


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Wilmington, OH
Issued by NWS Wilmington, OH
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019 FXUS61 KILN 181019 AFDILN Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Wilmington OH 619 AM EDT Mon Aug 18 2025 .SYNOPSIS... Near normal temperatures are expected today before a brief warmup with more humid conditions arrives for Tuesday into Wednesday. This will coincide with a more pronounced potential for scattered showers and storms before drier conditions evolve late in the workweek once again. Slightly cooler and drier conditions are expected by Thursday and Friday, with a signal for an even stronger push of mild and dry air arriving late this weekend into early next week. && .NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 PM THIS EVENING/... Drier air continues to filter in from the NE in the wake of a backdoor cold front progressing to the SW through the local area. This will yield dry conditions locally through the near term period with morning cloud cover expected to scatter out into the afternoon, with only a few Cu in the W/SW where the better LL moisture will reside by midday. Afternoon dewpoints will likely mix out into the upper 50s in central OH to the mid 60s in the Tri-State with abundant sunshine on tap. Temps will top out in the mid 80s in central OH to around 90 degrees in the Tri-State into EC IN. A few SHRA/TSRA may approach the far wrn fringes of the local area by late afternoon but should dissipate before moving into EC/SE IN as the activity encounters increasingly dry air with eastward extent. && .SHORT TERM /6 PM THIS EVENING THROUGH 6 PM TUESDAY/... The dry air will remain entrenched across the region tonight into the first part of the daytime Tuesday before an abrupt return to more humid conditions arrives late Tuesday afternoon through Tuesday night ahead of the next system. But until we get to that point, temps tonight will bottom out in the lower 60s in central OH and rural/sheltered spots in south-central OH and NE KY to upper 60s in the Tri-State amidst mainly clear skies. Some patchy fog cannot be ruled out in NE KY and the lower Scioto Valley and in area river valleys. As we progress into Tuesday afternoon, several clusters of SHRA/TSRA will likely approach from the W before weakening with eastward extent into the local area. This activity will be progressing eastward on the leading edge of a more humid airmass advecting into the area through Tuesday evening/night. The arrival of better LL moisture will translate into better instby development, although the overall forcing and source for ascent through Wednesday morning looks to be fairly meager. So despite a more conducive thermodynamic environment for SCT TSRA, the lack of better lift may limit the overall coverage of activity locally Tuesday evening into Wednesday morning. Nevertheless, with the sudden increase in PWs and instby, some locally heavy rain and isolated flooding cannot be ruled out in any persistent activity through Tuesday evening. This low-end potential will likely be confined to locales near/W of I-71 into north-central KY. Highs on Tuesday will top out in the upper 80s to near 90 degrees. && .LONG TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY/... Shortwave trough continues to work its way through the Great Lakes region Tuesday night into Wednesday. The extent of this shortwave isn`t quite as far south as some of the previous runs had, which would result in lower shower/thunderstorm coverage given the weaker forcing. Thus, have maintained trend of lower PoPs in the grids at this juncture. Global models continue to show this H5 trough propagating eastward and absorbing Hurricane Erin, carrying this tropical system just off the Atlantic coast. This interaction may result in a subtle retrograde of the troughing feature on Thursday, leading to some increased cloud coverage, along with a low probability for a spotty shower. Have maintained a dry forecast for now however given the weak signal for pcpn. Dry conditions expected heading into the weekend, with temperatures maintaining their near normal values. However, a robust, longwave trough will begin to carve its way into the Ohio Valley on Sunday, resulting in a surge of seasonably cool and dry air. Highs on Sunday may remain in the middle to upper 70s for our northern CWA. && .AVIATION /12Z MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... A quiet TAF period is on tap with dry conditions area-wide. Some patches of SCT/BKN clouds will linger about the local area through the morning hours, impacting the local sites with some borderline MVFR/VFR CIGs from time-to-time. Brief MVFR CIGs are most likely for KCMH/KLCK. A clearing trend should evolve into the afternoon as LL moisture mixes out, with just a few cirrus toward late afternoon through the remainder of the period. Some river valley BR/FG cannot be completely ruled out early Tuesday morning, mainly at KLUK, but confidence in development is low. Light NE winds around 5kts will prevail through this evening before going more easterly late tonight and more southerly past daybreak. OUTLOOK...Thunderstorms are possible Tuesday and Wednesday. && .ILN WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OH...None. KY...None. IN...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...KC NEAR TERM...KC SHORT TERM...KC LONG TERM...Clark AVIATION...KC