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
- Mainly dry weather is expected through this afternoon.
- Showers and thunderstorms will make a return this evening or overnight tonight and Monday, possibly bringing heavy rainfall along with strong wind gusts.
LONG TERM
(Monday night through Saturday) Issued at 1246 AM EDT Sun Jun 21 2026
When the long term forecast period opens on Monday evening, there will likely be ongoing showers and thunderstorms across Eastern Kentucky. As discussed above, this lingering convection may initially pose a risk for gusty winds and heavy rainfall. However, the intensity of this activity is poised to decrease after sunset. The loss of diurnal heating and rain-cooled air will combine to reduce instability to below favorable values. This, in turn, should allow rainfall rates to wind down overnight, with only light showers remaining in SE KY by Tuesday morning.
The parent cold front looks to finally clear the entire CWA by midday Tuesday. A shortwave trough axis propagates into the southern Appalachians in this time frame and places Eastern Kentucky in a vertically stacked northwesterly flow regime. Orographic lift could yield a few additional sprinkles in the higher southeastern terrain on Tuesday afternoon, but midlevel height rises and the advection of a cooler and drier airmass into the area should prevent any additional impacts. Expect seasonably cool afternoon highs in the upper 70s behind the boundary under clearing skies, which will then favor overnight ridge-valley temperature splits into Wednesday morning. Given the recently wet grounds, expect nocturnal radiation fog to form in at least the conventional river valleys. That fog should burn off as the sun rises on Wednesday, which will be a pleasant summer day under the influence of a postfrontal surface high pressure system.
The flow aloft returns to a progressive quasi-zonal flow regime by midweek, with passing shortwave disturbances triggering occasional precipitation chances. As the aforementioned surface high shifts east into Thursday, southwesterly wind components reintroduce warm air advection and moisture return to the column. Highs accordingly return to the mid/upper 80s through the remainder of the period, but increasing model spread regarding the timing and amplitude of those late period impulses makes it difficult to pinpoint precipitation forecast details. PoPs are accordingly relegated to below the 50% mark in the blended forecast guidance used to populate the long term grids, and it may be more reasonable to describe this shower/storm activity with isolated/scattered coverage wording. In other words, expect typical summertime weather conditions towards the end of the long term forecast period.
AVIATION
(For the 06Z TAFS through 06Z Monday) ISSUED AT 112 AM EDT SUN JUN 21 2026
Isolated to widely scattered showers and perhaps a rumble of thunder will be possible near KIOB and KSYM through ~07z. Otherwise, prevailing VFR conditions are expected outside of valley fog that is anticipated early this morning - potentially bringing localized IFR or worse conditions. Some uncertainty arises after ~02z Monday as to the magnitude, location, and timing of upstream convection which may move toward or through KIOB and KSYM before the end of the TAF period. This is covered by PROB30 groups for now at those two TAF sites.
Light winds overnight will trend southerly to southwesterly at 7 kts or less during the afternoon hours, and will likely continue into the late evening at more exposed locations such as KSME and KIOB.
JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
None.
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