212  
FXUS63 KJKL 152153  
AFDJKL  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE JACKSON KY  
553 PM EDT SUN MAR 15 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
- WIND ADVISORIES ARE IN EFFECT TONIGHT FOR WIND GUSTS OVER 40  
MPH. THESE WINDS COMBINED WITH LOW HUMIDITY LEVELS WILL KEEP  
FIRE DANGER ELEVATED THIS EVENING.  
 
- A LINE OF STRONG TO SEVERE SHOWERS AND STORMS WILL CROSS THE  
AREA BETWEEN MIDNIGHT AND 6 AM MONDAY. DAMAGING WINDS AND A  
BRIEF TORNADO ARE POSSIBLE, HIGHEST RISK NEAR LAKE CUMBERLAND.  
 
- TEMPERATURES WILL CRASH MONDAY MORNING, TURNING RAIN SHOWERS TO  
SNOW. SUDDEN, HEAVY SNOW SQUALLS MONDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING  
COULD CAUSE HAZARDOUS TRAVEL CONDITIONS AND RAPID DROPS IN  
VISIBILITY.  
 
- WINTER-LIKE COLD BRIEFLY RETURNS TUESDAY WITH HIGHS ONLY IN THE  
30S BEFORE A WARMING TREND ARRIVES MID-WEEK.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM  
(THIS EVENING THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT)  
ISSUED AT 545 PM EDT SUN MAR 15 2026  
 
EASTERN KENTUCKY IS BASKING UNDER A MAY-LIKE BRAND OF WARMTH WITH  
WIDESPREAD TEMPERATURES IN THE 70S THIS AFTERNOON UNDER PARTIAL  
SUN AND A GUSTY SOUTHERLY BREEZE, A FAR CRY FROM WHAT IS IN STORE  
FOR TOMORROW AFTERNOON. THE LATEST WEATHER ANALYSIS SHOWS AN  
AROUND 991 MB LOW BETWEEN ST. LOUIS AND CHICAGO, LEAVING EASTERN  
KENTUCKY UNDER THE LOW'S WARM SECTOR. A POWERFUL COLD FRONT AND  
DEVELOPING SEVERE SQUALL LINE EXTEND SOUTH-SOUTHWEST FROM THE LOW  
ACROSS THE OZARKS DOWN INTO EASTERN TEXAS. ON THE COLD SIDE OF  
THIS LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM, A BITTER ARCTIC AIR MASS IS SPILLING  
INTO THE NORTH-CENTRAL CONUS FROM THE CANADIAN PRAIRIES;  
TEMPERATURES ALONG THE ND/CANADIAN BORDER ARE IN THE SINGLE  
DIGITS. MEANWHILE, AN EARLY SPRING BLIZZARD IS DEVELOPING FROM  
IOWA INTO NORTHERN MICHIGAN. AT THE UPPER LEVELS, THIS POWERFUL  
STORM SYSTEM IS DEVELOPING AHEAD OF A DIGGING 500 HPA TROUGH AXIS  
EXTENDING FROM MANITOBA SOUTHWARD TO TEXAS.  
 
THE WARM, DRY, AND BREEZY CONDITIONS WILL PERSIST INTO THIS  
EVENING, LEADING TO AN ELEVATED FIRE DANGER THREAT, PARTICULARLY  
EAST OF THE POTTSVILLE ESCARPMENT WHERE GREATER DOWNSLOPE DRYING  
WILL CONTINUE DOWNWIND OF THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS LEADING TO  
RELATIVE HUMIDITY VALUES OF 25 TO 40 PERCENT. PEAK WIND GUSTS IN  
THE 25 TO 45 MPH RANGE HAVE BEEN COMMONPLACE, STRONGEST IN THE  
WIND ADVISORY AREA ALONG AND WEST OF THE POTTSVILLE ESCARPMENT  
(CLOSER TO THE CORE OF THE LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM'S WARM CONVEYOR  
BELT JET). AS THE SUN SETS, MOMENTUM TRANSFER IS LIKELY TO BECOME  
LESS EFFICIENT FOR SEVERAL HOURS THIS EVENING, ALLOWING THE GUSTY  
WINDS TO SLACKEN SOMEWHAT EVEN THOUGH WINDS ALOFT WILL INCREASE AS  
THE LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM'S COLD FRONT AND PRECEDING WARM CONVEYOR  
BELT JET SHIFT EASTWARD. AS THE PARENT SURFACE LOW DEEPENS TO NEAR  
980 MB AND TREKS ACROSS LOWER MICHIGAN, THE 15Z RAP13 AND THE  
BROADER 12Z LREF SUITE SUPPORT FURTHER INTENSIFICATION OF THIS JET  
CORE AT 850 HPA TO 60+ KNOTS JUST AHEAD OF THE COLD FRONT LATE  
THIS EVENING AND EARLY OVERNIGHT. STEEPENING LOW-LEVEL LAPSE RATES  
AS MOISTENING OCCURS IN THE MID-LEVELS SHOULD SUPPORT MORE  
EFFICIENT MIXDOWN IN THE HOUR OR TWO BEFORE THE LEADING EDGE OF  
THE SQUALL LINE ARRIVES. WITH BUFKIT GUIDANCE SHOWING THE  
POTENTIAL FOR MORE THAN 40 KTS OF MIXED-LAYER MOMENTUM TRANSFER,  
THE WIND ADVISORY FROM THE POTTSVILLE ESCARPMENT WESTWARD WAS  
EXTENDED IN TIME THROUGH THE FRONTAL PASSAGE WHILE COUNTIES  
FURTHER EAST WERE PLACED UNDER A SEPARATE WIND ADVISORY FROM 12 AM  
MONDAY TO 8 AM MONDAY. THUS AFTER TODAY'S WINDS, ALL OF EASTERN  
KENTUCKY WILL EXPERIENCE A SECOND ROUND OF STRONGER ENVIRONMENTAL  
WINDS OVERNIGHT OUTSIDE OF THE APPROACHING FRONTAL SQUALL LINE (OR  
QLCS).  
 
THE QLCS ITSELF WILL POSE ADDITIONAL HAZARDS AS IT APPROACHES  
FROM CENTRAL KENTUCKY, REACHING THE LAKE CUMBERLAND AREA AROUND  
MIDNIGHT TO 1 AM AND EVENTUALLY EXITING THROUGH PIKE COUNTY BY  
AROUND 6 AM. WHILE THE MOST FAVORABLE PARAMETER SPACE APPEARS TO  
BE UPSTREAM OVER CENTRAL AND WESTERN KENTUCKY, GUIDANCE STILL  
SUGGESTS SUFFICIENT INSTABILITY TO MAINTAIN AN HSLC QLCS THROUGH  
THE I-75 CORRIDOR. OF NOTE, 18Z NAMNEST/HRRR SHOW THE SQUALL LINE  
BEGINNING TO OUTRUN THE FORCING PROVIDED BY COLD FRONT'S SURFACE  
THETA-E GRADIENT AS IT MOVES BETWEEN I-65 AND I-75 THIS EVENING.  
THAT DISSOCIATION BECOMES MORE STARK FURTHER EAST, LEADING TO AN  
ACCELERATED WEAKENING OF THE QLCS BY THE TIME IT APPROACHES THE  
US-23 CORRIDOR EARLY MONDAY MORNING. ADDITIONALLY, PRE-FRONTAL  
SBCAPE RANGES FROM 100 TO 250 J/KG IN THE RAP13 OVER WESTERN  
PORTIONS OF THE CWA BUT WANES TO MERE TENS OF J/KG FURTHER EAST,  
SO THE OVERALL WEAKENING TREND MAKES SENSE AS THE SYSTEM RUNS LOW  
ON FUEL (INSTABILITY) AND COLD POOL MOMENTUM. WITH THAT IN MIND,  
RAP MODEL SOUNDINGS STILL SHOW 40+ KNOTS OF 0-1 KM BULK SHEAR,  
YIELDING 250+ M2/S2 OF 0-1 KM STORM-RELATIVE HELICITY AND 50 TO 55  
KNOTS OF 0-3 KM BULK SHEAR FROM THE SOUTH-SOUTHWEST. THUS, ANY  
LINE SEGMENT THAT SURGES AND BECOMES MORE NW-SW ORIENTED WILL HAVE  
A BETTER CHANCE OF UTILIZING THAT SHEAR TO PRODUCE DAMAGING  
STRAIGHT-LINE WIND GUSTS AND POSSIBLY EVEN A BRIEF SPIN-UP  
TORNADO. SPC HAS THE WESTERN PORTIONS OF WAYNE AND FAR WESTERN  
PULASKI COUNTIES UNDER AN ENHANCED (3/5) RISK FOR SEVERE WEATHER  
FOR DAMAGING WIND GUSTS AND A TORNADO THREAT (MAKES LOTS OF SENSE  
GIVEN THE BEST PARAMETER SPACE IS LIKELY TO BE IN PLACE THERE). A  
SLIGHT RISK (2/5) EXTENDS EASTWARD FROM THERE TO THE US-23  
CORRIDOR AND A MARGINAL RISK (1/5) REMAINS FURTHER EAST. OF NOTE,  
SPC HAS MAINTAINED LEVEL 1 INTENSITY HATCHING FOR THE WIND AND  
TORNADO THREATS NEAR AND WEST OF THE US-23 CORRIDOR, INDICATING AN  
ENVIRONMENT SUPPORTIVE OF AT LEAST ISOLATED SIGNIFICANT WIND  
GUSTS (74+ MPH) AND UP TO EF-2 TORNADOES. AGAIN THOUGH, THE  
HIGHEST THREAT OF SIGNIFICANT SEVERE WEATHER SHOULD COINCIDE WITH  
THE BETTER INSTABILITY--SOUTHWEST OF KY-15 AND ESPECIALLY WEST OF  
I-75. IT IS WORTH NOTING THAT SEVERE WEATHER MAY OCCUR WITH THIS  
SQUALL LINE IN THE ABSENCE OF THUNDER AS ELS AND INSTABILITY MAY  
BE TOO MARGINAL IN SOME AREAS FOR THE GENERATION OF LIGHTNING.  
 
BEHIND THE LEADING EDGE OF THE SQUALL LINE, A PERIOD OF TRAILING  
STRATIFORM PRECIPITATION CAN BE EXPECTED ALONG WITH A WIND SHIFT  
TO THE WEST, ALBEIT SUB-ADVISORY WINDS. BALMY TEMPERATURES IN THE  
60S AHEAD OF THE FRONT ARE LIKELY TO DROP SHARPLY BEHIND THE  
FRONT MONDAY MORNING AS THE STRATIFORM RAINFALL TAPERS TO  
SHOWERS. IN FACT, A LITTLE SNOW COULD BEGIN MIXING IN ACROSS THE  
LAKE CUMBERLAND AREA BY 12Z. AS TEMPERATURES TUMBLE THROUGH THE  
50S, 40S, AND INTO THE 30S, THAT TRANSITION TO SNOW SHOWERS SHOULD  
BE COMPLETE ACROSS THE ENTIRE AREA BY EARLY MONDAY AFTERNOON.  
ONGOING MODERATE CAA AND DIURNAL HEATING WILL SUPPORT SURFACE TO 3  
KM LAPSE RATES STEEPENING TO AROUND 8 C/KM DURING THE AFTERNOON  
WHILE THE 2 PVU SURFACE DIPS TO NEAR 500 HPA (INDICATING DEEP,  
DYNAMIC FORCING), LEAVING OUR REGION ON THE POLEWARD SIDE OF AN  
IMPRESSIVELY DEEP UNDULATION OF THE 250 HPA JET. THIS WILL ALSO  
PLACE EASTERN KENTUCKY IN A HIGHLY FAVORABLE ENVIRONMENT FOR SNOW  
SQUALLS FROM MONDAY AFTERNOON INTO MONDAY NIGHT WHILE AIR  
TEMPERATURES CRASH INTO THE 20S AT LOWER ELEVATIONS AND INTO THE  
TEENS ABOVE 2,500 FEET. VERY WARM GROUND TEMPERATURES STARTING IN  
THE 50S AND 60S THIS EVENING WILL BE A STRONGLY MITIGATING FACTOR  
FOR SNOW ACCUMULATION. HOWEVER, SNOWFALL RATES IN SNOW SQUALLS  
COULD BECOME INTENSE ENOUGH TO OVERCOME GROUND HEAT TEMPORARILY  
AND LEAVE SLIPPERY, SLUSHY ACCUMULATIONS ON ROADWAYS (EVEN AT  
LOWER ELEVATIONS) IN ADDITION TO CAUSING SUDDEN, DRASTIC REDUCTIONS  
IN VISIBILITY. WITH WIND SPEEDS AT THE MIXED LAYER NEAR 35 TO 40  
KNOTS, THE STRONGEST SQUALLS COULD ALSO GENERATE WIND GUSTS  
NEARING SIMILAR STRENGTH. FURTHERMORE, ELS NEAR OR EVEN COLDER  
THAN -20C COULD SUPPORT INSTANCES OF THUNDERSNOW IN THE MOST  
INTENSE SQUALLS. SNOW SHOWERS AND THE OVERALL RISK FOR SNOW  
SQUALLS SHOULD GRADUALLY DIMINISH MONDAY EVENING AND NIGHT WITH  
THE LOSS OF DIURNAL HEATING AND A LOWERING OF THE ELS.  
TEMPERATURES WILL COOL MOST RAPIDLY AT THE HIGHER ELEVATIONS NEAR  
THE KY/VA BORDER, SO CONFIDENCE IN WINTER WEATHER IMPACTS WAS  
HIGH ENOUGH TO ISSUE A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FOR HARLAN AND  
LETCHER COUNTIES. HOWEVER, ADDITIONAL LOWER ELEVATION LOCATIONS  
MAY NEED A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY IF SNOW SQUALLS BECOME NUMEROUS  
AND/OR PERSISTENT.  
   
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.  
 
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...GEERTSON  
LONG TERM...VORST  
AVIATION...GEERTSON  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab KY Page
Main Text Page