Current Radar
Meteorological summer, aka fake summer, ends tonight. As weather nerds even we agree fall does start until Sept 22, 2016 at 9:21 A.M. CDT.
— NashSevereWx (@NashSevereWx) September 1, 2016
Current Radar
Meteorological summer, aka fake summer, ends tonight. As weather nerds even we agree fall does start until Sept 22, 2016 at 9:21 A.M. CDT.
— NashSevereWx (@NashSevereWx) September 1, 2016
Current Radar

Scattered showers and storms currently sit to our North and are drifting down into our area.
Storm still moving very slowly. Wind fields look weak. I think it'll come down 24, mostly as a nuisance. When thunder roars, go indoors.
Current Radar
Update: One small shower developed over Brentwood this afternoon. Other than that, we don’t expect much in the way of rainfall this evening. Temperatures will fall through the low 80s later this evening, with humidity holding strong (dew points in the 70s). Tonight will be great for an evening at the Sounds Ballpark.
Current Radar
We’ve been able to dodge the shower activity so far today. Still could get some small showers and thunderstorms to develop right over us, but expecting the majority to stay to our South.
We are in nowcast mode @NashSevereWx on Twitter as storms pop up and work their way in from the east.
We will may see a few weak microbursts. Microbursts happen when winds come screaming down from a storm, slam into the ground, then spread out in all directions. Here is an example.
This gif expresses how I feel about the heat:

Here we have the Biebs representing HEAT, sticking out in the crowd, and being obnoxious about it with the gold watch, two gold chains, red hot hat brim, indoor sunglasses, and that unnecessarily cool way he grips the water bottle. I like that he’s hydrating (although, why two tiny sips, Biebs?), but I can’t think that leather (?) garbage-bag-styled shirt is the loose, lightweight clothing that makes more sense during a heat wave. And worst part about it, is the gif never moves on. It’s stuck in an interminable loop.
Current Radar

Update: Showers and storms, some severe, are moving across the area. If you have any storm reports, please tweet #tSpotter with your messages and pictures.
What’s new besides that? Not too much. Keeping it simple with temperatures falling through the 80s by mid-evening. The rain valve *should* shut off by 7 or 8pm at the very latest.
Current Radar

It appears rain activity will fizzle in coverage, but not in totality. A few storms could linger into the evening, mainly west of the area. Still, have the rain gear on hand for any plans you have outdoors tonight.
Temperatures will cool through the upper 80s and upper 70s by 9PM.

Saturday will repeat today, except now the better rain chances shift towards I-65 and east towards the Cumberland Plateau. It won’t be a washout, but if you have sports or other outdoor excursions planned, you’ll be wise to take the umbrella with you.
Temperatures will top out in the middle 90s with heat index readings above 100º. This heat could be dangerous. Remember, the heat index is a measure of what it feels like in the shade. Those in the sun will experience more heat than suggested by the Heat Index. Stay hydrated!
Low to middle 90s for highs, PM storm chances daily, and we’re closely monitoring the tropics for any development that *could* impact our weather later in the week. More on that below…
There’s a very unorganized tropical disturbance located in the circle:
It is not named, and therefore is not a “classified” tropical depression, storm, or hurricane. It is simply a small “eddy” (miniature circulation) entering the Bahamas, that, if convection trends up, could intensify.
Here it is on satellite:

It does this “pulsing” type of thing…where it looks really disorganized one moment, then storms fire up and it looks healthy again. This morning, it’s going through one of these cycles.
So if this “99L” is way far away from us, why talk about it? NWS Nashville sees it worthy of discussion:
We are still watching the tropics to see what the area of interest near Cuba will do over the next several days. The Euro keeps the system rather weak and takes it up the west coast of FL and then swings it northeast. The GFS has a rather creative solution keeping the disturbance weak and making initial landfall near the AL/MS coastline before drifting east along the Gulf Coast and strengthening. Either solution would not impact our weather here in Middle TN. The Euro has been more consistent with the track over the last couple of days, but looking at spaghetti plots a couple of models want to bring it into the Gulf Coast. It will be worth keeping an eye on regardless.
Current Radar
Through most of today, we have won the lottery of avoiding most of the pop-up shower activity. Showers have popped up throughout the region and are moving very slowly if at all. I’d keep an eye on these through the remainder of the afternoon and into the early evening hours.
Current Radar

So far so good through the day as those showers have stayed out of our area. We still have that very small chance of a shower trying to develop, but it doesn’t look too promising as the day progresses.
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