textproduct: Jackson

This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.

KEY MESSAGES

- A warming trend will last through Thursday, with some places potentially topping 70 degrees, especially Thursday. Cooling then arrives by the weekend.

- The next likelihood of rain is Thursday and Thursday night, with a slight chance of thunderstorms in most of the area. Some storms could be strong to severe.

- A cold front brings cooler air starting Friday. Rain chances persist into the weekend, potentially ending as light snow or a wintry mix on Sunday.

LONG TERM

(Wednesday night through Monday) Issued at 356 AM EST TUE FEB 17 2026

The forecast period begins with the region positioned within the warm sector of an occluding surface cyclone migrating from the Upper Midwest toward the Great Lakes. Within this sector, low-level southwesterly flow will advect a warmer air mass into the area, resulting in mild overnight lows for Wednesday night. While isolated PoPs exist overnight, chances will increase toward sunrise. Initial guidance suggested higher overnight PoPs; however, forecast soundings indicate a significant layer of dry air between 850 mb and 200 mb. This dry layer is expected to cause substantial evaporation of falling hydrometeors, necessitating a reduction in PoP chances until the column fully saturates and precipitation can reach the surface.

While the primary system is progged to stall over the western Great Lakes, a secondary shortwave is forecast to develop late Wednesday into early Thursday over the Central Plains. As this cyclone tracks northeastward into the Midwest, its associated warm front will lift into the region by Thursday morning. Although earlier model runs suggested early convection, a lack of surface-based instability has warranted the removal of thunder from the Thursday morning forecast. The warm front is forecast to lift across the Commonwealth as the parent surface low moves into Illinois and Indiana. Showers remain likely throughout Thursday, with the potential for thunderstorms, some of which could become strong to severe. Recent model suites have increased common convective indices to more favorable thresholds, though these may remain unrealized if post-frontal clearing fails to occur, limiting instability ahead of the cold front. Regardless, it is difficult to ignore a warm front in a spring-like environment and this notion is reflected in the latest Day 3 convective outlook from the SPC. A Slight Risk has been introduced for areas closest to the low track, including portions of Illinois, Indiana, and northwestern Kentucky, clipping parts of the CWA (Montgomery, Bath and Fleming Counties). A Marginal Risk encompasses the Slight Risk area, extending northwest of a line from Martin County to Wayne County. Areas southeast of this line remain under a General Thunder risk.

Shower and storm chances persist through Thursday night and Friday morning as the cold front slowly traverses the Commonwealth. While shower coverage may diminish slightly during the day Friday, a secondary wave is expected to develop along the trailing boundary, bringing renewed precipitation chances late Friday through Saturday. The system is forecast to exit the region late Saturday night into Sunday. However, as cold air advection intensifies, lingering wrap- around moisture will likely transition from rain to a rain-snow mix, and eventually all snow by late Sunday night.

Overall, the forecast remains active as multiple synoptic features traverse the CONUS. Temperatures will remain above seasonal averages through the work week due to persistent southwesterly flow. After temperatures peak in the low 70s on Thursday, a cooling trend will take hold for the remainder of the period.

AVIATION

(For the 18Z TAFS through 18Z Wednesday afternoon) ISSUED AT 1243 PM EST TUE FEB 17 2026

VFR flight conditions prevailed at TAF issuance with a few low- VFR clouds beginning to exit the KSYM area to the north and east. High clouds are drifting across much of the area. Additional lower clouds are expected at times throughout the day but are not currently expected to become a persistent ceiling. Winds will increase out of the south and southwest this afternoon. At least a few brief gusts into the 15 to 20 kts range are possible during peak heating for the more western and open terrain locations such as KIOB, KSYM, KSME, and KLOZ, though were not included in this issuance as these may not be sustained for much duration. Winds will tend to slacken with the loss of daytime heating around 23Z. However, winds aloft ahead of the system in the Plains trekking toward the upper MS Valley will begin to increase late, and will likely result in at least marginal LLWS tonight. Lower cigs will begin to impact the area most likely between 12z and 18z Wednesday, but confidence in timing of sub-VFR conditions with lowering cigs, and any potential -SHRA activity and associated reduced viz, is low. Will thus reflect a general lowering trend from low-VFR to MVFR conditions through this time period, where possible, with this TAF package.

JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES

None.


IMPORTANT This is an independent project and has no affiliation with the National Weather Service or any other agency. Do not rely on this website for emergency or critical information: please visit weather.gov for the most accurate and up-to-date information available.

textproduct.us is built and maintained by Joshua Thayer.