ALERT For High Stream Levels Along Steep Creeks Draining The High Knob Massif And For Strong Rises On Mainstem Rivers. Caution Is Advised.
ALERT For Strong SSE-SSW Winds Overnight Into Wednesday Morning In Advance And Right Along A Squall Line Of Potentially Strong-Severe Storms
Strong winds are expected across the entire area but with enhancements along high mountain ridges and in typical mountain wave breaking zones ( e.g., Powell Valley of Wise County & Clinch River Valley of Russell-Tazewell counties in southwest Virginia & along Pine-Black Mountain in SE KY ).
ALERT For Heavy Rain Potential & Strong Rises On Creeks In The Midnight-Noon Period of Wednesday
The threat for strong rises on creeks will be greatest in those draining the High Knob Massif where snow melt has steep creeks running swift, and in any locations that might have downpours in thunderstorms during the Midnight to Noon period of today.
Overnight Into Mid-Morning
Increasing clouds with showers & thunderstorms becoming likely during the midnight-sunrise period. Strong to locally severe storms possible. Windy. SSE winds 15-35 mph, with higher gusts, below 2700 feet. SSE-S winds 25-40 mph, with gusts of 50-60+ mph, along upper elevation ridges ( locally severe winds to 60+ mph also possible in mountain wave zones ). Unseasonably warm & humid. Temperatures varying from upper 40s to the upper 50s.
The main threat from showers & thunderstorms, other than heavy rainfall, will be the potential for downward transfer of powerful winds aloft to the surface. The main squall line is expected around sunrise along the Virginia-Kentucky border, reaching western Lee County first ( probably before sunrise ). Some development will be likely in advance of this main squall line during the overnight.
This Afternoon
Rain & showers ending. Partly sunny. Winds SSW-WSW at 10-20 mph, with higher gusts. Temps widespread in the 40s to upper 50s-lower 60s ( tending to drop late ).
Tonight Into Mid-Morning Wednesday
Becoming cloudy and colder. Cloud bases obscuring upper elevations with freezing fog ( riming ) above 3000 to 3500 feet overnight into morning. Chance of flurries or snow showers overnight into the morning. SW winds shifting WNW to NW at 5-10 mph, with higher gusts across upper elevation mountain ridges. Temperatures varying from upper 10s to lower 20s along upper elevation ridges to the upper 20s to lower 30s by sunrise to mid-morning ( milder leeward of mountains toward the Tri-Cities ). Wind chill factors in the 10s & 20s into morning ( single digits at the highest elevations of the High Knob Massif ).
Weather Discussion ( February 2-3 )
Afternoon Update
My afternoon update is to add an ALERT for high water on steep creeks draining the High Knob Massif which are near flood stage. Be very careful along these roaring creeks.
Big Stony Creek was only 0.6 feet below flood stage as of 12:15 PM. A new stream level update at 4:15 PM showed a slight drop in the level to 5.5 feet ( 12″ below flood stage ).
Superintendent Andrew Greear, of the City of Norton Water Plant, reported at 4:00 PM that the ROAR of water there had also began to decrease a little. It was, indeed, a very close shave and a Flood Watch should have officially been issued before this event given recent snow melt + it’s intensity.
Little Stony Creek, as well as many other steep creeks, are ROARING and at very high levels along both sides of the Wise-Scott border into northern Lee County. Flooding of some low-lying and poor drainage places has occurred.
The Clinch River at Speers Ferry was a little less than 5 feet below flood stage at 4:15 PM, and is forecast to rise into Thursday.
Rainfall totals topped 2.00″ in the High Knob Massif into today, with 2.24″ reported by the Automated Gauge on Big Stony Creek. More than 2.00″ also looks to have fallen at Big Cherry Lake Dam.
With relatively rapid afternoon clearing of low clouds temps have risen and I have updated the MAXS, with beginning of cold air transport delayed until tonight.
My Overnight Discussion
A beautiful but increasingly windy Tuesday was observed across the mountain area, with additional wind speed rises tonight along mid-upper elevation mountain ridges and in local mountain wave zones.
Observe that a portion of a Circumhorizontal Arc is visible above as sunlight is refracted by ice crystals in high altitude cirrostratus clouds. Lower clouds are taking on wave forms amid strong winds.
A nice sunset followed amid unseasonably warm air. PM MAXS varied from low-mid 50s in the High Knob Massif to upper 60s in downslope locations from Pound to Clintwood and Haysi-Grundy ( 67 degrees officially at Clintwood 1 W ).
The focus tonight is on ROARING winds, with 30-50+ mph speeds being common across mountain ridges above 2700 feet in elevation.
Local mountain wave gusts have also topped 50 mph in portions of the Clinch River Valley, and no doubt also amid portions of Powell Valley in Wise County.
Wind speeds in Wise have been running just below 30 mph at Lonesome Pine Airport ( perhaps higher in other spots there ).
A large shield of rain, with embedded thunderstorms, will be overspreading the mountain area during the overnight.
The Jackson Dual-Pol Doppler can be viewed for current images. Note by clicking on “Toggle Map Size” that this image can be viewed at full screen size ( a zoom tool is on the right side and menu options can be removed ).
This Doppler automatically refreshes itself to the current image if left running in a separate window-tab, with various zoom options.
The main severe threat for the Kentucky foothills into the mountains can be seen on Doppler imagery, with numerous notable echo notches along a wavy squall line which is indicative of rear inflow jets of strong winds aloft. Transfer of these to the surface is the biggest concern for potential wind damage.
The AMS definition of a Rear Inflow Jet can be read, with transfer of strong winds to the surface in downdrafts which are enhanced by entrainment of drier, mid-level air into the system being the main idea ( this drier mid-level air aids evaporative cooling and enhances negative buoyancy or sinking of air in water loaded downdrafts in this setting ).
It is this enhanced, wavy squall line that models time to reach the Virginia-Kentucky border by around 7:00 AM, earlier for extreme western Lee County.
Wind speeds analyzed up to around 80 mph at the 850 MB level is reason for concern as this squall line moves east into morning.
Heavy rainfall and strong rises on creeks, as well as ponding of water, will be the other main concern for the predawn to mid-day period.
Stay tuned to NOAA Weather Radio for possible warnings.
ALERT Remains In Effect For Dense Fog Into The Overnight Along Mid-Upper Elevation Ridges And Plateaus ( Cloud Bases Lifting Off Mid-Elevations Toward Morning – Patchy Dense Fog Other Sites )
ALERT For Strong SSE-SSW Winds From This Afternoon Into Wednesday Morning – In Advance & Along A Line Of Potentially Strong-Severe Storms
Strong winds are expected across the entire area but with enhancements along high mountain ridges and in typical mountain wave breaking zones ( e.g., Powell Valley of Wise County & Clinch River Valley of Russell-Tazewell counties in southwest Virginia & along Pine-Black Mountain in SE KY ).
ALERT For Heavy Rain Potential & Strong Rises On Creeks In The Midnight-Noon Period of Wednesday
The threat for strong rises on creeks will be greatest in those draining the High Knob Massif where snow melt has steep creeks gushing with water tonight, and in any locations that might have downpours in thunderstorms during the Midnight to Noon period on Wednesday ( February 3 ).
Overnight Into This Morning
Dense fog along middle-upper elevation ridges-plateaus giving way to patchy fog at lower-middle elevations as winds shift from northerly to SE to SSW at 5 to 15 mph. Temperatures nearly steady in the 40s ( or slowly rising into morning on mid elevation ridges & plateaus ).
This Afternoon
Partly to mostly sunny. Warm & windy. SSE winds 10-20 mph, with higher gusts, below 2700 feet. SSE to S winds at 20-30 mph, with gusts to 40+, on upper elevation ridges. Local mountain wave gusts becoming possible. Temps varying from 50 to 55 degrees in upper elevations of the High Knob Massif to the upper 50s to middle 60s ( some upper 60s possible amid downslope communities of the Russell Fork & Levisa Fork basins from Pound to Grundy ).
Tonight Into Wednesday Morning
Increasing clouds with showers & thunderstorms becoming likely during the midnight-sunrise period. Strong to locally severe storms possible. Windy. SSE winds 20-35 mph, with higher gusts, below 2700 feet. SSE-S winds 30-40 mph, with gusts of 50-60+ mph, along upper elevation ridges ( locally severe winds to 60+ mph also possible in mountain wave zones ). Unseasonably warm & humid. Temperatures varying from upper 40s to the upper 50s.
Weather Discussion ( February 1-2 )
The new month of February is wasting little time in getting active, with the first weather system spreading rain across the mountain area during Monday.
Cloud bases dropped as low-level winds shifted northerly. This was well predicted in advance by my forecast last night ( reference my 020116 Forecast for details ).
During the evening some especially dense sections along U.S. 23 included Little Stone Mountain Gap, near Powell Valley Overlook, and the Wise Mountain section at the head of Indian Creek.
These clouds will remain on the ground in mid-elevations as long as low-level winds possess a northerly component, and will linger after that if the shift to SSE-SSW winds remains light enough overnight to minimize downsloping ( valleys will tend to have dense fog in places ).
This shift to southerly winds has now occurred along high crest lines which also remain obscured in orographic pilatus clouds.
Snow melt has produced a steady increase in water levels on steep creeks draining the High Knob Massif since beginning on January 26, with a recent peak to above “Red Alert” level indicating a gush ( ROAR ) of tumbling whitewater.
This prolonged period of snow melt run-off is not surprising given the snow cores that I took in the High Knob Massif. Reference the updated My High Country Focus section for more details.
Focus now shifts to a major storm system that will begin impacting the Mountain Empire later today as the pressure gradient begins to CRANK winds. Severe non-storm related gusts will become possible from late today into Wednesday.
Meanwhile, the highest risk for severe thunderstorms will remain west and southwest of the Appalachians; however, this will need to be closely followed as a strong to locally severe thunderstorm can not be ruled out ( main threat being enhanced transfer of severe winds aloft down to surface layers ) as the main squall line reaches the area between Midnight and Sunrise on Wednesday.
Outside of the strong wind threat, with possible tree damage and downed power lines, the focus will be on where do main bands of heavy rainfall set up. The models differ on this and often have trouble with convective rains ( like with orographic precip ).
Given recent snow melt, and ongoing melt, we must hope to keep downpours at a minimum as this system rolls across the area.
ALERT For A Period Of Dense Fog Formation During Monday Afternoon-Evening For Mid-Upper Elevations Along & North Of The High Knob Massif & Tennessee Valley Divide On Upsloping Northerly Winds
Overnight Into Monday Morning
Increasing low-mid clouds. A chance of light rain-showers by morning. Winds SSW-SW 10-20 mph, with higher gusts, along middle elevation ridges & plateaus below 2700 feet. SSW-SW winds 15-25 mph, with higher gusts, along upper elevation mountain ridges. Temperatures widespread in the 40s to low-mid 50s ( mildest temps on exposed middle elevation ridges-plateaus of the thermal belt ). Wind chill in the 30s & 40s ( coldest at the highest elevations ).
This Afternoon
Rain & showers. A chance of thunder. SW winds shifting NNW-NNE and decreasing to 5-10 mph, with higher gusts along ridges. Turning cooler. Cloud bases dropping with potential for dense fog formation from elevations of Wise upward ( along and north of High Knob Massif ). Patchy fog possible at lower elevations. Temps dropping to the lower-middle 40s ( a little milder south, lee of mountains, into Clinch, Powell, Holston river valleys toward the Tri-Cities ).
Tonight Into Tuesday Morning
Chance of light rain or drizzle. Chance of dense evening fog along middle-upper elevation ridges-plateaus giving way to patchy fog at lower-middle elevations as winds shift from northerly to SE-SSW at 5-15 mph. Temperatures nearly steady in the 40s ( or slowly rising into morning on mid elevation ridges & plateaus ).
*Strong winds and showers-thunderstorms will be likely from late Tuesday into Wednesday. A line of strong-severe thunderstorms and heavy rainfall will need to be closely watched as it approaches the mountains from the west. Strong rises on creeks will also be possible. Stay tuned for updates on this major storm system.
Weather Discussion ( Jan 31-Feb 1 )
Sunday was a LONG day for me. After doing my nightly forecast it was up early to meet my buddy Roddy Addington at the City of Norton Water Plant for a run at the summit.
Run-off from snow melt has been steady, but creeks are showing some rise with the Big Stony Creek gauge reaching the “Yellow Alert” stage of 3.0 feet as of 1:45 AM tonight.
This will factor into any heavy rainfall upcoming this week.
Meanwhile, Saturday Night through Sunday was all about strong SW winds which were simply ROARING like a big 747 had landed on top of High Knob. Strong winds mixed down into Pound, Clintwood, and across nearly all of Wise and Dickenson counties during this period.
There is absolutely no doubt winds at High Knob Lookout topped 50 mph during this past day, with snow across all of the northern woods being wind blasted and covered by fine particles blown off trees.
Winds will finally diminish, at least temporarily, today as a cold front passes and the flow turns northerly. Rain with a possible rumble of thunder will give way to a little cooler conditions and cloud bases will drop later today into this evening to generate a period where dense fog formation will become possible for mid-upper elevations along and north of the High Knob Massif ( patchy fog being possible amid all locations with rain ).
ALERT For Strong & Gusty SW Winds Across Mid-Upper Elevation Mountain Ridges & Plateaus Through Sunday
Overnight Into Sunday Morning
Mostly clear ( high clouds ). Large vertical temperature spread between mountain valleys with calm winds & snow cover verses windy mid-upper elevation mountain ridges. SSW to SW winds 10-25 mph, with higher gusts, on ridges-plateaus below 2700 feet. SW winds 20-35 mph, with gusts to 40+ mph, on upper elevation mountain ridges. Temps varying from 20s in colder valleys to 40s-lower 50s along exposed mid-upper elevation ridges & plateaus. Wind chills in the 30s & 40s ( coldest at the highest elevations ).
*Rapid overnight temp rises ( chinook style ) are possible in any decoupled mountain hollows which couple back up with the very strong SW wind field above ( i.e., rapid 20+ degree temp jumps ).
This Afternoon
Sunshine to increasing mid-high clouds. Windy. SSW winds 10-20 mph, with higher gusts, along mid elevation ridges & plateaus below 2700 feet. SSW-SW winds 20-30 mph, with gusts to 40+ mph, along upper elevation ridges. Temperatures varying from low-mid 40s over deep snow on northern slopes in upper elevations of High Knob Massif to 55 to 60 degrees in downslope locations ( even milder south over bare ground into the Tennessee Valley ). Wind chills in the 30s along upper elevation mountain ridges ( 40s on mid elevation ridges & plateaus ).
Tonight Into Monday Morning
Increasing low-mid clouds. A chance of light rain-showers by morning. Winds SSW-SW 10-20 mph, with higher gusts, along middle elevation ridges & plateaus below 2700 feet. SSW-SW winds 20-30 mph, with higher gusts, along upper elevation mountain ridges. Temperatures widespread in the 40s. Wind chill factors in the 30s & 40s ( coldest at the highest elevations ).
Weather Discussion ( January 30-31 )
Saturday featured a large temperature spread in mountain valleys and a relatively small temperature spread over deep snow still across upper elevations of the High Knob Massif.
The official National Weather Service temperature in Clintwood began the day at 19 degrees and peaked at 52 degrees, before falling quickly back to 30 degrees by 10:00 PM.
*The temperature being reported for Clintwood on WCYB-TV is actually from a weather station located near Ramey Flats, not far from majestic Pine Mountain and north of the Pound River ( thus the large differences observed at times since the official Clintwood NWS site is in a valley ).
Temperatures along upper elevation crestlines varied from upper 20s Friday evening, at around 10 PM, to low-mid 40s Saturday PM, followed by a minor drop back to 42 degrees this evening before a small rise back up amid strong SW winds.
Feels-like conditions were, of course, much colder with 30s and even some 20s ( in stronger gusts ) atop the High Knob Massif and Black Mountain during the afternoon. That is continuing tonight and is even making the 48-50 degrees reported at LNP in Wise feel chilly.
The air is very dry so any evaporation from melting snow acts as a cooling process to slow down it’s rate of decrease ( snow will melt much faster amid moist air ). A general 1″ to 5″ of snow depth was measured at Clintwood 1 W this afternoon near sunset ( elevation of 1560 feet above mean sea level ). Snow cover continues to be widespread across northern slopes and in deep hollows verses much less snow or bare ground on well exposed southern slopes.
This truly generated a huge contrast with places like the Tri-Cities where bare ground now rules and temps soared into the 60s during the afternoon ( no snow to melt so the insolation was able to be applied to maximum heating of the surfaces, which then heat the overlying air ).
While Sunday will remain dry, the start of this new work week is looking wet. This will especially be true for places along and northwest of the Cumberland Mountains, as now forecast by both the NAM Model group and European Model.
Meanwhile, if it sounds like a jet airplane has landed near your house it is because winds are ROARING along the high mountain ridges ( if you live in a place to hear-feel them ).
Given the thermal structure of the atmosphere, some of these stronger winds are mixing downward to Norton-Wise overnight and ( of course ) into the many ridge communities across Dickenson-Wise counties. Batten down the hatches!
ALERT For Strong SW Winds Across Mid-Upper Elevation Mountain Ridges & Plateaus From Late Saturday Through Sunday
*State Route 619 remains extremely icy. Chains are recommended if traveling across the High Knob Massif from the City of Norton to Fort Blackmore. Hazardous conditions remain on other routes in the area ( Route 237 remains impassible due to snow drifts ).
Overnight Into Saturday Morning
Mostly clear. A large vertical temperature spread developing between colder valleys and milder mountain ridges into morning. WNW winds shifting S-SW at 5-10 mph along mountain ridges-plateaus below 2700 feet. W- WSW winds 10 to 20 mph, with higher gusts, along upper elevation mountain ridges ( especially by morning ). Temps dropping into 10s in colder valleys with calm winds verses rising readings through the 20s into 30s along middle to upper elevation ridges & plateaus. Wind chills in the 10s and 20s ( coldest at highest elevations ).
This Afternoon
Mostly sunny. SSW winds 5-15 mph, with higher gusts, below 2700 feet. SW winds 10-25 mph, with higher gusts, across upper elevation mountain ridges. Temps widespread in the 40s, varying from upper 30s to around 40 degrees on northern slopes at upper elevations of the High Knob Massif to 50-55 degrees in downslope locations of the Russell Fork & Levisa Fork basins. Wind chills in the 20s & 30s across upper elevation mountain ridges.
Tonight Into Sunday Morning
Mostly clear. Large vertical temperature spread between mountain valleys with calm winds & snow cover verses windy mid-upper elevation mountain ridges. SSW-SW winds 10-20 mph, with higher gusts, on ridges-plateaus below 2700 feet. SW winds 20-30 mph, with gusts to 40+ mph, on upper elevation mountain ridges. Temps varying from 20s in colder valleys to the 30s & 40s along exposed mid-upper elevation ridges & plateaus ( tending to rise along highest mountain ridges into morning ).
Weather Discussion ( January 29-30 )
Reference my 012916 Forecast discussion for a recap of my first missed snow forecast of this season, at least for the High Knob Massif & Norton-Wise area, with reasons behind the miss. It is indeed refreshing to have a weather source that admits when a wrong forecast was made. It is good to miss a forecast and to admit to it, as that promotes advancement in the science.
That last statement may sound insane in this world, but actually is part of the very foundation of the scientific method where “critical” thinking is and should always be promoted. No human nor supercomputer will ever make consistently perfect forecasts. Is a “perfect” forecast even possible? If you think so, then maybe it is time to review some scientific principles!
A clear sky featured a beautiful close to TGIF as night fell upon snow cover that remains widespread across the area from the High Knob Massif north ( and no doubt, in some other directions too ). A high water content pack of snow that will not magically disappear, especially on northern slopes where it will take some time to all melt away.
*That is why I keep the slick & hazardous road statement at the beginning of this forecast, as no one should think they can jump into their car and drive up to the High Knob Lookout on Saturday like during a late spring or summer day.
Unless State Route 619 has been worked ( Friday ) again, it remained extremely icy with chains required for safer travel between the City of Norton and Fort Blackmore during Jan 28. Some roads, such as Route 237, remained blocked by drifts.
Focus now shifts to a January Thaw weekend with ideal conditions in comparison to a week ago. However, as my friends who live along ridges in Wise, northern Scott, and Dickenson counties constantly remind me, there will be a factor ( WIND ) that will make this less than pleasant.
As is so often the case, it’s difficult to get “warm” in the mountains at this time of year without cranking up winds which act as a great transporter of warm air from southern latitudes ( wind being a direct response to an increasing north to south temperature gradient ).
The NAM Model group and European Model are predicting winds around the summit level of the High Knob Massif to increase into the 40-50 knot range during Saturday Night into Sunday Night, with speeds tending to increase today ahead of this low-level jet of stronger winds. This will, of course, make conditions feel chillier than air temperatures show across middle-upper elevations ( especially ).
Winds have already made the SW turn up top and are generating chill factors tonight that are making high crestlines feel like the colder valleys down below where drainage flows continue.
Wind chills and the effect of them are essentially never mentioned in most forecasts outside of arctic outbreak periods. As residents of the mountains know well; however, this effect is important in much more of the year than most would like and is a near constant factor throughout the cold season from mid-late autumn through the early-mid spring ( i.e., October-April ).
The SW air flow trajectories forecast through this weekend will correlate well to mean annual winds, such that affects of this type of flow are well documented in my climatology.
This shows a tendency for cooler conditions from the Tennessee Valley Divide and High Knob Massif southwest, on upslope flow and rising air, verses milder conditions to the northeast on downslope flow and sinking air.
MAX temperatures in Jonesville to Big Stone Gap and Norton-Wise tend to be cooler under this type of flow than communities such as Pound, Clintwood, Haysi, and Grundy. Under these conditions it is not unusual for temps at the summit level of the High Knob Massif to be as cool as the highest peaks in the southern Appalachians.
Beyond this weekend an initial wave of rain will become possible Monday ( February 1 ) in advance of a major storm system that will be lifting northeast from the lee of the Rockies into the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes during Ground Hog Day-Wednesday of next week.
A strong pressure gradient associated with this major storm will crank winds back up across the mountains, with potential for a mountain wave event on S-SE flow ( precise flow trajectories and inversion levels aloft are yet to be determined ).
An outbreak of severe thunderstorms, with possible tornadoes, will need to be closely followed west of the Appalachians as it approaches the mountains late Tuesday into early Wednesday.
Reference my latest Extended Outlook for trends beyond this time as winter is likely to return with a vengeance by the second week of February ( with much going on in the Northern Hemisphere ).
ALERT For Snow Shower & Local Snow Squall Development Overnight Into This Morning
Visibility will be reduced in heavier snow showers and any snow squalls which develop. Roads in affected locations could quickly become slick & hazardous. Remain Alert.
*State Route 619 remains extremely icy. Chains are recommended if traveling across the High Knob Massif from the City of Norton to Fort Blackmore. Hazardous conditions remain on other routes.
Overnight Into Mid-Morning
Lowering cloud bases with flurries and snow showers developing overnight into morning. Snowstreaks and snow squalls possible. Winds SW to WNW-NW at 10-20 mph, with higher gusts on middle-upper elevation ridges and plateaus. Temperatures dropping into the upper 10s to upper 20s by sunrise to mid-morning. Wind chill factors in the single digits and teens ( coldest at highest elevations ).
Snowfall Forecast For Friday
Upslope Side of Mountains 0.5″ to 3.0″
Downslope Side of Mountains Dusting to 0.5″
Target snowfall of 1.0″ at Wise, ( +/- ) 0.5″ Error Potential. This implies 0.5-1.5″ possible in the Norton-Wise area. Extremes of a dusting up to 2-3″ will be possible across the area, with greatest snow amounts expected along upslope side of mountains with respect to WNW-NW air flow trajectories ( i.e., least snow likely ESE-SE of the High Knob Massif and Tennessee Valley Divide ).
This Afternoon
Any snow showers & squalls tapering to flurries & ending. Cloudy skies becoming mostly sunny. Cold. WNW winds 5-15 mph, with higher gusts. Temperatures varying from 20s to low 30s high elevations to the middle-upper 30s. Milder south into river valleys of the Clinch, Powell, Holston and Great Valley of the Tri-Cities. Wind chills 10s & 20s.
Tonight Into Saturday Morning
Becoming mostly clear to partly cloudy. A large vertical temperature spread developing between colder valleys and milder mountain ridges. WNW winds shifting S to SSW at 5-10 mph along mountain ridges-plateaus below 2700 feet. SW-WSW winds 10-20 mph, with higher gusts, along upper elevation mountain ridges ( especially by morning ). Temps dropping into the 10s to low 20s in colder valleys with calm winds verses rising readings through the 30s along mid-upper elevation ridges ( mainly above 2700-3000 feet ).
*Strong SW winds of 10-20 mph, with 30-40+ mph gusts, will become possible Saturday into Saturday Night across mid-upper elevation mountain ridges as warmer air is transported into the Cumberland Mountains ( conditions will feel much cooler than generally forecast, especially at higher elevations ).
Weather Discussion ( January 28-29 )
My Afternoon Update
This afternoon update documents my first missed snow forecast of this winter season ( it will remain above and be saved for later reference ). The only current change was to update afternoon temperatures since with more sun and less cloudiness they have trended a little higher.
Even though this was to be a very weak event, a dusting to 0.5″, at the very most, is all that occurred along the upslope side of the mountains.
I typically look at a dozen or more different parameters when forecasting NW Flow snowfall. However, of them all moisture is perhaps most critical since regardless of how good other factors are you can simply not get snow without sufficient moisture.
Moisture along and upstream of the high north-northwest facing slopes and crestlines is especially important in the generation of orographic snow on NW flow. At 10:00 AM above, as one point selected, the 87% RH value came in well below the 96% value predicted by the 7 AM run of the NAM model this morning ( the GFS Model being very similar ).
The air never did saturate completely with orographic pilatus being limited and of short-duration during the morning, which limited riming. Riming is a very important factor in enhancement of snowfall across upper elevations in the High Knob Massif where it adds to snow volume, in addition to its deposition and growth upon trees and other exposed objects ( as a secondary source of moisture that is visible until its drop…the rime enhancement of snowfall is visible only via close analysis and inspection ).
A major reason, of course, for the lesser amount of low-level moisture is that a calculation of backward air flow trajectories into Wise up to 7:00 AM reveal a miss with incoming air from a continental source region instead of the Great Lakes ( the above plot set for 500 meters above ground level with a 100 meter plot streaming in from mid-continent to an even greater extent ).
Vigorous morning snow showers moved through the Charleston area of West Virginia. From space the difference is small between Wise & Charleston; however, on the ground the difference this AM was large since air flow into Charleston crossed the Great Lakes upstream ( illustrating, as has been well known here for decades, how important the Great Lakes are to NW Flow ( upslope ) snow in absence of wrap-around and all other moisture sources ).
Moisture streams off the Great Lakes are notoriously narrow in nature along the Lakes, and can remain that way downstream. Hitting any given point from 400 air miles away then becomes a challenge if flow across the Lakes is not strong and vigorous and cyclonic in nature.
My Overnight Discussion
A significant spread in temperatures were observed across the mountain area during Thursday, as past climatology has dictated, with PM MAXS varying from low-mid 30s over the snowpack atop the High Knob Massif to middle 40s on SW downslope flow at Clintwood and upper 40s in Grundy.
A period of afternoon clouds featured more nice waves visible above the High Knob Massif area, with gusty SW winds making conditions feel like winter ( for certain ) across the higher terrain.
MAX temperatures in the upper 30s to lower 40s were common in the Norton-Wise area, in contrast to mid-upper 40s from Pound and Clintwood to Grundy.
NW winds tonight have been gusting over 30 mph recently along our high mountain crestlines.
This has occurred as the temperature begins to drop and moisture begins to increase ( below ).
Focus now shifts to the final cold air push of January 2016 which has been a relatively cold month in the mountains, with increasing overnight moisture to bring a final snow.
The NAM Model now predicts that the 925-850 MB flow field will come into alignment to bring a period of Great Lake moisture into the High Knob Massif area during the predawn to mid-morning period of this TGIF ( flow now being predicted to come farther south into the area verses previous model runs ).
Snow showers and flurries will develop with potential now for local squall and snowstreak development given this increased moisture in low-levels amid the upslope lifting zone.
The GFS Model streamline forecast predicts the same basic flow, which will be short-lived but potentially productive during a 6 hour or so period from the predawn into mid-morning.
I increased my previous snowfall forecast only slightly for the area in general, leaving my target snow forecast for Wise alone given uncertainty associated with where squalls and any narrow snowstreaks may hit ( the upslope area having widespread snow, but with embedded heavier bursts which are impossible to pinpoint since they are yet to form on Doppler ).
Snow flakes began falling on Eagle Knob of the High Knob Massif during the 2:00 to 2:30 AM period as an upper air disturbance passed and the atmosphere began to moisten. The best low-level moisture not arriving until the predawn to mid-morning period when Doppler will begin to show a more classic upslope development of echoes as air rises upon approaching the Virginia-Kentucky border area.
With widespread old snow remaining on the ground, the upcoming day will be cold so bundle up, as this fresh batch of cold air arrives.
For those wanting a warm up, the good news is that cold air will begin retreating as soon as this upcoming overnight-Saturday morning period along highest mountain ridges of the Cumbelands; but, the bad news, is with increasingly strong winds from the SW which will drop chill factors to effectively delay true sensible warming for our middle-upper elevations until the late weekend and/or Monday.
As long as snow cover remains widespread it is hard to get really warm. A major storm system next week still looks to generate a potential for strong winds ( and mountain waves ) along with the chance of strong-severe thunderstorms as the warmest air arrives by Tuesday ( February 2 ). Stay tuned for updates.
Partly cloudy ( some high clouds ). Patchy fog possible along major rivers. Winds becoming S-SW at generally less than 10 mph along mid elevation ridges and plateaus. SW to WSW winds 10-20 mph, with higher gusts, along upper elevation mountain ridges. Temperatures varying from the 10s to lower 20s in colder locations verses rising readings into upper 20s to lower 30s on exposed ridges at mid-upper elevations ( mostly above 2700 feet ). Wind chills in the 10s and 20s ( coldest at highest elevations ).
This Afternoon
Partly to mostly sunny. A period of mid-high altitude clouds. SSW-SW winds at 5-15 mph, with higher gusts, below 2700 feet. Winds SW-WSW 10-20 mph, with higher gusts, above 2700 feet. Temps varying from the lower 30s to the lower 40s ( coldest at highest elevations ), with mid 40s possible in downslope sites ( e.g., Pound, Clintwood ). Wind chills in 20s & 30s.
Tonight Into Friday Morning
Lowering cloud bases with flurries and snow showers developing overnight into morning. Turning blustery. Winds SW shifting WNW-NW at 10-20 mph, with higher gusts on middle to upper elevation ridges and plateaus. Temperatures dropping into upper 10s to upper 20s by sunrise to mid-morning. Wind chill factors in the single digits and teens ( coldest at highest elevations ).
Snowfall Forecast For Friday
Upslope Side of Mountains 0.5″ to 2.5″
Downslope Side of Mountains Dusting to 0.5″
Target snowfall of 1.0″ at Wise, ( +/- ) 0.5″ Error Potential. This implies 0.5-1.5″ possible in the Norton-Wise area. Extremes of a dusting up to 2-3″ will be possible across the area, with greatest snow amounts expected along upslope side of mountains with respect to WNW-NW air flow ( i.e., least snowfall to the ESE-SE from the High Knob Massif and Tennessee Valley Divide ).
Weather Discussion ( January 27-28 )
Reference my 012616 Forecast discussion section for a look at some interesting mountain wave clouds observed Wednesday.
The day began amid low clouds and a coating of rime along middle-upper elevation mountain ridges & plateaus, with widespread riming across the High Knob Massif as shown via an iPhone shot by my friend Darlene Fields on her way to work ( school nurse at Appalachia Elementary ).
Wednesday ended with a gorgeous sunset featuring mountain wave clouds above the lingering snow.
Following a mix of sun and clouds today ( Thursday ) just enough moisture and lift will combine overnight into Friday morning for some snow to develop along the mountains.
Unless flow off Lake Michigan improves from what is being predicted by models now, limited moisture will only allow for light accumulations. It is so close; however, that a shift south by 50 air miles or so would increase snowfall significantly into the High Knob Massif area via more moisture from Lake Michigan & Lake Superior on NW flow.
Flurries and snow showers will become possible late this evening into the early overnight of Friday as a upper air disturbance will be crossing the mountains.
A January Thaw which opens February continues on tap as a major winter storm develops and lifts northeast across the central USA, putting the southern Appalachians in its warm sector initially as February opens. Thunderstorms and strong gradient ( mountain wave ) winds are likely before cold air returns once again to shorten the thaw!
ALERT For Icy Walks-Decks-Above Ground Objects And Roadways Overnight Into Early Afternoon Wednesday
Drizzle & Fog Changing To Freezing Drizzle & Freezing Fog With Especially Dense Fog Amid Upslope Locations Along & North of the High Knob Massif and Tennessee Valley Divide Overnight Into Wednesday
This setting favors very dense fog for Wise and places of similar or higher elevation along and north of the High Knob Massif and the Tennessee Valley Divide overnight into Wednesday. Please slow down and use extreme caution walking outside and/or driving.
Overnight Into Wednesday Morning
Turning colder ( inversion developing ). Freezing drizzle and freezing fog – worst at mid-upper elevations. NW-N winds 5-15 mph. Temperatures falling into the 20s, with upper 10s at highest elevations by morning. Wind chills falling into 10s to low 20s overnight into morning, with single digits & 10s at highest elevations ( milder temps in river valleys of Clinch, Powell, Holston toward Tri-Cities ).
This Morning Through This Afternoon
Cloud bases lifting and becoming partly sunny. Light N to NE winds generally less than 10 mph, becoming variable. Temperatures mostly in the 20s to mid 30s ( milder south toward the Tri-Cities and river valleys of Clinch & Powell ).
Tonight Into Thursday Morning
Becoming clear. Areas of fog possible. Winds becoming SSW-WSW at 5-15 mph along mid-upper elevation ridges, with higher gusts by morning. Temperatures varying from the 10s to low 20s in colder locations verses rising readings on exposed mountain ridges above 2700 feet.
Weather Discussion ( January 26-27 )
Afternoon Update
Cloud bases began lifting off of middle elevations this morning, with breaks for sunshine developing into early afternoon ( northern slopes of the High Knob Massif and portions of the Tennessee Valley Divide being slower to break for sun than locations lee of the mountains into portions of the Clinch River Valley ).
While some clouds still linger along northern sides of the High Knob Massif, the view is certainly better than 12-hours earlier when the area was engulfed amid freezing fog.
Temperatures are slowly beginning to rise with upper 20s to lower 30s from Norton-Wise to Clintwood at 2:00 PM, in wake of low temps which occurred at mid-morning.
A feature of note this afternoon is a nice, stationary orographic wave cloud which has now held in the same position for a couple hours or more.
Other waves are visible, but this orographic cloud has tended to be the biggest and most predominate seen from this CAM perspective.
Observe also miles of riming visible along the High Knob Massif from the prolonged freezing fog event of Tuesday Night into today.
It changes shape a little and color as light changes, but basically holds in the same place over time. It is present in the first image above at 2:18 PM and remains in this latest image at 4:14 PM.
Looking downward from space ( above ) three such clouds are visible along the Wise-Scott border of the High Knob Massif, with the middle one being the cloud best seen in above CAM images.
Mountain waves ( above ) after sunset with more defined stacked lenticular forms in the same location as the long-lived afternoon wave that possessed more of a roll-type appearance. Very nice!
Observe the “white light” above Eagle Knob which is the PBS Transmitter Tower at 4413 feet above sea level ( appears red to naked eye, as this is the infrared night mode of the High Knob Massif Webcam ).
My Overnight Discussion
A raw and nasty Tuesday was dominated by rain, gusty winds at higher elevations, and a general array of fog that formed over the cold snowpack as moist, milder air was transported across the area on southerly air flow.
That played a major role in my forecast last night, in which I greatly undercut model forecast temperatures for Tuesday ( reference my 012616 Forecast for more details ).
Now my ALERT for Freezing Drizzle & Freezing Fog should be taken seriously by everyone planning on being outside overnight into Wednesday. Be careful walking-driving as any surface could be icy & slick.
The Norton-Wise temp being 30-32 degrees at 11:30 PM.
The setting from now through the overnight is all about cloud bases which are dropping on northerly upslope flow and temperatures that go sub-freezing to generate an array of icy conditions on above ground and ground surfaces.
Temperatures at 11:30 PM on January 26 included
Black Mountain: 28 degrees ( Elevation 4031 feet )
Lonesome Pine Airport: 32 degrees ( Elevation 2684 feet )
While the entire area will be dropping below freezing into Wednesday morning, locations from Norton-Wise & Sandy Ridge are at or below freezing now and will fall into and through the 20s into the upcoming day ( reaching a MIN around mid-morning Wednesday, followed by steady or slow rises through the afternoon with small recoveries ).
The moisture profile appears to become too shallow to support any snow, with freezing fog and freezing drizzle being favored instead amid upslope locations along and north of the High Knob Massif and Tennessee Valley Divide ( given this thermal structure ).
The biggest unknown during this forecast cycle arises by late today when high-resolution models like the NAM show a shift in wind directions working downward from top of the inversion layer ( above High Knob summit level in the morning to below its level by late afternoon ). Depending upon when this occurs, cloud bases will begin to lift and break up ( it may be during mid-late PM or after sunset ).
Climatology shows it could be BOTH. Settings like this in the past have featured clearing across the high country of the High Knob Massif before it occurs from Wise northward to Pound-Clintwood as moisture thins from top to bottom. Snow on the ground acts as a complicating factor; however, since it keeps low-levels cold and can enhance a vertical inversion ( warmer air over cold air ). If the snow effect is strong enough then clouds may just hold right into Wednesday evening.
Regardless of how this plays out exactly, it will be another raw day and I have again undercut temperatures to make them colder than guidance suggests as many places along and north of the High Knob Massif and Tennessee Valley Divide will remain below freezing all day. Keep warm!
ALERT For Strong & Gusty SSW to SW Winds Across Middle-Upper Elevation Mountain Ridge & Plateaus Into Tuesday Morning
*Light freezing rain may be possible in sheltered mountain valleys by the predawn-morning hours of Tuesday, as well as on cold road surfaces running along northern slopes. Caution Is Advised.
Fog Will Become Possible Above Cold Snow Surfaces
*Drizzle will change to freezing drizzle Tuesday Night into Wednesday Morning. The Freezing Level will drop from the summit level of the High Knob Massif Tuesday evening to elevations of Norton-Wise by around 10 PM-Midnight.
Overnight Into Mid-Morning
Mostly cloudy. A chance of light showers by morning. Possibly freezing in sheltered valleys and on northern slope roads. Windy or becoming windy on exposed mid to upper elevation mountain ridges & plateaus. SSW-SW winds 10-25 mph, with higher gusts, along ridges-plateaus at middle elevations. SSW-SW winds 20-30 mph, with gusts of 40 to 50 mph, on upper elevation mountain ridges. Large vertical temperature spread varying from lower to mid 20s in colder mountain valleys ( tending to rise overnight ) to 30s-lower 40s on exposed ridges & plateaus. Wind chill factors in the 10s and 20s ( coldest at highest elevations ).
Mid-Morning Through This Afternoon
Rain showers, with a period of rain, likely. Chilly & raw with fog possible. Winds SSW-SW shifting W-NW around or after sunset at 5-15 mph below 2700 feet. SW to WNW winds 10-20 mph, with higher gusts, on ridges above 2700 feet. Temperatures mainly in the upper 30s to lower 40s. Wind chills in 20s and 30s ( coldest at highest elevations ).
Tonight Into Wednesday Morning
Low clouds & areas of fog. Turning colder ( inversion developing ). Light rain & drizzle to freezing drizzle late. Freezing fog along some middle to upper elevation ridges. WNW-NW winds 5-15 mph. Temperatures falling through the 30s into 20s, with upper 10s at highest elevations by morning. Wind chills falling into 10s to low 20s overnight into morning, with single digits & 10s at highest elevations.
Weather Discussion ( January 25-26 )
My Afternoon Update
Just as I had in my forecast, it has been a chilly, raw day with widespread areas of fog ( especially in valleys ) over the cold snowpack with temps in upper 30s to lower 40s.
At least wind gusts of 20 to 40+ mph, which dominated the overnight along many mid-upper elevation mountain ridges, decreased this afternoon ( it remains gusty atop High Knob ).
The official day-time ( since Midnight ) MAX temperature in Clintwood has been 38.6 degrees, with 37 degrees at 4:00 PM beneath low clouds and shallow areas of fog above snow.
The fog over snow has been widespread as the milder air runs across its cold surface. Shallow in comparison to the orographic clouds ( fog ) obscuring upper elevations amid the High Knob Massif where snow remains much deeper.
While the air temperature of 37 degrees on Eagle Knob is about the same as down in Clintwood, the difference is 20-30 mph SW wind gusts which are making it feel like 20s atop the massif ( and along some of our middle elevation mountain ridges like Sandy Ridge ).
My Overnight Discussion
Strong SW winds began increasing at highest elevations during Monday afternoon, with 30-40+ mph gusts common, to set the stage for nice orographic waves around sunset.
It would be rare to have air flowing across the High Knob Massif that is this strong, with moisture present, and not form waves.
Note the nice lenticular shape of these wave clouds.
A battle between strong cooling over the snowpack and the pressure gradient allowed for a drop in wind speeds after sunset into early evening, as cooling prevailed initially.
The general evening trend has featured progressively stronger wind gusts dropping downward onto middle elevation ridges amid an increasing pressure gradient.
This has begun to influence the elevation of Wise.
The strongest winds will lift northeast along the Cumberland range overnight into Tuesday morning.
Many mountain valleys have, by contrast, dropped into the 20s with drainage flow and calm-light winds. Temp rises are expected with increased clouds and increased vertical mixing. The chance of a little light rain and some valleys remaining at or below freezing must be respected into morning; although, this does not look widespread.
As noted previously, ground-road surfaces are cold, especially those on northern slopes which receive little to no sunshine. This increases the chance that icing could occur on contact in places.
As this beautiful photograph by my friend Rodney Parsons illustrates, snow cover remains widespread and as this air mass saturates today there will be potential for fog to form as its cold surface comes into contact with a new air mass from the Deep South bringing rain ( while this will be most likely across upper elevations, it could occur into portions of our lower-middle elevations along the Cumberlands ).
As air turns colder tonight behind the passage of an evening cold front moisture becomes shallow and trapped beneath a developing inversion. This tends to support low clouds-fog and drizzle that could change into freezing drizzle from top down through this evening into the overnight.
The freezing level will begin at the High Knob Massif summit level and drop downward over time to the elevations of Norton-Wise by around 10 PM-Midnight, then into lower elevations during the overnight period into Wednesday morning.
If the inversion holds, as the high-resolution NAM Model shows, low clouds will be hard to shake on Wednesday…especially along and north to northwest of the High Knob Massif-Tennessee Valley Divide on NW-N air flow. Stay tuned for updates.
The ALERT For Strong Winds Has Begun For Upper Elevations ( 3:00 PM ) With Downward Mixing Into Middle Elevations Expected Tonight
Caution For Possible Icy Patches From Refreezing Of Water And The Continuation Of Hazardous Travel On Untreated Roadways
ALERT For Strong & Gusty SSW-SW Winds Developing Across Mid-Upper Elevation Mountain Ridge-Plateaus During Monday Night Into Tuesday Morning
*Light freezing rain may be possible in sheltered mountain valleys by the predawn-morning hours of Tuesday, as well as on cold road surfaces running along northern slopes.
Overnight Into Monday Morning
Cold with high clouds. SSE-SSW winds at generally less than 10 mph below 2500 feet. SW-WSW winds 10-20 mph, with higher gusts, along exposed upper elevation mountain ridges & plateaus. Large vertical temp spread between snow covered mountain valleys with calm winds and exposed mid to upper elevation ridges. Temps varying from single digits and 10s in colder valleys to mid 20s-lower 30s on exposed mountain ridges ( wind chills in the 10s to low 20s ).
This Afternoon
Sunshine & high altitude clouds. S-SSW winds increasing to 10-20 mph on mountain ridges & plateaus below 2700 feet. Winds SSW-SW 15-25 mph, with higher gusts, along ridges above 2700 feet. Temperatures in the 30s to low-mid 40s. Wind chills in the 20s & 30s ( coldest at high elevations ).
Tonight Into Tuesday Morning
Mostly clear skies giving way to clouds. A chance of light rain or showers by morning. Possibly freezing in sheltered valleys and on northern slope roads. Windy across exposed mid-upper elevation mountain ridges & plateaus. SSW-SW winds 15-30 mph, with higher gusts, on ridges-plateaus at elevations below 2700 feet. SW winds 25 to 35 mph, with gusts to 40-50 mph, on upper elevation mountain ridges. Temperatures varying from low-mid 20s in colder valleys to the 30s on exposed ridges & plateaus. Wind chills in the 10s & 20s ( coldest at highest elevations ).
*Some blowing and drifting of snow will be possible at high elevations as wind speeds increase Monday Night, especially across northern slopes and shaded sides of crests where snow tends to be shaded from direct sunshine ( keeping recent low density top layer snow loose & able to blow more efficiently ).
Weather Discussion ( January 24-25 )
Afternoon Update
The ALERT for strong SW winds has now started with recent gusts to between 40 and 50 mph along the high crestlines of the High Knob Massif and Black Mountain.
Although temperatures have risen into upper 30s to around 40 degrees, it feels like 20s along the high mountain ridges.
Following a MIN of 12 degrees at Clintwood 1 W the PM temp climbed to 44 degrees before dropping back to 38 degrees as of 5:00 PM. Low-Mid 40s have also been reported in Norton-Wise and the adjacent ridge communities on increasingly gusty SW winds ( and warm air advection ).
A low-level jet and wind speed max will be moving up along the western side of the Appalachians tonight, with greatest impact across mid-upper elevations of the Cumberland Mountains.
My Overnight Discussion
Upslope snow finally ending into early hours of Sunday and low clouds began to break for some locations. A real temp plunge took readings down to around 0 degrees or locally below in some places.
MIN Temperatures Sunday Morning
Burkes Garden
-2 below zero
Clintwood 1 W
1 degree
South Fork of Pound
5 degrees
Jonesville Airport
7 degrees
Upslope clouds held tough along and just north of the High Knob Massif to keep temps a bit “milder” into Norton-Wise, with upper single digits to lower 10s reported ( heatwave ).
The day featured beautiful blue skies and only scattered high altitude ice crystal clouds. A nice day for NASA to capture Landsat Images of widespread snow cover.
Observe that flat or rolling terrain tends to show snow better than mountainous, convex topography
Unless you are really into climatology, an aspect that is never talked about on a day like Sunday is that snow glare causes thermometers to read too high, that is unless they are shaded completely ( e.g., on northern exposures ).
Even National Weather Service MMTS Thermometers can read too high with intense snow glare reflecting sunlight upward into radiation shields from the ground.
That is one reason I like to use Nora 4 SSE observations, at the official NWS station of Wayne & Genevie Riner, where the thermometers are on the north side of the house and protected from radiation and intense snow glare.
The MAX temperature of 30 degrees was more representative of what elevations such as Wise truly had, with the elevation of this station being only 34 feet lower than Lonesome Pine Airport where the reported MAX reached 37 degrees.
*Snow glare radiation caused many Weatherbug Stations to read absurdly high during Sunday ( roof + snow glare ).
As always it seems amid this complex terrain, interesting weather variations are on display once again tonight with colder valleys 10 to 15 degrees at 2:45 AM ( Jan 25 ) verses a temp trend that has been rising along high crestlines into the lower 30s on steady and gusty SW winds ( WCF 10s ).
Speaking of which, SW winds are going to really begin to CRANK along the Cumberland Mountains late Monday into Tuesday Morning as this next weather maker arrives.
This low-level inversion will be stronger than the NAM predicts since valley temperatures in many places will drop off fast during Monday evening above snow, before rising overnight into Tuesday morning for places that have enough turbulent, vertical mixing to overcome stratification ( warmer air above cold air ) and recouple calm valleys back up with strong flow along top of the boundary layer field ( the recoupling point being dependent upon the local terrain features and varying with location ).
An inversion will further enhance this setting by aiding channelization of air flow between the High Knob Massif and Black Mountain, as SW winds stream up through the High Knob Landform corridor tonight into Tuesday.
A possible freezing concern will be any valleys that remain decoupled, with light to calm winds, since precipitation will be developing by the predawn-sunrise period of Tuesday. In addition, as past climatology shows, northern slope roads will also be a concern since surfaces will be very cold.
While precipitation amounts with this next system are yet to be fully resolved, the high-resolution NAM fits climatology with an axis of heaviest amounts extending northeast across the Cumberland range on strong SW flow.
*In particular, the upslope-downslope couplet being shown between the High Knob Massif-Black Mountain corridor and Russell Fork-Levisa Fork basins fits climatology of strong SW flow regimes well.
Although relatively close, the SW Upslope Flow snow potential with this system seems currently to be reduced by above freezing air forecast for the 825-775 MB layer. However, should that layer cool then the threat would increase. A trend to monitor today.