Friday – Light/Moderate, Off & On Rain – High 59
6am 53 . 9am 55 . Noon 58 . 3pm 52 . 6pm 47 . 9pm 45
Rain most of the day, then a cold front will clear us out. Hi-Res NAM model Friday 7 am – 4 pm:
Friday – Light/Moderate, Off & On Rain – High 59
6am 53 . 9am 55 . Noon 58 . 3pm 52 . 6pm 47 . 9pm 45
Rain most of the day, then a cold front will clear us out. Hi-Res NAM model Friday 7 am – 4 pm:
Today – Mostly Cloudy – Low 43
Clouds increase tonight. Nothing to worry about.
Thursday – Some Clouds; Warmer – High 64
6am 44 . 9am 52 . Noon 61 . 3pm 63 . 6pm 59 . 9pm 56
More clouds pile on in, but overall, it’ll be a nice day.
Wednesday – Some Clouds; Warmer – High 59
6am 35 . 9am 45 . Noon 55 . 3pm 58 . 6pm 52 . 9pm 48
Thursday – Warmer; Rain Late – Morning Low 42, High 63
6am 43 . 9am 51 . Noon 60 . 3pm 62 . 6pm 59 . 9pm 57
No tornadoes occurred in Davidson or Williamson County, but the tornado-warned segment of last night’s squall line produced two tornadoes to our north:
(1) an EF-1 tornado in Robertson county, and
Tonight’s severe weather threat in Davidson & Williamson Counties has ended, mostly without incident.
Monday – Clearing Out – Morning Low 44, Afternoon High 60
6am 46 . 9am 51 . Noon 58 . 3pm 59 . 6pm 51 . 9pm 44
The Storm Prediction Center has issued a Tornado Watch for Davidson County until 9 p.m. tonight:

If you look closely, you’ll notice the Watch box covers the northern half of Williamson County, roughly along Highway 96.
At 1:34 pm, the Storm Prediction Center said there’s a 95% chance they’d issue us a Tornado Watch for us “within the hour.”

At 2:15 p.m., there was still no Tornado Watch. At 2:24 p.m., SPC decided to hold off on issuing a Tornado Watch at this time. Then, at 2:55 pm, SPC decided to issue the Tornado Watch for Kentucky, but excluding us:
Tornadoes with debris signatures on radar are cutting through Illinois right now (11:30 a.m.). The risk in Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan, northern Kentucky, and Ohio is much greater than ours, but you need to pay attention to our weather this afternoon and tonight.
This morning’s Storm Prediction Center (SPC) headline reads “A Major Severe Weather Outbreak is Forecast Today and/or Tonight.”
SPC”s “High Risk” category of severe weather category is rarely used. It’s in effect over Eastern Illinois, all of Indiana, southwest Michigan, and western Ohio. Chicago, Indianapolis, and Cincinnati are a few of the major cities included. If you have friends and family in the “High Risk” area, urge them to monitor the weather. This is not an “ordinary severe weather day” for them. It does not get worse than a “High Risk.”
Two rounds of potentially severe weather will take a swing at us tomorrow.
Round 1: The Morning
There was debate this morning as to whether we’d see rain/storms tomorrow morning or afternoon.
Right now, we think there will be morning storms.