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
- Chances for showers and a few thunderstorms increase to end the weekend, followed by additional chances at midweek.
- Frost is possible late Monday night into Tuesday morning in deeper valleys and hollows - mainly away from mainstem rivers.
UPDATE
Issued at 737 PM EDT SAT MAY 9 2026
No major changes made to the forecast as it is largely on track. Just incorporated the latest surface obs. Grids have been saved and sent.
LONG TERM
(Monday through Saturday) Issued at 220 PM EDT SAT MAY 9 2026
The period begins Monday morning with a secondary cold front accompanied by showers exiting south and east as a shortwave trough moves across the area within an overall broad longwave trough.
A cooler and drier air mass moves into the region from the north as high pressure builds in for the remainder of the daytime hours Monday. Though models have trended slightly warmer than 24 hours, Monday looks to be on the cool side with highs in the mid to upper 60s. Monday night is still looking rather chilly for mid-May as surface pressure settles in over Ohio. Big questions remain as to how much low-level dry air can move into the area and whether winds fully decouple near ridgetop level. A slightly drier air mass with full decoupling will introduce the possibility of patchy frost in the outlying hollows away from mainstem streams and rivers, which are more likely to see the typical fog in such setups.
A modest warm-up is expected Tuesday as shortwave ridging moves overhead in northwesterly flow aloft, but unsettled weather returns Wednesday with the passage of a cold front. Instability will be rapidly diminishing as this system moves through, so while thunder chances are in the forecast currently, would not be surprised to see this reduced to just showers in future forecasts.
After another brief modest cooldown Thursday, heights/thicknesses rise significantly Friday into Saturday, signaling a stronger warm- up into next weekend. Though there are significant model discrepancies yielding low confidence in the forecast details by this time, low-end PoPs around 10 to 15 percent are indicated by the NBM as models hint at a potential disturbance and/or front near the area with some potential instability.
AVIATION
(For the 00Z TAFS through 00Z Sunday evening) ISSUED AT 737 PM EDT SAT MAY 9 2026
VFR conditions are prevailing across all TAF sites for this issuance. VFR conditions will exist through the entirety of the TAF window as surface high pressure is overhead. Some river valley fog is possible overnight but should stay clear of terminals. A sagging cold front will bring increasing winds and shower chances toward the end of the TAF window but mainly to KSJS. Winds will remain light through the period before starting to pick up ahead of frontal approach Sunday afternoon.
JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
None.
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