

Probabilities

Stay tuned to @NashSevereWx on Twitter and multiple media outlets as thunderstorms impact our area. Use #tSpotter on Twitter to send in your storm photos/reports, only if you can do so safely!


Probabilities

Stay tuned to @NashSevereWx on Twitter and multiple media outlets as thunderstorms impact our area. Use #tSpotter on Twitter to send in your storm photos/reports, only if you can do so safely!

Showers and thunderstorms are currently (as of 8:50AM) moving eastward towards Davidson/Williamson Counties. A couple of these could spark up, but right now they are not expected to be severe. We’ll monitor them, just in case.

For the remainder of our Friday, expect for calm conditions with clouds increasing as we move through the evening.
Other than that, enjoy your Friday evening!
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Dry weather and warmer temperatures are expected Friday as a small ridge of relatively higher pressure traverses middle Tennessee. In fact, a ten degree jump or so in afternoon temps is anticipated, with highs in the middle 80s under mostly sunny skies! It could still be a bit breezy with wind gusts up to 20 mph, but this time it’s out of the south-southwest. Hakuna matata…at least for Friday. Things start to change on Saturday.

Good news, the bulk of the showers have moved through and will continue to move to the east.
The iffy news is that we still have a chance of showers through the remainder of the evening. While we shouldn’t see a lot more, we still could see a rogue shower or two.


(AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)
An eventful next couple of weeks of hockey are lining up, so hopefully weather cooperates for Plaza festivities and other outdoor gatherings. Go Preds!
Updated HRRR Model


So far, so good today. Clouds have continued to increase throughout the afternoon, but so far we have had a nice dry day. Expect for clouds to continue to increase as we head into the evening hours. You may want to bring a light jacket with you tonight if you have any outdoor plans as temps will fall into the 60s by 8 PM.
As I write this, a cold front is arriving, scattering a few isolated showers across both counties, moving from west to east. This hit-or-miss activity may linger for a few hours. The HRRR model continues to show it:
A total of 1.06″ fell in the official rain can at BNA from yesterday’s rain.
Local CoCoRaHS observer totals in Davidson County:

And Williamson County:

Radar Estimated Storm Total Rainfall, which isn’t that reliable for raw totals, but it has a good idea of who got the most rain. Green is less than 1″ and yellow is more than 1″:


Scattered showers and a few rumbles of thunder will remain possible through Sunday afternoon. The severe weather threat will be next to nothing.
Our pattern will be to trend cooler through the week, especially towards next weekend. Uncertainty exists about a potential rain/storm maker on Wednesday.
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