week and consolidate into a complex upper low next weekend somewhere over the Central Appalachians and Mid- Atlantic regions, with the ECMWF and GFS in generally good agreement. Along with this, there is development of a coastal surface low that moves up the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic coastline while remaining offshore, perhaps taking on some subtropical characteristics. Regardless, the new scenario favors precip being confined to areas to our east. Thus, after Wednesday morning PoPs remain generally at or below 10 percent through the duration of the period.

&&

.AVIATION...(For the 18Z TAFS through 18Z Tuesday afternoon) ISSUED AT 158 PM EDT MON OCT 6 2025

VFR conditions are expected to prevail for the first 12 to 15 hours of the period. However, an area of showers associated with an approaching cold front should begin to begin to arrive from the northwest by the 06Z to 12Z timeframe and could result in MVFR conditions northwest of a KSJS to KJKL to KSME line which may affect KSYM before 12Z. The area of showers and perhaps some embedded storms should move further southeast into the area between 12Z and 18Z and is forecast to bring MVFR to all the TAF sites to end the period. Winds will generally be light and variable through tonight and then become south to southwest at 10KT or less to end the period.

&&

.JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.

&&

$$

SHORT TERM...JP LONG TERM...CMC/HAL AVIATION...JP

NWS JKL Office Area Forecast Discussion

WeatherForYou.com, LLC is not responsible for any damages or problems caused by this service. Some weather information is powered by XWeather. WeatherForYou.com, NOAA, Xweather and their data providers disclaim liability of any kind whatsoever, including, without limitation, liability for quality, performance, merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose arising out of the use or inability to use the data. Like all things, this site belongs to Jesus Christ... He just trusts us to maintain it. If you have any questions or comments please use the suggestion box.

Copyright © 1999 - 2025, WeatherForYou.com LLC. All rights reserved.