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Yeaddiss, Kentucky Weather Forecast Discussion

632
FXUS63 KJKL 300545 AAA
AFDJKL

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED National Weather Service Jackson KY 145 AM EDT Tue Sep 30 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Increasing moisture around the outskirts of Tropical Storm Imelda`s circulation could produce a few rain showers in Southeastern Kentucky today.

- Dry and seasonably warm conditions return on Wednesday and then persist into early next week.

- Valley fog is likely to develop each night this week in the deeper river valleys of eastern Kentucky.

&&

.UPDATE... Issued at 130 AM EDT TUE SEP 30 2025

No significant changes were made to the forecast with mainly just the inclusion of the latest obs and trends for the T/Td/Sky grids. These minor adjustments have been sent to the NDFD and web servers along with a freshening of the zones.

UPDATE Issued at 1221 AM EDT TUE SEP 30 2025

Made some minor updates to the hourly PoP and Sky grids to reflect latest observed and model trends. Otherwise, no significant changes were needed to the forecast.

UPDATE Issued at 914 PM EDT MON SEP 29 2025

There are no significant changes to the forecast with the mid- evening update. The hourly grids were initialized with the latest hourly T/Td observations.

&&

.SHORT TERM...(This evening through Tuesday night) Issued at 305 PM EDT MON SEP 29 2025

Shallow, fair-weather cumulus are developing across eastern Kentucky this afternoon, with temperatures in the low to mid-80s. High clouds are streaming northward into far eastern Kentucky, associated with a weak upper low over the Southern Appalachians and tropical moisture. The surface analysis shows an ~1024 mb high centered over Lower Ontario, while a sub-998 mb low (Imelda) is circulating north of the Bahamas. Aloft, 500 hPa ridging predominates over the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes.

Through the short-term period, Imelda will accelerate northeast toward Bermuda while 500 hPa ridging weakens slightly, allowing some upper-level energy and tropical moisture to seep westward across the Central Appalachians tonight and especially on Tuesday. This increased moisture will manifest over eastern Kentucky as slowly increasing cloud cover from the east tonight. The moisture and some meager destabilization on Tuesday could yield a few showers, primarily in the first and second tier of counties adjacent to the Virginia-Kentucky border. This activity should be of the nuisance variety with most of the area being dry and even where rainfall does occur, substantial dry time is likely.

In terms of sensible weather, outside of typical diurnal cumulus, high clouds will gradually increase from the east through at least midday Tuesday. While a rogue shower cannot be entirely ruled out tonight in the far east, the best chance for any showers (20 to 30 percent) will come on Tuesday afternoon and evening. As is typical for this time of year, fog is favored each night in the usual river valleys. Temperatures will remain mild with lows mainly in the 50s at night, recovering into the lower to middle 80s on Tuesday.

.LONG TERM...(Wednesday through Monday) Issued at 436 PM EDT Mon Sep 29 2025

The forecast guidance suite collectively resolves a mid/upper-level ridge nudging into the Ohio River Valley on Wednesday as the aforementioned upper level low and tropical cyclones eject further east-northeast into the Atlantic. That ridging feature is then forecast to strengthen, leading to mid-level height rises and the development of a surface high pressure system over much of the Eastern CONUS. The persistence of these two ridging features into the weekend will keep skies mostly clear, foster efficient diurnal warming/mixing processes, and allow temperatures to remain above climatological norms through next Monday.

In sensible weather terms, expect seasonably pleasant conditions throughout the period. Afternoon highs in the mid 70s to near 80 are forecast each day, with ridge-valley splits likely to emerge at night. While ridgetops will see lows in the upper 50s, the cooler valleys will experience MinTs closer to 50. A few pockets of diurnal minimums in the upper 40s cannot be ruled out, especially in the more sheltered valleys of far-east Kentucky. Overnight river valley fog has been added throughout the long term forecast period given the synoptic pattern at hand, but the fog will likely decrease in spatial coverage each night as the ground progressively dries out. In fact, there are no mentionable PoPs in the forecast from Wednesday through Monday. That dryness will likely maintain or even worsen the D0/D1 drought conditions currently delineated across most of the commonwealth.

There are some hints of moisture return from the Gulf just beyond the end of the forecast period. However, models disagree on both the timing and strength of its parent feature, leading to limited extended-range precipitation forecast confidence. The CPC`s 6-10 and 8-14 day extended period outlooks mirror this sentiment; they show a strong (60-80% chance) for above-normal temperatures, but no strong signal towards wetness/dryness on the precipitation side. Autumn is climatologically the dry season in KY, but surges of moisture related to Gulf disturbances can interrupt this and dampen the potential for fall fire weather concerns. Thus, the evolution of that feature could become a focal point of future long term forecast packages. With that being said, the main idea of today`s long term forecast is the continuation of seasonably warm and dry conditions into early October.

&&

.AVIATION...(For the 06Z TAFS through 06Z Tuesday night) ISSUED AT 145 AM EDT TUE SEP 30 2025

The river valley fog through dawn is unlikely to affect the terminals given the persistent low-level dry air advection, so it continues to not be included the TAFs. Localized vsby reductions in the deeper valleys remain likely through 13Z, though. Mid and high-level clouds streaming off tropical moisture in the Carolinas will reach eastern terminals (such as KSJS) by morning. The proximity of the parent upper-level disturbance could trigger some rain showers later today at these eastern sites and may warrant a mention in a future TAF issuance. Otherwise, VFR conditions will to prevail at the TAF sites through the period with winds less than 10 kts - generally from the northeast.

&&

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

&&

$$

UPDATE...GREIF SHORT TERM...GEERTSON LONG TERM...MARCUS AVIATION...CMC/GREIF

NWS JKL Office Area Forecast Discussion

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