717  
FXUS63 KJKL 091615 AAB  
AFDJKL  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION...UPDATED  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE JACKSON KY  
1115 AM EST FRI JAN 9 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- TEMPERATURES AVERAGING 10 TO 20 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL PERSIST  
INTO SATURDAY.  
 
- A WIDESPREAD 0.5 TO 2.00 INCH RAINFALL IS PROBABLE THROUGH  
SATURDAY, WITH THE HIGHEST TOTALS FORECAST IN THE CUMBERLAND  
VALLEY, WHERE LOCALLY HIGHER TOTALS CANNOT BE RULED OUT.  
 
- GUSTY RAIN SHOWERS ARE LIKELY TODAY, AND ANY ISOLATED  
THUNDERSTORMS COULD PRODUCE LOCALLY STRONGER WIND GUSTS.  
 
- A COLDER AND DRIER AIRMASS MOVES INTO THE REGION OVER THE  
WEEKEND AND PERSISTS INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 

 
   
UPDATE
 
 
ISSUED AT 1112 AM EST FRI JAN 9 2026  
 
HOURLY GRIDS WERE FRESHENED UP BASED ON RADAR AND OBSERVATION  
TRENDS. THIS LED TO NO SUBSTANTIAL CHANGES AT THIS TIME.  
 
UPDATE ISSUED AT 802 AM EST FRI JAN 9 2026  
 
EXPECT PERIODS OF SHOWERS TO CONTINUE THIS MORNING, TAPERING FROM  
THE NORTHWEST BETWEEN 15Z AND 21Z FROM THE NORTHWEST. IT WILL  
REMAIN WARM AND BREEZY WITH TEMPERATURES IN THE 60S FOR MOST  
LOCATIONS AND SOUTHWEST WINDS GUSTING TO BETWEEN 25 AND 35 MPH AT  
TIMES. A COLD FRONT MAY BRING A BRIEF RENEWED RAIN SHOWER CHANCE  
LATE IN THE AFTERNOON AND EVENING.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM
 
(TODAY THROUGH SATURDAY)  
ISSUED AT 413 AM EST FRI JAN 9 2026  
 
UNSEASONABLY MILD CONDITIONS ARE IN PLACE ACROSS EASTERN KENTUCKY  
THIS MORNING, WITH TEMPERATURES IN THE UPPER 50S TO MID 60S OVER  
RIDGETOPS AND ACROSS OPEN TERRAIN WHERE WINDS HAVE BEEN ABLE TO  
MIX OVERNIGHT. THE MORE SHELTERED VALLEYS IN THE EAST ARE  
CERTAINLY COLDER IN THE MID 40S, BUT THAT IS STILL 20+ DEGREES  
ABOVE NORMAL NIGHTTIME LOWS FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR. SATELLITE AND  
SURFACE OBSERVATIONS SHOW VARIABLE CLOUD COVER IN PLACE.  
MEANWHILE, THE REGIONAL RADAR MOSAIC SHOWS MULTIPLE LINES OF  
CONVECTION UPSTREAM FROM SOUTHEAST MICHIGAN DOWN INTO THE MID AND  
LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY. SURFACE WEATHER MAPS REVEAL THAT THIS  
ACTIVITY IS OCCURRING AHEAD OF A POTENT COLD FRONT EXTENDING SOUTH  
FROM AN ~992 MB LOW NORTH OF MILWAUKEE, WI. LOOKING ALOFT TO 500  
HPA, A RIDGE AXIS IS MOVING OFF THE MID-ATLANTIC COAST WHILE  
TROUGHING (COMPOSED OF A SOUTHERN STREAM ENERGY AND NORTHERN  
STREAM ENERGY COMPONENT) IS AMPLIFYING OVER THE ROCKIES/HIGH  
PLAINS. A ROBUST SHORTWAVE IS EJECTING OUT ACROSS THE UPPER  
MIDWEST AHEAD OF THE PRIMARY TROUGH.  
 
THAT LEADING SHORTWAVE WILL CONTINUE TO LIFT NORTHEAST TOWARD THE  
ST. LAWRENCE VALLEY BY THIS EVENING, TAKING THE SURFACE LOW  
PRESSURE WITH IT AND DRAGGING THE COLD FRONT ACROSS THE EASTERN  
KENTUCKY COALFIELDS BETWEEN 18Z AND 03Z. WINDS SHOULD BECOME  
INCREASINGLY GUSTY AS THE LEADING PRE-FRONTAL SHOWERS APPROACH  
THIS MORNING (REACHING LAKE CUMBERLAND AND THE BLUEGRASS AFTER 6  
AM AND FAR EASTERN PIKE COUNTY TOWARD NOON). THE STRONGEST CORE OF  
THE WARM CONVEYOR BELT JET (70+ KNOTS AT 850 HPA) SHOULD STAY  
NORTHWEST OF THE FORECAST AREA; HOWEVER, WINDS ALOFT AT THAT LEVEL  
WILL STILL BE 50 TO 65 KNOTS OVER OUR AREA THROUGH LATE MORNING.  
FORTUNATELY, LOW-LEVEL STABILITY SHOULD LIMIT MOST OF THIS  
MOMENTUM FROM REACHING THE SURFACE, WITH PEAK RAP BUFKIT MIXED  
LAYER MOMENTUM TRANSFER GENERALLY 25 TO 30 KTS, EXCEPT BRIEFLY  
APPROACHING 35 KTS IN THE BLUEGRASS COUNTIES JUST BEFORE THE  
PREFRONTAL SHOWER BANDS ARRIVE AND FURTHER STABILIZE THE  
ENVIRONMENT. NAM/RAP MODEL SOUNDINGS ARE EASILY DEPICTING  
SUFFICIENT INSTABILITY FOR THUNDER WITH STRONGER CONVECTION TODAY,  
BUT IN MOST CASES THE LOW-LEVELS LOOK TO BE TOO STABLE FOR  
SURFACE-BASED CONVECTION EXCEPT PERHAPS BRIEFLY RIGHT ALONG THE  
COLD FRONT. THE COLD FRONT WILL BRING THE BEST OPPORTUNITY FOR  
BRIEFLY STRONG TO ISOLATED DAMAGING WIND GUSTS, WITH THE BEST  
CHANCES OVER THE OPEN TERRAIN WEST OF I-75. ADDITIONALLY, RAINFALL  
COULD BE BRIEFLY HEAVY AT TIMES, THOUGH ANY HYDRO CONCERNS SHOULD  
BE MITIGATED BY ANTECEDENT DRIER SOILS AND LOW STREAMFLOWS. TOTAL  
RAINFALL AMOUNTS THROUGH THIS EVENING ARE GENERALLY EXPECTED TO  
RANGE FROM UNDER 0.25 INCH NORTH OF I-64 TO 0.75 INCHES OVER THE  
FAR SOUTHEASTERN CUMBERLAND MOUNTAINS (PINE MOUNTAIN  
SOUTHEASTWARD). EVEN THE HREF ENSEMBLE MAX, A REASONABLY HIGH-END  
SOLUTION, STILL ONLY SHOWS 1.0 TO 1.5 INCHES OVER PORTIONS OF THE  
CUMBERLAND RIVER BASIN THROUGH THIS EVENING -- VERY MANAGEABLE.  
 
SHOWERS AND ANY GUSTY WINDS WILL DIMINISH THIS EVENING  
TEMPORARILY AS THE COLD FRONT STALLS TO OUR SOUTHEAST. MEANWHILE,  
THE UPPER LEVEL TROUGH WILL CONTINUE TO PHASE AND AMPLIFY  
OVERNIGHT AND EVENTUALLY CLOSE OFF INTO AN UPPER LOW NEAR/OVER  
LAKE MICHIGAN BY THE END OF THE PERIOD. THIS WILL SUPPORT A SECOND  
AREA OF LOW PRESSURE RIDING NORTHEASTWARD ALONG THE LINGERING  
BAROCLINIC ZONE FROM TEXAS TO WESTERN NEW YORK ON SATURDAY. THIS  
WILL CAUSE THE STALLED BOUNDARY TO BRIEFLY LIFT BACK NORTH AS A  
WARM FRONT ON SATURDAY MORNING BEFORE QUICKLY PUSHING EASTWARD  
AGAIN AS A COLD FRONT AND OUT OF THE AREA LATE IN THE AFTERNOON.  
THIS SECOND LOW WILL BRING ANOTHER ROUND OF RAINFALL, BUT WITH  
LOWER OVERALL THUNDER RISK. FORECAST RAINFALL AMOUNTS WITH THIS  
SECOND SYSTEM RANGE FROM UNDER 0.25 NORTH OF I-64 TO AROUND 1 INCH  
OVER THE FAR SOUTHEASTERN CUMBERLAND MOUNTAIN COUNTIES  
(BELL/HARLAN). EVEN UNDER HIGH-END SCENARIOS, RAINFALL AMOUNTS ARE  
GENERALLY LESS THAN 1.5 INCH OVER THE HARDEST HIT PARTS OF THOSE  
COUNTIES, SO THE OVERALL FLOODING CONCERN REMAINS LOW AT THIS  
TIME.  
 
IN SENSIBLE WEATHER, LOOK FOR ABUNDANT CLOUD COVER AND ROUNDS OF  
SHOWERS THROUGH THE PERIOD. A FEW THUNDERSTORMS WILL BE POSSIBLE  
THIS MORNING AND AFTERNOON AS WELL. IT WILL BE BLUSTERY DURING  
THE DAYLIGHT HOURS, ESPECIALLY TODAY WITH WIDESPREAD SOUTHWESTERLY  
WIND GUSTS IN THE 25 TO 35 MPH RANGE AND POSSIBLY NEARING 40 MPH  
OVER PORTIONS OF THE BLUEGRASS. TEMPERATURES WILL BE VERY MILD FOR  
THIS TIME OF YEAR, RANGING IN THE MID 60S TODAY, THEN DIPPING  
BACK INTO THE MID 40S NORTH TO MID 50S SOUTH TONIGHT. TEMPERATURES  
ON SATURDAY SHOULD BE SLIGHTLY COOLER, PEAKING IN THE MID/UPPER  
50S NORTH AND LOWER 60S SOUTH.  
   
LONG TERM
 
(SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY)  
ISSUED AT 600 AM EST FRI JAN 9 2026  
 
THE LONG-TERM PERIOD OPENS SATURDAY EVENING WITH A DEEP ~520 DAM  
LOW NEAR/OVER WISCONSIN WITH A TROUGH AXIS EXTENDING SOUTHWARD  
ALONG THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER. AT THE SURFACE, A COLD FRONT WILL BE  
DEPARTING OVER THE APPALACHIANS WHILE ITS SURFACE LOW SPINS OVER  
THE EASTERN GREAT LAKES. A SECONDARY COLD FRONT EXTENDS SOUTHWEST  
FROM THE LOW TO ALONG THE NORTHERN SIDE OF THE OHIO RIVER AND THEN  
WEST-NORTHWESTWARD BACK INTO THE NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS.  
 
COLDER AIR WILL RUSH INTO EASTERN KENTUCKY SATURDAY NIGHT WITH  
THE SECONDARY COLD FRONTAL PASSAGE; LREF MEAN 850 HPA TEMPERATURES  
FALL TO -11 TO -12C BY MIDDAY SUNDAY. MODEL SOUNDINGS ARE  
INDICATIVE OF AN ENVIRONMENT SUPPORTIVE OF CONVECTIVE SNOW SHOWERS  
AND POSSIBLE SQUALLS BY LATE SATURDAY NIGHT AND EARLY SUNDAY  
MORNING AS THE 250 HPA POLAR JET BRIEFLY DIPS TO OUR SOUTH. WITH  
ANY HEAVIER SNOW SHOWERS/SQUALLS, SUDDEN REDUCTIONS IN VISIBILITY  
WOULD LIKELY BE THE GREATEST CONCERN. WARM PAVEMENT TEMPERATURES  
SHOULD PREVENT ANY IMPACTFUL ACCUMULATION, THOUGH SOME BRIEF  
SLUSHINESS CANNOT BE RULED OUT IF SNOWFALL RATES BRIEFLY EXCEED  
THE PACE OF THE WARM PAVEMENT TO MELT THE SNOW. THAT ACTIVITY  
SHOULD QUICKLY DIMINISH DURING THE DAY ON SUNDAY AS THE TROUGH  
AXIS PASSES. HEIGHTS ALOFT REBOUND SUNDAY NIGHT, SUPPORTING HIGH  
PRESSURE BUILDING ACROSS THE TENNESSEE VALLEY, THOUGH BROADLY  
CYCLONIC FLOW REMAINS ALOFT. THAT HIGH THEN SINKS SOUTHWARD MONDAY  
NIGHT AND TUESDAY AS POTENT REINFORCING VORT ENERGY SINKS OUT OF  
NORTHERN CANADA, CAUSING SIGNIFICANT AMPLIFICATION OF THE TROUGH  
OVER THE EASTERN CONUS AND SUPPORTING A SOUTHWARD SINKING COLD  
FRONT WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY. THERE IS STILL SIGNIFICANT MODEL  
DISPARITY AS TO HOW INTENSE THE COLD AIR MIGHT BE WITH THIS SYSTEM  
AS WELL AS THE OVERALL DEPTH OF THE TROUGH. HOWEVER, THE POST-  
FRONTAL NORTHERLY FLOW COULD FAVOR A MOISTURE FETCH OFF THE GREAT  
LAKES IN AN AIR MASS COLD ENOUGH FOR MORE SNOW SHOWERS.  
 
IN SENSIBLE WEATHER TERMS, LOOK FOR A COOL AND BLUSTERY SUNDAY  
WITH LINGERING SNOW SHOWERS/FLURRIES FOR AT LEAST THE MORNING, AND  
PERHAPS EVEN A SNOW SQUALL FOR A FEW LOCATIONS. IT WILL BE COOLER  
WITH HIGH TEMPERATURES ONLY IN THE MID 30S FOR MOST. CLEARING  
SKIES AND DRY WEATHER RETURN SUNDAY NIGHT WITH CHILLY LOWS RANGING  
FROM THE UPPER TEENS TO MID 20S. FAIR WEATHER WITH A WARMING  
TREND FOLLOWS FOR MONDAY AND TUESDAY WITH MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES  
RETURNING TO NEAR 50F OR BETTER BY TUESDAY AFTERNOON. RAIN CHANCES  
RETURN ON WEDNESDAY, SWITCHING OVER TO SNOW WEDNESDAY NIGHT AND  
THURSDAY AS TEMPERATURES RETREAT BACK TO NEAR THE FREEZING MARK.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
(FOR THE 12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z SATURDAY MORNING)  
ISSUED AT 739 AM EST FRI JAN 9 2026  
 
A STRONG LOW-LEVEL JET IS LEADING TO LLWS AT TAF ISSUANCE WHILE  
SHOWERS ARE INCREASING FROM WEST TO EAST AHEAD OF A COLD FRONT. AS  
THIS ACTIVITY MOVES THROUGH, EXPECT CEILINGS LOWERING TO MVFR  
THROUGH THE REMAINDER OF THE MORNING. PARTIAL MOMENTUM MIXDOWN AT  
TIMES WILL LEAD TO GUSTY CONDITIONS, ESPECIALLY THROUGH 18Z WHEN  
SOUTHWEST WINDS AT ~8 TO 15 KTS WITH GUSTS OF 20 TO 30 KTS CAN BE  
EXPECTED AT THE TAF SITES.  
 
THAT LOW-LEVEL JET AND RAINFALL TRANSITIONS OUT OF THE AREA  
THIS AFTERNOON. THE WINDS SHOULD BECOME LESS GUSTY AREAWIDE  
THEREAFTER, SHIFTING TO LIGHT WEST AND NORTHWEST BEHIND THE COLD  
FRONTAL PASSAGE DURING THE EVENING BETWEEN 20Z AND 01Z. RAIN  
CHANCES WILL INCREASE AGAIN LATE TONIGHT WITH AN INCOMING LOW  
PRESSURE SYSTEM.  
 

 
   
JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
UPDATE...JP  
SHORT TERM...GEERTSON  
LONG TERM...GEERTSON  
AVIATION...GEERTSON  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab KY Page Main Text Page