209 FXUS63 KJKL 230550 AFDJKLAREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Jackson KY 150 AM EDT Tue Sep 23 2025
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms are expected through the week.
- While this rain will largely be beneficial in alleviating dry conditions, it could also lead to isolated flash flooding, especially on Wednesday.
- Another potential for thunderstorms with strong winds exists on Wednesday.
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.UPDATE... Issued at 1150 PM EDT MON SEP 22 2025
Grids were freshened up based on recent radar and observation trends. Showers and some embedded storms should continue moving across the region overnight in advance of an approaching shortwave trough. Temperatures should move little from current values overnight with the rainfall and cloud cover.
UPDATE Issued at 815 PM EDT MON SEP 22 2025
Initial stronger convection has moved off into WV with a linger outflow boundary moving into the far southeastern portions of the CWA. Additional areas of showers with some embedded thunder linger back to the west. Where the outflow boundary and convection has passed temperatures have dropped off into the 60s. Pops as well as hourly temperatures and dewpoints have been updated based on recent observation, radar, and convective allowing model trends.
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.SHORT TERM...(This evening through Tuesday night) Issued at 500 PM EDT MON SEP 22 2025
A large, elongated, positively tilted upper level trough stretches from Quebec southwest across the north central CONUS late today. On the southern side of this trough there is a shortwave trough traveling eastward through the mid Mississippi and lower Ohio valleys. It is promoting convective development as it approaches, especially with daytime heating/destabilization which has occurred. The combination of modest shear (near 40 kts of flow at mid levels in our northern counties) and pockets of decent instability (1500-2000 J/KG) is resulting in some strong storms organizing over central KY late today. These pose a risk of localized damaging winds as they move into the JKL forecast area this evening. The severe wx threat should lessen as heat/instability eventually wanes this evening. A resurgence of non-severe thunderstorms is possible overnight into Tuesday morning as the shortwave trough continues to approach. There is also a potential for multiple occurrences of storms to bring locally heavy rainfall. While recent dry weather should mitigate the overall flooding threat, won`t rule out some hydro issues where the heaviest rainfall totals occur.
It`s unclear how things will play out on Tuesday. While any morning activity would tend to inhibit destabilization, there is potential for enough recovery for a diurnal increase. This again should be on the decline in the evening. The upper trough is expected to deepen and become somewhat more longitudinal on Tuesday night. Models show this supporting deepening of a surface low just west of KY. This would increase our lower level warm/moist advection, with an increase in POP resulting overnight.
.LONG TERM...(Wednesday through Monday) Issued at 755 PM EDT Mon Sep 22 2025
Active, wet weather is expected to continue for the first half the long term forecast period across Eastern Kentucky. The forecast guidance suite collectively resolves longwave troughing over the Eastern CONUS through Friday before the pattern shifts and model solutions begins to diverge. As various disturbances rotate around this parent troughing feature, multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms appear likely to impact the region. That activity is poised to give the Greater Ohio River Valley some highly beneficial rainfall, although some of these storms could be on the stronger side. Likewise, the cumulative nature of the rainfall could lead to some hydrological concerns by the end of the work week. Headed into the weekend, guidance generally points towards synoptics that would advect a cooler and drier continental airmass into the area. As the early-period pattern breaks down, a cutoff/closed upper level low is expected to emerge over the Gulf Coast. The latest deterministic model runs have moved closer to a consensus regarding the positioning of said low on Saturday, but continue to struggle to resolve the amount of moisture wrapping around this feature early next week. Thus, confidence in the forecast is much lower for Sunday and beyond.
When the period opens on Wednesday morning, the aforementioned troughing is expected to be in a deepening phase. The forecast area will be positioned to the east of this positively-tilted trough axis, and this set-up favors cyclogenesis in the Ohio River Valley. A surface low pressure system is expected to develop and then move northeast as the day progresses. The system`s warm front is expected to lift north that morning, producing an initial round of rainfall. Likely PoPs continue into Wednesday afternoon/evening, and some of this rain is likely to be accompanied by thunder as temperatures warm into at least the upper 70s. Questions linger regarding the amount of available instability for storms in this time frame, as it is uncertain whether or not temperatures will warm further into the 80s behind that warm front. Antecedent cloud coverage from the morning activity could mitigate the thermodynamic environment for stronger storms, although shear parameters look more favorable. The LREF joint probabilities for favorable MUCAPE/bulk shear parameters are currently in the 30-45% range on Wednesday afternoon/evening across northern/western portions of the forecast area. Mean bulk shear values of 30-35 knots would support a damaging wind gust threat if enough instability is realized and frontal forcing could allow for the development of multicellular clusters or a QLCS. With a warm front nearby, we will also need to monitor the potential for localized low-level shear enhancement. The Storm Prediction Center has outlined most of the forecast area in a Marginal (Level 1/5) Risk for severe thunderstorms on Wednesday, but noted that the risk appears conditional due to these mesoscale uncertainties. As higher- resolution models begin to provide more detailed insight into this set up, confidence in details related to timing/coverage/hazard types will increase. Interests are accordingly encouraged to stay tuned to future forecast updates, especially because the evolution of Wednesday`s event will play a role in Thursday`s forecast.
Shower and thunderstorm chances will persist into Thursday as the aforementioned features propagate eastward. The LREF joint probabilities for convective parameters are slightly higher (35-50%) on Thursday afternoon in places along/south of the KY-80/Hal Rogers Parkway corridor relative to the previously-discussed Wednesday probs. Damaging wind gusts would be the primary threat with any storms that take advantage of 30-35 knots of shear and frontal forcing, but compounding uncertainties preclude the mention of specific severe weather outlook details at this moment in time. Thursday generally looks cooler than Wednesday, with afternoon highs in the low to mid 70s and plenty of cloud cover in the sky. This will likely limit instability across the area relative to Wednesday, but the better frontal forcing will arrive on Thursday. Furthermore, a remnant outflow boundary or a differential heating boundary could serve as a focal point for convective initiation on Thursday. The currently-available model guidance is too coarse to pick up on these finer details, and this forecast is likely to change as higher- resolution data comes in.
Regardless of severe weather potential, this activity is poised to bring an additional 1.5 to 2.5 inches of rain to the forecast area. Given the recently-worsening drought across the commonwealth, that rain should be highly beneficial. However, if any given location sees multiple rounds of heavy rainfall multiple days in a row or multiple times in one day, this activity could culminate in some localized hydrological impacts. The mean values for modeled atmospheric precipitable water content in the LREF Grand Ensemble are between 1.75 and 1.85 inches on Wednesday, and these values remain elevated between 1.45 and 1.55 on Thursday. Wednesday`s values are above the 90th climatological percentile, and Thursday`s are above the 75th. These PWATS, along with the long/skinny CAPE profiles visible in model soundings in this time frame, suggest that rainfall rates will be efficient with this mid-week convection. WPC has outlined the entirety of Kentucky in a Slight (Level 2/4) Excessive Rainfall Outlook for Wednesday. This means that there is a 15% chance of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance thresholds within 25 miles of any given location in the forecast area on Wednesday. These probabilities decrease to 5% (Marginal, Level 1/4) on Thursday, but if soils become saturated by Tuesday or Wednesday`s rainfall, these odds could increase in future forecast updates. While widespread main-stem river responses are not currently forecast, localized instances of flash flooding are possible across the forecast area on Wednesday and Thursday. Remember - turn around, don`t drown!
As the northern stream synoptic features responsible for all of the above activity begin to eject on Friday, a piece of southern stream energy will get cut off near the Gulf Coast. This yields the development of a closed low in the SE CONUS, placing the commonwealth in a weak regime of northerly flow headed into the weekend. As drier and cooler air advects into the forecast area behind Thursday`s cold front and the flow aloft returns to continental origins, skies should gradually clear. A few orographically-enhanced showers cannot be ruled out on Friday, but cooler highs in the low/mid 70s and much lower atmospheric moisture parameters will mitigate the potency of any showers that develop. Saturday and Sunday look generally drier as the northerly winds persist, leading to the return of overnight ridge/valley temperature splits and valley fog formation. However, some guidance suggests that flow throughout the column may turn easterly by the very end of the forecast period. If this shift were to materialize, a deep moisture fetch off the Atlantic could develop, and a moist conveyor belt around the aforementioned cutoff Gulf low could bring about the return of shower chances early next week. Model spread begins to increase around this time frame, so confidence that far out is fairly low. Before then, expect pleasant fall-like conditions for the first weekend of astronomical autumn.
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.AVIATION...(For the 06Z TAFS through 06Z Tuesday night) ISSUED AT 150 AM EDT TUE SEP 23 2025
Rounds of showers and storms ahead of an upper level disturbance are ongoing at TAF issuance and will continue until tapering off, generally in the 10 to 13Z timeframe. There should be a relative lull in coverage of activity behind this disturbance after sunrise. However, an increase in coverage should occur once again during the afternoon and early evening hours, warranting PROB30 mentions. Reductions to MVFR or IFR are anticipated under any convection and several hours of prevailing MVFR are anticipated for most terminals behind the ongoing activity. Winds will average south to southwest at 10kt or less outside of any stronger convection.
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.JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.
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UPDATE...JP SHORT TERM...HAL LONG TERM...MARCUS AVIATION...GEERTSON/JP
NWS JKL Office Area Forecast Discussion