


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Nashville, TN
Issued by NWS Nashville, TN
Versions:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
295 FXUS64 KOHX 172337 AFDOHX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Nashville TN 637 PM CDT Tue Jun 17 2025 ...New UPDATE... .KEY MESSAGES... Updated at 637 PM CDT Tue Jun 17 2025 - Showers and thunderstorms continue to be the pattern for the upcoming week with low chances of severe weather and medium chances of flash flooding. - Summer-like heat and drier weather makes an appearance across Middle Tennessee for next weekend. Heat indices climb to 100 degrees Saturday through Monday. && .UPDATE... Issued at 637 PM CDT Tue Jun 17 2025 A long wave trough is set up over the central part of the US and a short wave is just to our south. This is what has been bringing widespread scattered showers and thunderstorms throughout the day. Dew points are in the low to mid 70s and we are seeing impressive PWAT values up to 2.10". Very have rain has been observed with any convection and we saw BNA pick up 0.82" of rain in just 20-30 minutes. This has lead to localized urban flooding during the heavy rain. Scattered activity will continue through the evening but as the sun sets it will loose some of it`s intensity as CAPE gradually diminishes. The period for very heavy rain with localized flooding will be over the next 1-3 hours. We will dry out for the most part overnight but the short wave will be lifting through the region and can`t rule out a few showers or isolated thunderstorms but nothing of major impact. It will stay muggy overnight with mild lows in the upper 60s to lower 70s. More unsettled weather is expected tomorrow with periods of showers and thunderstorms. && .SHORT TERM... (Rest of today through Wednesday) Issued at 1130 AM CDT Tue Jun 17 2025 Low clouds are our story once again for this morning. The UL trough and shortwave should push east today, but still provide the forcing for thunderstorms across the area. Again, a low chance of severe weather, but flash flooding remains a concern. SPC has placed most of our area in a marginal risk for severe weather today (level 1/5), highlighting wind gusts as the most likely hazard. Daytime heating will play a role in the thunderstorms again, so most likely time will be in the afternoon and evening. With these storms, in addition to wind gusts, most likely hazards will be lightning, and heavy rainfall. PWATs from this morning`s sounding here at the office are around 1.90", which is close to our daily max and above the 90th percentile for today. This airmass is extremely moist, and we have already had above average rainfall this summer, which is why we are concerned about flash flooding in the area today. Be weather aware and know your action plan if a flash flood warning is issued. Wednesday will be a slight lull, in the terms it will be true diurnal thunderstorm activity without any UL forcing or support. However, Wednesday night into Thursday morning will be another story. SPC has placed our NW counties in a slight risk for severe weather (level 2/5) with a marginal risk (1/5) across the remainder of the area. Looking at the CAMs, 2 waves are shown. The first line moves along the KY/TN state line in the evening hours Wednesday, and is not really a threat to the rest of middle Tennessee. The second wave is overnight into Thursday morning, and affects the entire area. It seems stronger in the guidance west of I-65, and then kind of fizzles out as it moves east. Some guidance shows discrete storms ahead of the main lines, which would cause more severe weather issues, but wind is our main threat Wednesday evening into Thursday, followed by large hail, and a low tornado threat at this time. && .LONG TERM... (Wednesday Night through next Tuesday) Issued at 1130 AM CDT Tue Jun 17 2025 One more day of thunderstorm chances on Thursday after the morning`s activity, but with the timing shift to be more of an overnight into the morning event, we will have to see how much the atmosphere can rebound into the afternoon. If there is enough rebound, we could see isolated thunderstorms, mainly in the eastern part of the area. Hazards with these cells will be lightning, heavy rain, and windy conditions. The weekend looks largely dry, but humid and hot. A stout ridge will take hold over the southeast US over the weekend and into next week, which will limit our rain chances but crank up those temperatures. Highs look to reach the mid 90s, and the airmass will remain humid over middle Tennessee, bringing about heat index concerns as they could creep into the triple digits. We`re monitoring for heat issues into the weekend, but with the temporal extent, hard to say for certain now. It looks pretty likely though. && .AVIATION... (00Z TAFS) Issued at 633 PM CDT Tue Jun 17 2025 Showers and thunderstorms are moving through the area, just passing BNA/MQY. SRB and CSV will see thunderstorm chances continue through the evening. Scattered showers and thunderstorms remain in the forecast through the TAF period. Timing and location of these storms remain difficult to forecast and are inherently causing low confidence in the forecast. CIGs have been dropping between IFR-MVFR as storms move over terminals. In general, VFR CIGs are expected through the forecast period, outside of any showers or thunderstorms. SW winds will be on the rise tomorrow afternoon, gusting between 15 to 20 kts. && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS... Nashville 72 90 73 86 / 50 40 60 80 Clarksville 73 89 73 85 / 20 80 70 50 Crossville 67 83 67 79 / 70 70 50 100 Columbia 71 89 70 84 / 70 40 60 80 Cookeville 69 84 68 80 / 70 60 50 90 Jamestown 67 84 67 78 / 70 60 50 90 Lawrenceburg 70 88 70 83 / 70 50 50 80 Murfreesboro 71 90 71 85 / 60 50 50 90 Waverly 70 88 70 84 / 30 50 70 60 && .OHX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ UPDATE.......Mueller SHORT TERM...Holley LONG TERM....Holley AVIATION.....Cravens