328  
FXUS63 KJKL 151832  
AFDJKL  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE JACKSON KY  
232 PM EDT SUN MAR 15 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- WARM, DRY, AND WINDY WEATHER WILL LEAD TO ELEVATED FIRE DANGER  
TODAY.  
 
- A WIND ADVISORY IS IN EFFECT FROM UNTIL 6 AM MONDAY FOR THE  
WESTERN PORTIONS OF THE AREA FROM 12 AM TO 8 AM MONDAY FOR THE  
EASTERN PORTIONS OF THE AREA. EXPECT PEAK ENVIRONMENTAL WIND  
GUSTS OF 40 TO 50 MPH IN THE ADVISORY AREAS.  
 
- A LINE OF STRONG TO SEVERE SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS WILL SWEEP  
THROUGH LATE TONIGHT INTO EARLY MONDAY MORNING, BRINGING A RISK  
FOR DAMAGING WINDS AND BRIEF TORNADOES.  
 
- TEMPERATURES WILL PLUMMET MONDAY MORNING, QUICKLY CHANGING RAIN  
TO SNOW SHOWERS. HEAVY BURSTS OF SNOW AND STRONG WINDS COULD  
CAUSE HAZARDOUS TRAVEL CONDITIONS FOR THE MONDAY EVENING  
COMMUTE.  
 
- WINTER TEMPERATURES BRIEFLY RETURN ON TUESDAY, WITH HIGHS ONLY  
REACHING THE LOWER TO MIDDLE 30S.  
 

 
   
UPDATE
 
 
ISSUED AT 232 PM EDT SUN MAR 15 2026  
 
A BUSY SOUTHERLY WIND IS NOTED ACROSS EASTERN KENTUCKY AT MID-  
AFTERNOON WITH PEAK GUSTS NOTED MOSTLY IN THE 20 TO 40 MPH RANGE  
OVER THE AREA THUS FAR. RELATIVE HUMIDITY LEVELS NEARING THE  
CRITICAL 25% THRESHOLD PROMPTED THE ISSUANCE OF A FIRE DANGER  
STATEMENT EARLIER AS THE COMBINATION OF DRY AIR, LOW FUEL  
MOISTURES, AND STRONG WINDS ALL FAVOR RAPID WILDLAND FIRE SPREAD  
THROUGH THIS EVENING. ADDITIONALLY, THE LIKELIHOOD OF STRONG  
ENVIRONMENTAL WINDS AHEAD OF AND AND BEHIND TONIGHT'S COLD FRONT  
WARRANTED AN EXTENSION OF THE WIND ADVISORY ALONG AND WEST OF THE  
ESCARPMENT UNTIL 6 AM MONDAY AND THE ISSUANCE OF A NEW WIND  
ADVISORY FROM 12 AM MONDAY TO 8 AM MONDAY FOR ALL COUNTIES FURTHER  
EAST. FINALLY, CONDITIONS BEHIND THE COLD FRONT APPEAR INCREASINGLY  
SUPPORTIVE OF SNOW SHOWER AND POSSIBLE SNOW SQUALLS. THE HIGHEST  
ELEVATIONS NEAR THE KENTUCKY BORDER SHOULD BE MOST PRONE TO  
IMPACTFUL ACCUMULATIONS AS THEY ARE FAVORED TO RECEIVE THE MOST  
PERSISTENT SNOW SHOWER ACTIVITY AND EVENTUALLY EXPERIENCE THE  
COLDEST TEMPERATURES AS WELL.  
 
UPDATE ISSUED AT 1045 AM EDT SUN MAR 15 2026  
 
THE DENSE SMOKE ADVISORY HAS BEEN CANCELLED. MIXING HAS INCREASED  
WITH DIURNAL HEATING, PROVIDING BETTER SMOKE DISPERSION AROUND  
YESTERDAY'S CONTROLLED BURNS. AS WINDS INCREASE, EXPECT  
SOUTHERLY GUSTS TO BETWEEN 25 AND 35 MPH ACROSS MUCH OF THE AREA  
THIS AFTERNOON, THOUGH GUSTS TO AROUND 40 MPH ARE STILL EXPECTED  
ALONG AND WEST OF THE POTTSVILLE ESCARPMENT. GIVEN SOUTHERLY  
DOWNSLOPE FLOW AND CURRENT TRENDS, DEW POINTS WERE LOWERED A  
COUPLE OF DEGREES AND AFTERNOON MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES WERE RAISED A  
COUPLE DEGREES. FORECAST HIGHS THIS AFTERNOON NOW RANGE FROM 75  
TO 80F WHILE MINIMUM HUMIDITY VALUES RANGE FROM 25 TO 35 PERCENT.  
THE HOT-DRY-WINDY INDEX CONTINUES TO SHOW VALUES IN THE 90TH TO  
95TH PERCENTILE ACROSS MOST OF THE AREA WHICH IS SUPPORTIVE OF  
ELEVATED WILDLAND FIRE DANGER.  
 
UPDATE ISSUED AT 805 AM EDT SUN MAR 15 2026  
 
UPDATED THE GRIDS WITH THE LATEST OBSERVATIONAL DATA. WINDS SHOULD  
BEGIN TO PICK UP THROUGH THE MORNING AS THE INVERSION MIXES OUT.  
THE FORECAST REMAINS ON TRACK.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM
 
(THIS AFTERNOON THROUGH MONDAY EVENING)  
ISSUED AT 649 AM EDT SUN MAR 15 2026  
 
LOOKING AT THE BIG PICTURE ACROSS CONUS, BANDS OF HEAVY SNOW AND  
LIGHTNING ARE OFF OCCURRING IN NW IOWA. THIS IS ASSOCIATED WITH A  
STRONG SURFACE LOW, EMBEDDED IN A LONG-WAVE TROUGH. THIS TROUGH IS  
EXPECTED TO DIG SOUTH THROUGH THIS AFTERNOON, IN THE CENTRAL PLAINS.  
THE SURFACE LOW IS CENTERED OVER IOWA, AND IS EXPECTED TO TRACK EAST-  
NORTHEAST INTO THE GREAT LAKES SOMETIME MONDAY. HOWEVER, A STRONG  
LLJ WITH 850-MB WINDS OF 40 TO 50 KTS WILL GRADUALLY INCREASE IN  
STRENGTH AS A COLD FRONT APPROACHES THE AREA FROM THE WEST. WARM  
MOIST SOUTHERLY FLOW WILL ALLOW FOR TEMPERATURES TO WARM INTO THE 70S  
TODAY. WINDS WILL GUST STARTING BY MID-MORNING AFTER THE INVERSION  
ERODES/MIXES OUT. BUFKIT MIXED LATER MOMENTUM TRANSFER CONTINUES TO  
HIGHLIGHT MIXING POTENTIAL OF 30-40 KTS. THE HREF AND LREF ENSEMBLES  
HAVE SHOWN THE GREATEST PROBABILITIES OF SEEING WIND GUSTS OVER 35  
MPH WOULD BE ALONG AND WEST OF THE I-75 CORRIDOR. A WIND ADVISORY  
REMAINS IN EFFECT WEST OF THE POTTSVILLE ESCARPMENT THROUGH 8 PM EDT  
TODAY. AS THE COLD FRONT APPROACHES TOWARDS MIDNIGHT TONIGHT  
INSTABILITY WILL BE WANING, THOUGH FORCING WILL BE MORE THAN ENOUGH  
TO PRODUCE A ORGANIZED LINE OF ISOLATED TO SCATTERED SHOWERS WITH  
EMBEDDED ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS. THIS LINE, BETTER KNOWN AS A QLCS,  
WILL PRECEDE THE COLD FRONT, AND COULD PRODUCE STRONG TO DAMAGING  
WIND GUSTS AS WELL AS A BREIF SPIN UP TORNADO. THE SPC HAS PLACED  
THE WESTERN PORTION OF THE CWA IN A SLIGHT RISK (LEVEL 2/5) FOR  
SEVERE WEATHER, WHILE THE EASTERN HALF IS IN A MARGINAL RISK (LEVEL  
1/5). THE DIVIDING LINE BETWEEN THE SLIGHT AND MARGINAL RISK EXTENDS  
JUST WEST OF MOREHEAD AND JACKSON, BEFORE GOING EAST OF  
MIDDLESBORO. ON THESE OUTLOOKS A HATCHED AREA INDICATES A LEVEL 1  
INTENSITY, FOR WIND AND TORNADO THREATS ACROSS NEARLY ALL OF EASTERN  
KENTUCKY, INDICATING AN ENVIRONMENT SUPPORTIVE OF AT LEAST ISOLATED  
SIGNIFICANT WIND GUSTS (74+ MPH) AND EF-2 TORNADOES. ALTHOUGH, THE  
GREATEST ENVIRONMENT IN OUR FORECAST AREA REMAINS SOUTHWEST OF KY-15  
AND OVER THE EASTERN BLUEGRASS.  
 
SUNDAY NIGHT, WARM TEMPERATURES IN THE LOW 60S WILL REMAIN ACROSS THE  
AREA THROUGH MIDNIGHT. ONCE THE QLCS LINE MOVES THROUGH BETWEEN 2-5  
AM EDT MONDAY, TEMPERATURES WILL DROP SHARPLY. BY 9 AM EDT,  
TEMPERATURES WILL LIKELY BE IN THE LOW 30S TO NEAR 50 FROM WEST TO  
EAST ACROSS THE AREA.  
 
MONDAY, TEMPERATURES WILL CONTINUE TO FALL THROUGH THE DAY WITH HIGHS  
IN THE UPPER 30S TO NEAR 50 FROM WEST TO EAST. NOTICE HOW THERE'S  
LITTLE TO NO CHANGE FROM "SUNDAY NIGHTS" LOW TEMPERATURE AND MONDAYS  
HIGH TEMPERATURE. THAT'S BECAUSE THEY WILL LIKELY OCCUR WITHIN A FEW  
HOURS OF EACH OTHER MONDAY MORNING AS THIS FRONT GOES THROUGH. RAIN-  
SNOW WILL EVENTUALLY CHANGE OVER TO SNOW SHOWERS THROUGH THE MORNING  
MONDAY, AND CONTINUE THROUGH THE EARLY EVENING. GENERAL SNOW  
ACCUMULATIONS OF A HALF INCH ARE EXPECTED, THOUGH THE HIGH TERRAIN  
OF BELL AND HARLAN COUNTIES COULD SEE 1-2 INCHES OF SNOW. IT IS ALSO  
IMPORTANT TO NOTE THAT GIVEN HOW WARM ITS BEEN, IT MAY TAKE A WHILE  
TO ACCUMULATE ON GRASSY SURFACES. AS THE SURFACE LOW AND COLD FRONT  
BOTH LIFT TOWARDS THE UPPER GREAT LAKES, A TIGHTENING PRESSURE  
GRADIENT WILL LEAD TO WINDY CONDITIONS THROUGH THE DAY, WINDS ARE  
FORECASTED WITH SUSTAINED WINDS OF 15-25 MPH AND GUSTS 25-30 MPH.  
THIS WILL LEAD TO WIND CHILLS 10 DEGREES COLDER THAN THE AIR  
TEMPERATURE, FALLING INTO THE LOW TO UPPER 20S BY LATE AFTERNOON,  
AND TRENDING COLDER THERE AFTER.  
   
LONG TERM
 
(TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY)  
ISSUED AT 147 PM EDT SUN MAR 15 2026  
 
THE FORECAST PERIOD BEGINS WITH THE COMMONWEALTH SITUATED BEHIND A  
DEPARTING COLD FRONT AS SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS INTO THE  
REGION. LINGERING SNOW FLURRIES REMAIN POSSIBLE THROUGH THE FIRST  
FEW HOURS OF THE PERIOD; HOWEVER, AS THE PARENT SURFACE LOW TRACKS  
NORTHEAST TOWARD HUDSON BAY, ANY REMAINING PRECIPITATION WILL TAPER  
OFF. ALONG WITH THESE ISOLATED POP CHANCES, BREEZY CONDITIONS WILL  
PERSIST THROUGH THE EARLY AFTERNOON. AS THE UPPER-LEVEL TROUGH LIFTS  
NORTHEAST AND THE SURFACE PRESSURE GRADIENT RELAXES, WINDS WILL  
SLACKEN TOWARD THE LATE AFTERNOON AND EARLY EVENING. NORTHWESTERLY  
FLOW WILL CONTINUE TO ADVECT A COLDER AIR MASS INTO THE AREA, WITH  
HIGH TEMPERATURES STRUGGLING TO REACH THE LOW TO MID-30S. OVERNIGHT  
LOWS ARE PROGGED TO FALL INTO THE UPPER-TEENS TO LOWER-20S. WHILE  
COLD, PERSISTENT CLOUD COVER SHOULD LIMIT THE POTENTIAL FOR  
SIGNIFICANT RIDGE-VALLEY TEMPERATURE SPLITS.  
 
BY TUESDAY NIGHT, LOW-LEVEL FLOW WILL SHIFT WEST-SOUTHWESTERLY AS A  
CLIPPER SYSTEM DIVES OUT OF THE NORTHERN ROCKIES, LEADING TO  
INCREASING POPS FOR WEDNESDAY. AS THIS CLIPPER MOVES THROUGH, AN  
INITIAL RAIN-SNOW MIX IS POSSIBLE BEFORE THERMAL PROFILES WARM  
SUFFICIENTLY TO CAUSE A TRANSITION TO ALL RAIN. WITH THE CURRENT  
STORM TRACK CENTERED OVER THE OHIO VALLEY, PRECIPITATION CHANCES  
REMAIN AT 20 PERCENT OR LESS, WITH THE HIGHEST PROBABILITIES  
CONFINED TO THE NORTHERN CWA. A SECOND IMPULSE IS PROGGED TO MOVE  
THROUGH THE FLOW WEDNESDAY NIGHT INTO THURSDAY MORNING. THIS FEATURE  
IS METEOROLOGICALLY SIMILAR TO THE WEDNESDAY CLIPPER BUT IS  
DISPLACED FURTHER NORTH; CONSEQUENTLY, A 20 PERCENT POP OR LESS  
EXISTS AGAIN MAINLY FOR THE NORTHERN PORTION OF THE CWA.  
 
OTHERWISE, SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS BACK INTO THE REGION FOR  
FRIDAY, ALLOWING TEMPERATURES TO MODERATE ABOVE SEASONAL AVERAGES. A  
THIRD PASSING SYSTEM MAY BRING ISOLATED POP CHANCES TO THE REGION  
OVERNIGHT FRIDAY INTO SATURDAY MORNING, THOUGH CURRENT GUIDANCE  
KEEPS THE BULK OF THIS SYSTEM NORTH OF THE OHIO RIVER.  
 
THE PERIOD IS HIGHLIGHTED BY THE ARRIVAL OF COLD HIGH PRESSURE ON  
TUESDAY. A SERIES OF PASSING CLIPPERS WILL BRING ISOLATED RAIN OR  
SNOW CHANCES WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, AND POSSIBLY SATURDAY. A WARMING  
TREND WILL ESTABLISH ITSELF BY THE MIDDLE OF THE WEEK, WITH  
TEMPERATURES REMAINING ABOVE AVERAGE THROUGH THE REMAINDER OF THE  
PERIOD.  
 

 
   
AVIATION
 
(FOR THE 18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z MONDAY AFTERNOON)  
ISSUED AT 232 PM EDT SUN MAR 15 2026  
 
VFR CONDITIONS PREVAIL THROUGH THE FIRST ~12 HOURS OF THE TAF  
PERIOD AS A LOW-LEVEL JET INTENSIFIES AHEAD OF A POWERFUL COLD  
FRONT. STRONG WINDS WILL MIX DOWN THIS AFTERNOON WITH GUSTS IN  
THE 25 TO 35 KT RANGE ACROSS THE TERMINALS, HIGHEST SPEEDS AT  
SYM, IOB, LOZ, AND SME. A LULL IN THE WINDS CAN BE EXPECTED THIS  
EVENING UNTIL THE ARRIVAL OF THE COLD FRONT AND ITS ASSOCIATED  
SQUALL LINE. ISOLATED WIND GUSTS IN EXCESS OF 50 KTS WILL BE  
POSSIBLE AS THE FRONT MARCHES FROM WEST TO EAST ACROSS THE AREA  
BETWEEN 5 AND 10Z. A RAPID DETERIORATION IN CEILINGS CAN BE  
EXPECTED WITH AND BEHIND THE SQUALL LINE AS A LIGHTER STRATIFORM  
RAIN LINGERS BEHIND THE BOUNDARY. AFTER A BRIEF BREAK IN THE  
PRECIPITATION MONDAY MORNING, SNOW SHOWERS WILL DEVELOP TOWARD  
MIDDAY WITH ORGANIZED SNOW SQUALLS POSSIBLE DURING THE AFTERNOON.  
POST-FRONTAL WINDS WILL BE SUSTAINED WEST SOUTHWEST AT 10 TO 20  
KTS WITH GUSTS UP TO 30 KTS ON MONDAY.  
 

 
   
JKL WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
WIND ADVISORY UNTIL 6 AM EDT MONDAY FOR KYZ044-050-051-058>060-  
068-069-079-080-083-084.  
 
WIND ADVISORY FROM MIDNIGHT TONIGHT TO 8 AM EDT MONDAY FOR  
KYZ052-085>088-104-106>120.  
 
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FROM NOON MONDAY TO 8 AM EDT TUESDAY FOR  
KYZ088-118.  
 

 
 

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

The Nexlab KY Page Main Text Page