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This forecast update covers far southern Illinois, far southeast Missouri, and far western Kentucky. See the coverage map on the right side of the blog.
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June 9, 2017
Friday Night Forecast Details:
Forecast: Mostly clear.
Temperatures: MO ~ 60 to 65 IL ~ 60 to 65 KY ~ 60 to 65 TN ~ 60 to 65
Winds: Southwest turning briefly southeast and south at 5 mph.
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Medium. Some adjustments are possible.
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? None
Is severe weather expected? No.
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 0% IL ~ 10% KY ~ 0% TN ~ 0%
Coverage of precipitation: Most likely none.
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
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June 10, 2017
Saturday Forecast Details
Forecast: Mostly sunny. Quite warm.
Temperatures: MO ~ 85 to 90 IL 85 to 90 KY 85 to 90 TN 85 to 90
Winds: South winds at 6 to 12 mph with gusts to 18 mph possible.
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? None
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Medium. Some adjustments are possible.
Is severe weather expected? No.
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 0% IL ~ 0% KY ~ 0% TN ~ 0%
Coverage of precipitation: None
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
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Saturday Night Forecast Details:
Forecast: Mostly clear.
Temperatures: MO ~ 65 to 70 IL ~ 65 to 70 KY ~65 to 70 TN ~ 65 to 70
Winds: South winds at 6 to 12 mph with gusts to 20 mph.
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Medium. Some adjustments are possible.
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? None
Is severe weather expected? No.
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 0% IL ~ 0% KY ~ 0% TN ~ 0%
Coverage of precipitation: None anticipated
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
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June 11, 2017
Sunday Forecast Details
Forecast: Partly to mostly sunny. Hot. Increasingly humid. Heat index above 90 degrees. Windy.
Temperatures: MO ~ 86 to 92 IL 86 to 92 KY 86 to 92 TN 86 to 92
Winds: South and southwest winds at 15 to 30 mph. Some higher gusts possible.
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? Heat index values may rise above 90 degrees.
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Medium. Some adjustments are possible.
Is severe weather expected? No.
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 0% IL ~ 0% KY ~ 0% TN ~ 0%
Coverage of precipitation: None anticipated
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
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Sunday Night Forecast Details:
Forecast: Mostly clear and warm
Temperatures: MO ~ 66 to 72 IL ~ 66 to 72 KY ~66 to 72 TN ~ 66 to 72
Winds: South and southwest winds at 6 to 12 mph.
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Medium. Some adjustments are possible
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? None
Is severe weather expected? No.
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 0% IL ~ 0% KY ~ 10% TN ~ 10%
Coverage of precipitation: None anticipated
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
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June 12, 2017
Monday Forecast Details
Forecast: Partly to mostly sunny. Hot. Humid. Isolated storm possible. Heat index above 90 degrees.
Temperatures: MO ~ 86 to 92 IL 86 to 92 KY 86 to 92 TN 86 to 92
Winds: Southwest winds at 5 to 10 mph with gusts to 15 mph
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? Small chance for wet roads and lightning.
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Medium. Some adjustments are possible
Is severe weather expected? No.
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 20% IL ~ 20% KY ~ 20% TN ~ 20%
Coverage of precipitation: None to isolated.
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
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Monday Night Forecast Details:
Forecast: Some clouds. Isolated storms possible. Warm.
Temperatures: MO ~ 70 to 75 IL ~ 70 to 75 KY ~ 70 to 75 TN ~ 70 to 75
Winds: Southwest winds at 5 mph.
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Medium. Some adjustments are possible
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? Small chance for wet roadways and lightning.
Is severe weather expected? No.
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 20% IL ~ 20% KY ~ 20% TN ~ 30%
Coverage of precipitation: None to isolated.
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
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June 13, 2017
Tuesday Forecast Details
Forecast: Partly sunny. Warm. A shower or thunderstorm possible.
Temperatures: MO ~ 85 to 90 IL 85 to 90 KY 85 to 90 TN 85 to 90
Winds: South winds at 5 to 10 mph
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? Perhaps some wet roadways and lightning.
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Medium. Some adjustments are possible
Is severe weather expected? Unlikely
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 20% IL ~ 20% KY ~ 20% TN ~ 20%
Coverage of precipitation: Isolated
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
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Tuesday Night Forecast Details:
Forecast: Mostly clear to partly cloudy. Isolated thunderstorm possible.
Temperatures: MO ~ 70 to 75 IL ~ 70 to 75 KY ~ 70 to 75 TN ~ 70 to 75
Winds: South winds at 5 mph.
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Medium. Some adjustments are possible
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? Perhaps some wet roadways and lightning.
Is severe weather expected? Unlikely
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 20% IL ~ 20% KY ~ 30% TN ~ 30%
Coverage of precipitation: Isolated
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No, but monitor updates
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June 14, 2017
Wednesday Forecast Details
Forecast: Partly to mostly sunny. Warm. A chance for showers and thunderstorms.
Temperatures: MO ~ 85 to 90 IL 85 to 90 KY 85 to 90 TN 85 to 90
Winds: South winds at 5 to 10 mph
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? Lightning and wet roadways.
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Medium. Some adjustments are possible
Is severe weather expected? Monitor updates
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 30% IL ~ 30% KY ~ 30% TN ~ 30%
Coverage of precipitation: Isolated.
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No, but monitor updates
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Wednesday Night Forecast Details:
Forecast: Partly cloudy. A chance for a shower or thunderstorm.
Temperatures: MO ~ 70 to 75 IL ~ 70 to 75 KY ~70 to 75 TN ~ 70 to 75
Winds: South winds at 5 mph.
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Low. Significant adjustments possible.
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? Wet roadways and lightning.
Is severe weather expected? Monitor updates.
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 20% IL ~ 20% KY ~ 20% TN ~ 20%
Coverage of precipitation: S Isolated to perhaps scattered.
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No, but monitor updated forecasts
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June 15, 2017
Thursday Forecast Details
Forecast: Partly sunny. A chance for a shower or thunderstorm.
Temperatures: MO ~ 85 to 90 IL 85 to 90 KY 85 to 90 TN 85 to 90
Winds: South winds at 5 to 10 mph
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? Wet roadways and lightning.
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Low. Significant adjustments possible.
Is severe weather expected? Unlikely
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 30% IL ~ 30% KY ~ 30% TN ~ 30%
Coverage of precipitation: Scattered.
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? Monitor updated forecasts.
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Thursday Night Forecast Details:
Forecast: Partly cloudy. A thunderstorm possible.
Temperatures: MO ~ 68 to 74 IL ~ 68 to 74 KY ~ 68 to 74 TN ~ 68 to 74
Winds: South winds at 5 mph.
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Low. Significant adjustments possible.
What impacts are anticipated from the weather? Wet roadways and lightning.
Is severe weather expected? Unlikely
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 30% IL ~ 30% KY ~ 30% TN ~ 30%
Coverage of precipitation: Scattered
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
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June 16, 2017
Friday Forecast Details
Forecast: Partly sunny. A chance for a shower.
Temperatures: MO ~ 80 to 85 IL 80 to 85 KY 80 to 85 TN 80 to 85
Winds:
What impacts are anticipated from the weather?
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Low. Significant adjustments possible.
Is severe weather expected?
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 20% IL ~ 20% KY ~ 20% TN ~ 20%
Coverage of precipitation:
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
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Friday Night Forecast Details:
Forecast: Partly cloudy.
Temperatures: MO ~ 65 to 70 IL ~ 65 to 70 KY ~ 65 to 70 TN ~ 65 to 70
Winds:
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Low. Significant adjustments possible.
What impacts are anticipated from the weather?
Is severe weather expected?
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation: MO ~ 0% IL ~ 0% KY ~ 0% TN ~ 0%
Coverage of precipitation:
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
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June 17, 2017
Saturday Forecast Details
Forecast: Partly sunny.
Temperatures: MO ~ 80 to 85 IL 80 to 85 KY 80 to 85 TN 80 to 85
Winds:
What impacts are anticipated from the weather?
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Low. Significant adjustments possible.
Is severe weather expected?
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation? MO ~ 10% IL ~ 10% KY ~ 10% TN ~ 10%
Coverage of precipitation:
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
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Saturday Night Forecast Details:
Forecast: Partly cloudy.
Temperatures: MO ~ 65 to 70 IL ~ 65 to 70 KY ~ 65 to 70 TN ~ 65 to 70
Winds:
My confidence in the forecast verifying: Low. Significant adjustments possible.
What impacts are anticipated from the weather?
Is severe weather expected?
The NWS defines severe weather as 58 mph winds or great, 1″ hail or larger, and/or tornadoes
What is the chance of precipitation: MO ~ 0% IL ~ 0% KY ~ 0% TN ~ 0%
Coverage of precipitation:
Should I cancel my outdoor plans? No
Don’t forget to check out the Southern Illinois Weather Observatory web-site for weather maps, tower cams, scanner feeds, radars, and much more! Click here
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A severe thunderstorm is defined as a storm that produces quarter size hail or larger, 58 mph winds or greater, and/or a tornado. That is the official National Weather Service definition of a severe thunderstorm.
Friday night through Monday: Severe weather is not anticipated.
Monday through Friday: Thunderstorm chances will likely increase next week. Lightning and heavy downpours possible. Too soon to know if severe weather is a concern. Greatest risk for storms may center around Thursday.
Monitor updates.
Weather Analysis for the coming week:
Interactive Weather Radar Page. Choose the city nearest your location: Click this link
Did I mention that I am going on vacation the 16th through the 24th? It appears I should have gone on vacation this week/weekend! We are experiencing amazing and quiet weather. I have not heard a single person complain. Why should they! This is almost perfect weather for the Month of June. Not too cool. Not too warm. Not too humid. Just about right.
Our amazing weather will continue into the rest of the weekend. Temperatures will start to warm on both Saturday and Sunday afternoon. It might feel a little uncomfortable for some on Sunday afternoon. Especially in direct sunlight. A few spots could hit the 90 degree mark. Anything north of there means I will have to bring out the H word. Yes, hot! I like to reserve the word hot for 90 and above.
Widespread middle to upper 80’s are forecast for Saturday and Sunday. A few spots will hit the 90 degree mark. Dew points will be on the rise, as well. It will start to feel slightly more humid on Saturday and a bit more on Sunday.
Dew points by Monday and Tuesday may reach into the upper 60’s to lower 70’s. That equals sticky air. Keep that in mind if you have outdoor activities on Sunday or into next week. Heat index values will definitely rise above 90 degrees on Monday and Tuesday.
The warm weather should last into the end of next week.
Isolated storms may need to be introduced into the Monday/Monday night forecast. For now, I kept the probabilities very low. Perhaps a scattered thunderstorm on Tuesday into Wednesday, as well.
Rain chances may increase towards Thursday and Friday. A slightly stronger system is forecast to move into the central United States. I have bumped up rain chances to 30% for the time being. A bit too early to go much higher than that.
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We have regional radars and local city radars – if a radar does not update then try another one. Occasional browsers need their cache cleared. You may also try restarting your browser. That usually fixes the problem. Occasionally we do have a radar go down. That is why I have duplicates. Thus, if one fails then try another one.
During the winter you can track snow and ice by clicking the winterize button on the local city view interactive radars.
If you have any problems then please send me an email beaudodson@usawx.com
Interactive Weather Radar Page. Choose the city nearest your location: Click this link—
National interactive radar: Click this link.
Local interactive city radars include St Louis, Mt Vernon, Evansville, Poplar Bluff, Cape Girardeau, Marion, Paducah, Hopkinsville, Memphis, Nashville, Dyersburg, and all of eastern Kentucky. These are interactive radars. Local city radars – click here
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The official 6-10 day and 8-14 day temperature and precipitation outlook. Check the date stamp at the top of each image (so you understand the time frame).
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The forecast maps below are issued by the Weather Prediction Center (NOAA)
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The latest 8-14 day temperature and precipitation outlook. Note the dates are at the top of the image. These maps DO NOT tell you how high or low temperatures or precipitation will be. They simply give you the probability as to whether temperatures or precipitation will be above or below normal.
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The Beau Dodson Weather APP is ready for Apple and Android users. The purpose of this app is for me to deliver your text messages instantly. ATT and Verizon have not always been reliable when it comes to speed. The app allows instant delivery.
Some of you have asked if you can keep receiving the texts on your phone and the app. The answer to that is, yes. The Android app will automatically allow that to happen. On the Apple app, however, you will need to go into your app and click settings. Make sure the green tab is OFF. Off means you will still receive the texts to your phone and the app. If you have any questions, then email me at beaudodson@usawx.com
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The Android app is also ready.
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Here is the download link for the Android version Click Here
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Who do you trust for your weather information and who holds them accountable?
I have studied weather in our region since the late 1970’s. I have 39 years of experience in observing our regions weather patterns. My degree is in Broadcast Meteorology and a Bachelor’s of Science.
My resume includes:
Member of the American Meteorological Society.
NOAA Weather-Ready Nation Ambassador.
Meteorologist for McCracken County Emergency Management. I served from 2005 through 2015.
Meteorologist for McCracken County Rescue. 2015 through current
I own and operate the Southern Illinois Weather Observatory.
I am the chief meteorologist for Weather Talk LLC. I am the owner of Weather Talk LLC.
I am also a business owner in western Kentucky.
Recipient of the Mark Trail Award, WPSD Six Who Make A Difference Award, Kentucky Colonel, and the Caesar J. Fiamma” Award from the American Red Cross.
In 2005 I helped open the largest American Cross shelter in U.S. history in Houston, Texas. I was deployed to help after Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Rita. I was a shelter manager of one of the Houston, Texas shelter divisions.
In 2009 I was presented with the Kentucky Office of Highway Safety Award.
Recognized by the Kentucky House of Representatives for my service to the State of Kentucky leading up to several winter storms and severe weather outbreaks.
If you click on the image below you can read the Kentucky House of Representatives Resolution.
I am also President of the Shadow Angel Foundation which serves portions of western Kentucky and southern Illinois.
There is a lot of noise on the internet. A lot of weather maps are posted without explanation. Over time you should learn who to trust for your weather information.
My forecast philosophy is simple and straight forward.
- Communicate in simple terms
- To be as accurate as possible within a reasonable time frame before an event
- Interact with you on Twitter, Facebook, email, texts, and this blog
- Minimize the “hype” that you might see on some television stations or through other weather sources
- Push you towards utilizing wall-to-wall LOCAL TV coverage during severe weather events
Many of the graphics on this page are from www.weatherbell.com
WeatherBell is a great resource for weather model guidance.
You can sign up for my AWARE email by clicking here I typically send out AWARE emails before severe weather, winter storms, or other active weather situations. I do not email watches or warnings. The emails are a basic “heads up” concerning incoming weather conditions