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Peabody Kentucky Weather Forecast Discussion

975
FXUS63 KJKL 120850
AFDJKL

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Jackson KY 450 AM EDT Sun Oct 12 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Dry, seasonably pleasant weather is expected to continue for the next seven days for eastern Kentucky.

- Temperatures will remain near or just above climatological averages for much of the upcoming week.

- While confidence in specific details is low, the next chance of rain will likely come next weekend.

&&

.SHORT TERM...(Today through Monday) Issued at 435 AM EDT SUN OCT 12 2025

08Z sfc analysis shows high pressure centered over the Ohio Valley still dominating the weather for Kentucky though there is a significant storm off the southeast coast that is sending some high clouds into eastern parts of the area. These clouds, and some lingering ones from a nearby dissipating front, did not slow down the radiational cooling all that much this night. As a result, a moderate ridge to valley temperature difference was noted through the night along with the development of some fog in the river valleys. Currently, temperatures range from the mid 50s on the hills to the mid 40s in the low spots. Meanwhile, amid light northeasterly winds, dewpoints are generally in the mid to upper 40s.

The models, and their individual ensemble suites, are still in excellent agreement aloft through the short term portion of the forecast. They all depict a twin poled trough east of the Ohio Valley and through the Southeast at 5h. The northern center near Pennsylvania will drift south with time into the start of the new work week while the southern core slowly lifts north to eventually be absorbed into one minima off the Mid-Atlantic Coast toward the end of the period. Upstream of this trough ridging will nose into Kentucky from the southwest keeping the pattern quiet and benign over this part of the state - with any mid level energy staying well to the east through Monday and beyond. The models` continued small spread supported the NBM as the starting point of the grids with minimal adjustments needed - mainly just terrain driven enhancements to the hourly temperatures at night.

Sensible weather features seasonably warm temperatures during the days with dry conditions through the start of the new work week. Any lingering high clouds from the sfc cyclone well east of Kentucky will likely not interfere with the dry air`s ability to warm each day. Valley fog can be expected late at night (and early each morning) along with modest ridge to valley temperature differences.

The changes to the NBM starting point were primarily focused on elevation/terrain differences in the temperatures at night along with some extra drying applied to the dewpoints and RH during the afternoons. Did also tweak afternoon temps a notch higher today, as well.

.LONG TERM...(Monday night through Saturday) Issued at 450 AM EDT SUN OCT 12 2025

Once again the main changes to the extended forecast this morning were to enhance the terrain based differences of a ridge to valley split to the temperatures each night through the upcoming week, along with a touch of extra drying each afternoon from the mix down of lower dewpoints aloft. PoPs still appear to be quite limited during the upcoming week but there is increasing confidence in chances of showers or storms returning to the area for next weekend.

The previous long term discussion follows:

The beginning of the long term forecast period continues to be defined by atmospheric ridging and generally good agreement amongst the available pieces of forecast guidance. A cold front is poised to approach the forecast area by mid-week, but its impacts will likely be limited to only a modest cool down. The pattern begins to shift towards the end of the forecast period, but this corresponds with increasing model spread and decreasing confidence in the extended- range sensible weather forecast. Therefore, confidence is high that conditions will remain on the dry side through at least Friday, October 17th.

When the period begins on Monday morning, midlevel ridging will be building into the greater Ohio River Valley. The influence of this feature will increase headed into Tuesday, and the associated subsidence and height rises point towards dry and warm sensible weather. At the surface, the commonwealth will be positioned between a pair of phasing coastal cyclones off the Atlantic coast and a quickly-ejecting Canadian low. This leads to a broad area of relatively high pressure to the west of the forecast area, which favors persistent north-northeasterly surface flow. Together, this pattern favors mostly clear skies and seasonably warm temperatures for Monday and Tuesday. Expect highs in the low to mid 70s in the first half of the work week, with overnight ridge-valley temperature splits. While ridgetops will likely see lows in the 50-54 degrees range, efficient radiational cooling will allow valleys to easily cool into the 40s. This also favors the formation of overnight river valley fog, but the persistent dryness could gradually reduce the spatial coverage of said fog with each passing night this week.

By mid-week, the cold front associated with the aforementioned Canadian low is forecast to approach the Ohio River Valley, but it will be in somewhat of an orphaned state. The ejection of the parent cyclone into the Hudson Bay and the northward displacement of all mid/upper level dynamic forcing will limit this system`s ability to produce widespread cloud cover, let alone precipitation. Persistent northerly wind components throughout the column will keep the column fairly dry before, during, and after FROPA, further suppressing the PoPs. There is a signal for some midlevel cloud coverage in the northern half of the forecast area on Wednesday associated with the front, but the only real sensible weather impact from the mid-week system will be slightly cooler temperatures. Efficient diurnal warming could still allow cloudless southwestern portions of the forecast area to warm to the mid-70s on Wednesday, but overnight lows are poised to cool into the 40s area wide by Thursday morning. By Thursday afternoon, longwave troughing will have amplified over the Eastern CONUS and shunted the early-week ridge back towards the Ozarks. This translates towards cooler afternoon MaxTs (upper 60s) across the northeastern half of the forecast area, with low 70s still forecast closer to the ridge in vicinity of Lake Cumberland.

The shifting of midlevel synoptic features on Thursday marks the beginning of an overall pattern change, although the forecast guidance suite begins to diverge around this same time. The forecast generally trends towards return flow out of the south/southwest at some point late next week, although the models vary upon the timing and magnitude of the resultant moisture influx. Temperatures tick back up towards the mid 70s next weekend, but this warmth could be met with returning rain chances just beyond the end of the period. It remains too early to provide specifics regarding timing/amounts, but there is a signal next weekend for some relief from the persistent dryness that we`ve experienced as of late here in the Commonwealth. Before then, expect dryness to dominate the long term forecast period and generally pleasant weather for any planned outdoor fall activities.

&&

.AVIATION...(For the 06Z TAFS through 06Z Sunday night) ISSUED AT 135 AM EDT SUN OCT 12 2025

High pressure will build into eastern Kentucky from the Great Lakes through the rest of the weekend while a slow moving low pressure system creeps up the eastern seaboard. Some high clouds from this later feature will pass over eastern portions of the area into the morning hours. VFR conditions prevailed at issuance time and are expected to hold across the region during the next 24 hours, with one caveat - fog. Renewed fog development is currently underway in the valleys and will be around for the remainder of the night - dissipating by 14Z. The TAF sites should remain VFR through the period, with a small possibility for some of that fog to lift into KSME, KSJS, or KSYM, though confidence in this scenario was still too low to include in the TAFs. Light and variable winds will prevail until around 14Z, before the winds become northeast to north at less than 10 kts.

&&

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

&&

$$

SHORT TERM...GREIF LONG TERM...MARCUS/GREIF AVIATION...JP/GREIF

NWS JKL Office Area Forecast Discussion

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