189  
FXUS63 KJKL 101103  
AFDJKL  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE JACKSON KY  
603 AM EST WED DEC 10 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
 
- SOUTHWESTERLY WIND GUSTS TO BETWEEN 30 AND 35 MPH ARE LIKELY  
TODAY, WITH LOCALLY HIGHER GUSTS POSSIBLE. LAKE WIND ADVISORIES  
ARE IN EFFECT FOR THE CAVE RUN LAKE AND LAKE CUMBERLAND AREAS.  
 
- SNOW SHOWERS ARE EXPECTED TO PRODUCE SPATIALLY VARIABLE  
ACCUMULATIONS AND LOCALIZED TRAVEL IMPACTS ON TONIGHT INTO  
THURSDAY MORNING. THE GREATEST SNOWFALL ACCUMULATION AND IMPACT  
WILL BE ABOVE 1,500 FEET ASL WHERE A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY IS  
CURRENTLY IN EFFECT.  
 
- A CLIPPER SYSTEM IS EXPECTED TO PRODUCE MORE WIDESPREAD WINTER  
PRECIPITATION ON THURSDAY NIGHT INTO FRIDAY MORNING.  
 
- A MUCH COLDER THAN NORMAL AIRMASS IS FORECAST TO MOVE INTO THE  
REGION FOR THIS UPCOMING WEEKEND.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM  
(TODAY THROUGH THURSDAY)  
ISSUED AT 603 AM EST WED DEC 10 2025  
 
TEMPERATURES ARE A SOLID 15 TO 25 DEGREES WARMER ACROSS EASTERN  
KENTUCKY THIS MORNING COMPARED TO JUST 24 HOURS AGO, RANGING  
MAINLY IN THE 40S AT ALL BUT THE HIGHER ELEVATIONS. SOUTHWESTERLY  
WINDS ACROSS THE AREA CONTINUE TO STRENGTHEN AS THE PRESSURE  
GRADIENT TIGHTENS BETWEEN AN ~990 MB CLIPPER LOW OVER LAKE  
MICHIGAN AND AN ~1018 MB SURFACE HIGH OVER THE SOUTHEAST CONUS.  
GUSTS IN THE 20 TO 30 MPH RANGE ARE NOTED IN THE MORE EXPOSED  
TERRAIN, AND GENERALLY 10 TO 20 MPH IN MORE SHELTERED VALLEY  
LOCALES. LOOKING UPSTREAM, COMPOSITE RADAR REFLECTIVITY SHOWS AN  
AREA OF PRECIPITATION ACROSS MUCH OF SOUTHERN INDIANA AND SOUTHERN  
ILLINOIS AHEAD OF THE CLIPPER'S WELL-DEFINED COLD FRONT, WHICH  
STRETCHES FROM THE SURFACE LOW NEAR CHICAGO SOUTHWEST THROUGH ST.  
LOUIS AND TO OVER THE WESTERN OUACHITA MTNS. WITHIN THE BROADER  
CYCLONIC FLOW ALOFT, A PRONOUNCED HIGH-AMPLITUDE SHORTWAVE TROUGH  
IS NOTED AT 500 HPA OVER THE UPPER MIDWEST.  
 
THAT SHORTWAVE TROUGH WILL DIVE SOUTHEAST TODAY, CARVING OUT A  
DEEPER 500 HPA TROUGH OVER THE EASTERN CONUS. IT REACHES MAXIMUM  
DEPTH OVER OUR REGION AROUND 6Z TONIGHT WITH THE PASSAGE OF A  
SECONDARY SHORTWAVE/VORT MAX, BEFORE GRADUALLY PULLING EAST WITH A  
COUPLE OF TRAILING VORTICITY LOBES TRANSITING THE AREA: THE FIRST  
BETWEEN MIDNIGHT AND 7 AM THURSDAY, AND THE SECOND DURING THE DAY  
ON THURSDAY. MEANWHILE, THE SURFACE LOW WILL CONTINUE TO DEEPEN  
TO NEAR 980 MB AS IT SPEEDS FROM THE SOUTHERN GREAT LAKES TO THE  
CANADIAN MARITIMES BY THURSDAY EVENING. AS THE WARM CONVEYOR BELT  
JET CROSSES OUR AREA OUR AREA THIS MORNING, LOOK FOR AN UPTICK IN  
WINDS; PERHAPS EVEN THE STRONGEST WINDS OF THE DAY FOR SOME  
LOCATIONS WILL OCCUR BEFORE THE AFOREMENTIONED AREA OF STRATIFORM  
PRECIPITATION ARRIVES AND PARTIALLY STABILIZES THE LOW-LEVELS FOR  
A TIME. A SECOND MAXIMUM IN STRONG WIND GUSTS IS EXPECTED AS  
LAPSE RATES STEEPEN AGAIN IMMEDIATELY ALONG A BEHIND THE  
AFOREMENTIONED COLD FRONT. MODELED MIXED LAYER MOMENTUM TRANSFER  
VALUES STRONGLY SUPPORT GUSTS IN THE 30 TO 35 MPH RANGE, ESPECIALLY  
DURING THE NOTED FAVORED TIMEFRAME, AND COULD EXCEED 40 MPH AT A  
FEW SPOTS.  
 
THE COLD FRONT MENTIONED PREVIOUSLY SHOULD REACH THE WESTERN  
BORDER OF THE CWA BY AROUND 3-4 PM AND EXIT THE EAST BY 6-7 PM.  
MODEL GUIDANCE CONSISTENTLY SHOWS THAT BAND OF LIGHT STRATIFORM  
RAIN OUT JUST AHEAD OF THE FRONT, FORCED BY A POTENT LEADING VORT  
LOBE. THAT WILL BE FOLLOWED BY CONVECTIVE BANDED PRECIPITATION  
ALONG THE COLD FRONT ITSELF. RAP13 MODEL SOUNDINGS SHOW STEEP  
LAPSE RATES UP TO 700 MB WITH THE FRONTAL PASSAGE, LIKELY  
SUPPORTING A MIX OF RAIN AND GRAUPEL WITH CONVECTION ALONG THE  
BOUNDARY, PERHAPS MIXING WITH ALL SNOW WITHIN OR ON THE BACKSIDE  
OF THE HEAVIEST CONVECTION. THERE APPEARS TO BE A SECOND BOUNDARY  
ASSOCIATED WITH A 700 HPA VORT LOBE THAT DROPS IN FROM THE NORTH,  
REACHING FLEMING COUNTY AROUND 7 PM AND EXITING THROUGH SOUTHEAST  
KENTUCKY BY AROUND 9 TO 10 PM EST. THE AIR MASS BEHIND THE SECOND  
BOUNDARY WILL BE COLD ENOUGH FOR AN AREA-WIDE TRANSITION OVER TO  
SNOW. A PERIOD OF STRONG 20 TO 40 KT NORTHWEST UPSLOPE FLOW WITH A  
MOIST > 80% RH 925 TO 850 HPA LAYER WILL FAVOR OROGRAPHIC SNOW  
SHOWER ENHANCEMENT, ESPECIALLY OVER THE HIGHER MOUNTAINS NEAR THE  
VIRGINIA-KENTUCKY BORDER THROUGH THE REMAINDER OF THE NIGHT. THIS  
POTENTIAL HAS WARRANTED THE ISSUANCE OF A SEGMENTED WINTER  
WEATHER ADVISORY FROM PIKE DOWN TO BELL COUNTIES. MOST LOCATIONS  
ABOVE 1,500 FEET SHOULD PICK UP 1 TO 2 INCHES, AND SOME OF THE  
2,000 FOOT+ ELEVATIONS ON AND ADJACENT TO BIG BLACK MOUNTAIN COULD  
PICK UP 2 TO 4 INCHES. ADDITIONALLY, MUCH OF THE GUIDANCE SUGGESTS  
THAT THE LOW-LEVEL FLOW WILL BE NORTHERLY ENOUGH FOR A FETCH  
DIRECTLY OFF OF LAKE MICHIGAN. WHILE THE WINDS WILL BACK MORE  
WESTERLY WITH TIME, ONE OR MORE PRONOUNCED LAKE-ENHANCED BANDS OR  
EVEN AN OUTRIGHT SNOW SQUALL COULD REACH DOWN INTO OUR FORECAST  
AREA, WITH BEST CHANCES NORTHEAST OF US-421. THIS HAS WARRANTED  
ADDED MENTION OF A SNOW SHOWER THREAT TONIGHT IN THE ONGOING SPS.  
THE OVERALL ANTICIPATED TRANSIENT NATURE OF THE SQUALLS PREVENTS  
INCLUSION OF ANY ADDITIONAL COUNTIES IN THE WINTER WEATHER  
ADVISORY AT THIS TIME. HOWEVER, IF CERTAINTY FOR A MORE SUSTAINED  
AND FOCUSED BAND OF LAKE-ENHANCED SNOW INCREASES, ADDITIONAL  
COUNTIES MAY BE CONSIDERED. SNOW SHOWERS SHOULD GRADUALLY WIND  
DOWN TO JUST SOME FLURRIES FROM WEST TO EAST ON THURSDAY WITH  
OVERALL RELATIVELY LITTLE ADDITIONAL ACCUMULATION. SURFACE HIGH  
PRESSURE BRIEFLY TRIES TO NOSE IN FROM THE WEST LATER IN THE DAY.  
 
IN SENSIBLE TERMS, LOOK FOR A WINDY DAY WITH TWO PEAKS: DURING  
THE MORNING/MIDDAY HOURS AND AGAIN DURING THE LATE AFTERNOON AND  
EVENING. GUSTS OF 30 TO 35 MPH FROM THE SOUTHWEST TO WEST SHOULD  
BE COMMONPLACE. ADDITIONALLY, LOOK FOR RAIN TO REACH FLEMING  
COUNTY 7 TO 8 AM AND DROP SOUTHEAST TO NEAR THE VIRGINIA BORDER  
BY 2 PM EST. PRECIP WILL OVERALL BE LIGHT AND MAY LAST LESS THAN 1  
HOUR WEST OF I-75, VERSUS A COUPLE OF HOURS FURTHER NORTH AND  
EAST. AFTER THE STEADY RAIN ENDS (POSSIBLY MIXED WITH SNOW IN THE  
HIGHEST ELEVATIONS), ADDITIONAL SHOWERY ACTIVITY FOLLOWS, AND  
PRECIPITATION TYPES TRANSITION OVER TO ALL SNOW AT LOWER  
ELEVATIONS BY AROUND 8 TO 10 PM. SOME OF THE SNOW SHOWERS COULD  
BE BRIEFLY HEAVY. WINDS WILL GRADUALLY DIMINISH OVERNIGHT, WITH A  
SIMILAR THOUGH SLOWER DECLINE IN SNOW SHOWER ACTIVITY LINGERING  
INTO THURSDAY. TEMPERATURE-WISE, LOOK FOR HIGHS IN THE MID 40S TO  
LOW 50S (NORTH TO SOUTH) TODAY, LOWS IN THE MID 20S TONIGHT, AND  
HIGHS IN THE LOWER TO MIDDLE 30S ON THURSDAY.  
   
LONG TERM  
(THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY)  
ISSUED AT 326 AM EST WED DEC 10 2025  
 
THE FORECAST PERIOD COMMENCES WITH THE APPROACH OF AN ALBERTA  
CLIPPER, TRACKING SOUTHEAST TOWARD THE COMMONWEALTH. AT THE ONSET OF  
THE FORECAST, THIS SURFACE LOW IS ANTICIPATED TO BE TRAVERSING THE  
CENTRAL PLAINS. ANALYSIS OF FORECAST WIND PATTERNS AND ISOTHERMS  
SUGGESTS THAT THE WARM FRONT WILL REMAIN SOUTH OF THE AREA, AND AS  
THIS SYSTEM TRACKS FROM THE CENTRAL PLAINS INTO THE OHIO VALLEY, THE  
FORECAST AREA WILL BE SITUATED WITHIN THE PRECIPITATION SHIELD NORTH  
OF THE WARM FRONTAL BOUNDARY. DETERMINISTIC MODELS AND THEIR  
ENSEMBLE MEMBERS EXHIBIT STRONG CONSENSUS REGARDING THIS SYSTEMS  
TRAJECTORY ACROSS MISSOURI INTO KENTUCKY BEFORE ITS EVENTUAL  
NORTHEASTWARD EJECTION TOWARD THE MID-ATLANTIC STATES. GIVEN THIS  
PATH, THE FORECAST AREA IS EXPECTED TO BE BISECTED BY THE CRUCIAL  
540 DAM CRITICAL THICKNESS LINE. ALTHOUGH THE PRECISE LOCATION OF  
THIS BOUNDARY IS SUBJECT TO SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL SHIFTS WITH  
SUBSEQUENT MODEL CYCLES, THE OVERALL TREND INDICATES A NORTH-TO-  
SOUTH SPLIT IN P-TYPES ACROSS THE CWA. THE NORTHERN HALF OF THE CWA  
WILL LIKELY EXPERIENCE ACCUMULATING SNOW, WHILE A WINTRY MIX IS  
ANTICIPATED ALONG THE FREEZING LINE, TRANSITIONING TO ALL RAIN  
FURTHER TO THE SOUTH. PROVIDING EXACT ACCUMULATION VALUES FOR THE  
NORTHERN CWA IS PREMATURE; HOWEVER, THE CURRENT FORECAST SUPPORTS  
THE POTENTIAL NEED FOR WINTER WEATHER ADVISORIES FROM THURSDAY NIGHT  
THROUGH FRIDAY MORNING TO ADDRESS THE SNOW HAZARD.  
 
FOLLOWING THE DEPARTURE OF THE FIRST SYSTEM, A WEAK SURFACE HIGH  
PRESSURE IS FORECAST TO BUILD BACK INTO THE AREA. MODEL GUIDANCE  
MAINTAINS CONSISTENCY REGARDING A SUBSEQUENT CLIPPER SYSTEM TRACKING  
THROUGH THE CENTRAL CONUS, REACHING THE CWAS VICINITY BY LATE  
SATURDAY NIGHT INTO SUNDAY. POP IS EXPECTED TO INCREASE SATURDAY  
AFTERNOON; HOWEVER, GUIDANCE FOR THIS SECOND SYSTEM IS GENERALLY  
MORE NORTHERLY, SUGGESTING THE HEAVIEST PRECIPITATION WILL BE  
CONCENTRATED NORTH OF THE CWA, PRIMARILY ALONG AND NORTH OF THE OHIO  
RIVER. NONETHELESS, ISOLATED LIGHT ACCUMULATIONS ACROSS THE NORTHERN  
CWA CANNOT BE ENTIRELY RULED OUT THROUGH SUNDAY MORNING. A COLD  
SURFACE HIGH-PRESSURE SYSTEM WILL SUBSEQUENTLY BUILD INTO THE REGION  
BEHIND THE DEPARTING LOW, USHERING IN SOME OF THE COLDEST  
TEMPERATURES OF THE SEASON THUS FAR THROUGH THE EARLY PART OF THE  
SUCCEEDING WEEK. A GRADUAL WARMING TREND IS EXPECTED BY THE MIDDLE  
OF NEXT WEEK, PRECEDING THE APPROACH OF ANOTHER SYSTEM TOWARD THE  
END OF THE FORECAST PERIOD.  
 
IN SUMMARY, THE PERIOD WILL BE CHARACTERIZED BY THE PASSAGE OF TWO  
DISTINCT CLIPPER SYSTEMS, ONE FROM THURSDAY NIGHT INTO FRIDAY AND  
THE SECOND SATURDAY NIGHT INTO SUNDAY. BOTH SYSTEMS ARE FORECAST TO  
BRING PERIODS OF LIGHT SNOW ACCUMULATION. STRONG SURFACE HIGH  
PRESSURE WILL SUBSEQUENTLY ESTABLISH ITSELF OVER THE REGION ON  
SUNDAY, DRIVING COLD TEMPERATURES DOWN TO THE UPPER SINGLE DIGITS  
AND MID-TEENS. A NOTABLE WARMUP AHEAD OF THE NEXT SYSTEM IS FORECAST  
TO COMMENCE BY WEDNESDAY.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
(FOR THE 06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z THURSDAY NIGHT)  
ISSUED AT 1155 PM EST TUE DEC 9 2025  
 
MID AND HIGH LEVEL CLOUDS ARE STILL CURRENTLY CROSSING THE AREA.  
WINDS HAVE SETTLED TO GENERALLY FROM THE SOUTH TO SOUTHWEST AT  
10 KTS OR LESS. HOWEVER, WINDS ALOFT WILL BEGIN TO RAMP UP  
TONIGHT AHEAD OF AN APPROACHING COLD FRONT. WITH THAT, A LOW LEVEL  
JET (LLJ) MOVES ACROSS THE AREA TONIGHT, LEADING TO THE THREAT OF  
LLWS FOR MOST OF THE NIGHT. AROUND 12Z, THAT COLD FRONT STARTS TO  
PASS THROUGH PRODUCING A POTENTIAL FOR MAINLY LIGHT RAIN FOR MOST  
TAF SITES BETWEEN 13-18Z WEDNESDAY ALONG WITH CIGS FALLING TO IFR  
OR LOWER BY EVENING. WINDS WILL REMAIN OUT OF THE SOUTHWEST WITH  
GUSTS OF 25-30 KTS, THOUGH THE THREAT OF LLWS DIMINISHES WITH THE  
FRONTAL PASSAGE AND MORE EFFECTIVE MIX DOWN.  
 
 
   
JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
LAKE WIND ADVISORY UNTIL 6 PM EST THIS EVENING FOR KYZ051-052-  
060-079-080-083-084-106.  
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FROM 7 PM THIS EVENING TO 10 AM EST  
THURSDAY FOR KYZ086-087-110-113-115>117-120.  
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FROM 3 PM THIS AFTERNOON TO 10 AM EST  
THURSDAY FOR KYZ088-118.  
 
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...GEERTSON  
LONG TERM...VORST  
AVIATION...GREIF  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab KY Page
Main Text Page