806  
FXUS61 KILN 090610  
AFDILN  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WILMINGTON OH  
110 AM EST FRI JAN 9 2026  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
 
A COLD FRONT WILL MOVE THROUGH THE AREA TODAY, BRINGING RAIN AND  
WINDY CONDITIONS. ANOTHER WEATHER SYSTEM WILL PROVIDE RAIN ON  
SATURDAY, WITH MUCH COOLER WEATHER EXPECTED FOR SUNDAY AND BEYOND.  
 

 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TODAY/
 
 
THROUGH MORNING, THE ILN CWA WILL REMAIN IN A WARM ADVECTION PATTERN,  
WITH A 60-70 KNOT 850MB LOW-LEVEL JET IN PLACE OVER THE FORECAST  
AREA. MOST OF THIS WIND ENERGY IS FAILING TO REACH THE SURFACE AS A  
RESULT OF AN INVERSION, BUT 30-40 MPH WIND GUSTS ARE BEING OBSERVED  
IN THE WESTERN HALF OF THE CWA, AND SHOULD SPREAD THROUGH MUCH OF THE  
FORECAST AREA OVER THE NEXT FEW HOURS. SEVERAL NARROW BANDS OF HEAVY  
SHOWERS -- SOMEWHAT CONVECTIVE, THOUGH MOSTLY THUNDERLESS -- ARE  
MOVING ACROSS INDIANA. THIS PRECIPITATION WILL ALSO SPREAD EAST INTO  
THE ILN CWA OVER THE NEXT FEW HOURS, THOUGH WITH INSTABILITY VERY  
WEAK, IT IS UNCLEAR IF THESE SHOWERS OR CONVECTIVE LINES WILL BE  
CAPABLE OF ENHANCING WINDS ABOVE AND BEYOND THE BACKGROUND FLOW.  
 
A COLD FRONT IS THEN FORECAST TO MOVE EAST THROUGH THE FORECAST AREA  
TODAY, GENERALLY BETWEEN 14Z AND 19Z. THIS FRONT WILL SHIFT WINDS TO  
THE WEST AND AT LEAST TEMPORARILY PRODUCE SOME STEEP BOUNDARY LAYER  
LAPSE RATES. AS THIS COLD ADVECTION BEGINS, WIND GUSTS OF 35-45 MPH  
ARE EXPECTED, WITH THE STRONGEST VALUES GENERALLY NEAR AND NORTH OF  
THE INTERSTATE 70 CORRIDOR. THE STRONGEST WINDS SHOULD ONLY LAST A  
FEW HOURS BEFORE THE PRESSURE GRADIENT BEGINS TO RELAX AND WINDS  
DIMINISH FAIRLY QUICKLY IN THE MID TO LATE AFTERNOON.  
 
OVERALL FORECAST CONFIDENCE IS REASONABLY STRONG, BUT MEDIUM IN THE  
EXPECTED STRENGTH OF THE GUSTS WITH THE FRONT. ILN CRITERIA FOR A  
WIND ADVISORY (40 KNOTS / 46 MPH) IS NOT IN THE FORECAST AS OF NOW,  
BUT IS ALSO NOT OUT OF THE REALM OF POSSIBILITY.  
 
BEFORE THE COLD FRONT ARRIVES, EARLY-DAY HIGH TEMPERATURES WILL REACH  
THE LOWER TO MID 60S. SOME UPPER 60S IN THE FAR SOUTH OR SOUTHEAST  
MAY OCCUR. THESE FORECAST TEMPERATURES WILL BE CLOSE TO RECORD HIGHS.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /TONIGHT THROUGH 6 PM SATURDAY/
 
 
COLD ADVECTION WILL CONTINUE BEHIND THE FRONT TONIGHT, WITH MIN TEMPS  
IN THE MID 30S TO MID 40S BY SATURDAY MORNING.  
 
SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE WILL QUICKLY MOVE EAST OF THE AREA SATURDAY, AS  
ANOTHER WEATHER SYSTEM MOVES INTO THE AREA. THIS WILL SPREAD RAIN  
INTO THE REGION FROM SOUTH TO NORTH ON SATURDAY. OVERALL,  
PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS DO NOT LOOK NOTABLE, AS THE ILN CWA WILL BE  
CAUGHT IN BETWEEN STRONGER FORCING TO THE NORTH AND A STRONGER FEED  
OF MOISTURE TO THE SOUTH.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/
 
 
SURFACE LOW EJECTS TO THE NORTHEAST SATURDAY NIGHT, LIMITING  
COVERAGE IN PCPN. STRONG CAA WILL ENSUE WITH THE MEAN H5 TROUGH  
BARRELING THROUGH THE MIDWEST REGION. A POTENT VORT LOBE WILL PIVOT  
THROUGH THE GREAT LAKES/UPPER OHIO VALLEY REGION ON SUNDAY.  
ADDITIONALLY, DEEP LAYER NORTHWESTERLY FLOW WILL TRANSFER SOME  
MOISTURE FROM THE GREAT LAKES INTO OUR CWA, WHICH MAY HELP WITH  
INITIALIZING LIGHT SNOWFALL ON SUNDAY. THERMAL SOUNDINGS NOT  
INDICATIVE OF ANY HEAVY OR PERSISTENT SNOWFALL GIVEN THAT ANY  
SATURATION IN THE DGZ IS SHALLOW AND ONLY PERSISTS FOR A BRIEF  
PERIOD OF TIME ON SUNDAY. THUS, DO NOT HIGHLIGHT ANY SNOW ACCUMS IN  
THE GRIDS FOR NOW. NOTE THAT CONDITIONS WILL BE BREEZY ONCE AGAIN ON  
SUNDAY, WITH GUSTS OF 25-35 MPH EXPECTED DURING THE DAYTIME.  
 
H5 TROUGH QUICKLY SHIFTS TOWARDS THE ATLANTIC COAST SUNDAY NIGHT,  
WITH BROAD SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE SETTLING BACK INTO THE REGION FOR  
THE BEGINNING OF THE WORK WEEK. THE CENTER OF THE SURFACE HIGH  
STRETCHES ACROSS THE SOUTHEASTERN CONUS, IMMEDIATELY RESULTING IN  
RETURN FLOW FOR OUR FA BY MONDAY. THIS WILL ALLOW FOR ANOTHER  
WARMING TREND TO ENSUE THROUGH MID-WEEK, BUT FAR LESS IMPRESSIVE  
THAN THE CURRENT ANOMALOUS WARMTH THE OHIO VALLEY IS EXPERIENCING.  
TUESDAY WILL BE THE WARMEST DAY, WITH HIGHS GENERALLY PEAKING IN THE  
MIDDLE 40S TO NEAR 50.  
 
THE WARMING TREND QUICKLY ENDS AS ANOTHER H5 TROUGH SINKS DOWN INTO  
THE OHIO VALLEY TUESDAY NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY, OFFERING ANOTHER  
CHANCE FOR PCPN. A MIX OF RAIN AND SNOW EXPECTED WITH THIS WAVE, BUT  
OVERALL QPF REMAINS LIGHT ONCE AGAIN.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /06Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/
 
 
OVERNIGHT, GENERALLY VFR CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED. SOUTHERLY WINDS ARE  
CONTINUING TO INCREASE, AND SOME GUSTS UP TO 30 KNOTS ARE EXPECTED OR  
EVEN ALREADY OCCURRING. RAIN WILL ALSO MOVE INTO THE AREA, THOUGH  
IMPACTS TO AVIATION CONDITIONS FROM THE RAIN WILL NOT BE SIGNIFICANT.  
 
TOMORROW, SOME MVFR CEILINGS WILL DEVELOP, AS WINDS SHIFT FROM THE  
SOUTH TO SOUTHWEST. GUSTS IN THE 25-30 KNOT RANGE WILL CONTINUE  
THROUGH THE MORNING. A COLD FRONT IS THEN EXPECTED TO MOVE THROUGH  
BETWEEN 16Z-18Z, SHIFTING WINDS QUICKLY TO THE WEST, WITH GUSTS OF  
30-35 KNOTS. THESE WINDS WILL DIMINISH BY LATE AFTERNOON, AND BECOME  
MUCH LIGHTER AS THEY CONTINUE TO SHIFT TO THE NORTH AND THEN  
NORTHWEST.  
 
OUTLOOK...MVFR TO IFR CONDITIONS ARE POSSIBLE SATURDAY INTO SUNDAY.  
 

 
   
ILN WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
OH...NONE.  
KY...NONE.  
IN...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
SYNOPSIS...HATZOS  
NEAR TERM...HATZOS  
SHORT TERM...HATZOS  
LONG TERM...  
AVIATION...HATZOS  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab OH Page
The Nexlab IN Page
The Nexlab KY Page Main Text Page