Your favorites:

Bronston, Kentucky Weather Forecast Discussion

941
FXUS63 KJKL 231131
AFDJKL

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION National Weather Service Jackson KY 731 AM EDT Tue Sep 23 2025

.KEY MESSAGES...

- Multiple rounds of showers and thunderstorms will bring a soaking rain this week. While beneficial for the drought, this rain could cause localized flash flooding, especially on Wednesday.

- A few thunderstorms on Wednesday could become strong, with damaging wind gusts as the main threat. The potential for these storms will depend on how much the atmosphere can destabilize during the day.

- A wet and unsettled pattern will continue through Friday before cooler and drier, fall-like weather arrives for the weekend.

&&

.UPDATE... Issued at 731 AM EDT TUE SEP 23 2025

Forecast is on track. Showers and any embedded thunder are already diminishing and most of the forecast area should be dry, outside of widely scattered showers, by ~10 AM.

&&

.SHORT TERM...(Today through Wednesday) Issued at 453 AM EDT TUE SEP 23 2025

Regional radar at 8z shows numerous to widespread showers across eastern Kentucky, with more intense thunderstorm activity lifting northeast through Middle Tennessee. This activity is being forced by a potent vorticity maximum (embedded within a large-scale trough over the Eastern U.S.) moving into Central Kentucky. Mesoanalysis shows up to a 1,000 J/kg of skinny MUCAPE near Lake Cumberland waning to less than 250 J/kg east of US-23. As a result, lightning activity is substantially greater toward the southwest. PWATs are also high, ranging from 1.5 to 1.7 inches, with moderate moisture transport occurring on a 20 to 25 kt, 850 mb southwesterly flow. Model soundings also reveal a deep warm cloud layer, supporting efficient rainfall processes and torrential downpours under the heavier cores. Cell motions are progressive at around 30+ knots but the tropospheric profile is supportive of training.

Heading through the remainder of the morning, the ongoing convection will gradually lift northeastward and diminish in coverage as the 500hPa trough axis and associated forcing shift further east. Locally heavy rainfall leading to high water or even an isolated instance of flash flooding cannot be ruled out. For most locations, however, this rainfall is beneficial due to antecedent abnormally dry to moderate drought conditions. Once the wave pulls away, flow will turn quasi-zonal regionally. There should be enough diurnal destabilization for some convective redevelopment this afternoon, but a combination of weak height rises, the lack of a notable forcing mechanism, and subsiding PWATs should keep activity sparse. A positively-tilted trough of Pacific origin, presently over the Central Plains, will begin to pivot toward the east later tonight and Wednesday while fostering cyclogenesis over Oklahoma. The first of multiple rounds of vorticity energy will eject from this trough toward the Ohio Valley tonight, ahead of a surface low that will move into the Mid-Mississippi Valley on Wednesday. With that approaching surface low, PWATs will surge higher again as the low`s warm conveyor belt jet feeds tropical moisture northward from the Gulf of Mexico. The successive rounds of energy will lead to persistent episodes of shower and thunderstorm activity tonight and Wednesday across eastern Kentucky. Ongoing rains are priming soils, thus making flooding more likely with this renewed rainfall. A general 1 to 2 inches of rain is expected for many locations from 00z Wednesday through 00z Thursday. However, while there is not much spatial model-to-model consistency, multiple CAMs are generating swaths of concerningly high rainfall tonight and tomorrow with 23/00z HREF 24 hour ensemble max values locally approaching 5 inches. Accordingly, the Weather Prediction Center (WPC) has maintained a Slight Risk for Excessive Rainfall on Wednesday. The system`s evolution will need to be monitored closely, and a Flood Watch may be needed if confidence in the location and magnitude of excessive rainfall increases. If cloud breaks develop between rounds of rainfall, there will be enough shear to support organized convection, including the potential for weak supercells. All of eastern Kentucky is under a Marginal Risk for severe weather on Wednesday.

In terms of sensible weather, rain with embedded thunderstorms will gradually fade eastward by mid-morning. A mix of clouds and sun can then be expected, with isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms developing during the afternoon before fading again in the evening. It will be seasonable with temperatures topping out in the upper 70s to lower 80s. Additional rounds of showers and thunderstorms return tonight and continue for much of the day on Wednesday. Some of this activity could become very persistent, leading to high water and isolated to widely scattered instances of flash flooding. An isolated strong to severe thunderstorm is also possible, with gusty winds as the main concern. Temperatures are expected to fall into the 60s tonight before rebounding to similar highs in the upper 70s to lower 80s on Wednesday.

.LONG TERM...(Wednesday night through Monday) Issued at 516 AM EDT TUE SEP 23 2025

The only change to the long-term forecast was to ensure sufficient nocturnal ridge-valley temperatures splits from Friday night on into early next week. Also, the most recent analysis discussion for Wednesday is provided in the short-term discussion.

Previous discussion 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.

&&

.AVIATION...(For the 12Z TAFS through 12Z Wednesday morning) ISSUED AT 731 AM EDT TUE SEP 23 2025

In the wake of last night`s rainfall, leftover showers are diminishing from west to east. Several hours of primarily MVFR to low end VFR conditions are expected into early afternoon. The relative lull will give way to some renewed convective development from early afternoon to early evening, warranting a PROB30 mention. The next substantial upper level perturbation then approaches tonight, leading to dropping ceilings and renewed convection late. Category reductions to MVFR or IFR are anticipated under any convection. Winds will average south to southwest at 10kt or less, but could be locally stronger and erratic near thunderstorms.

&&

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

&&

$$

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

NWS JKL Office Area Forecast Discussion

WeatherForYou.com, LLC is not responsible for any damages or problems caused by this service. Current weather conditions are obtained from the closest government operated station, a personal station contributing to the PWSweather.com network or from the Meteorological Assimilation Data Ingest System (MADIS). Some weather information is powered by XWeather. WeatherForYou.com, NOAA, AerisWeather 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.