After a chilly night in the mid 20s, look for the clouds to thicken on Monday followed by a mixture of rain, sleet, and snow during the afternoon and evening hours. Temperatures are expected to reach the low 40s, and the mix should change to all rain Monday evening (although it may stay sleet and snow in Kentucky and northwest of Clarksville). The rain should last through most of Tuesday before ending as a brief period of snow showers late Tuesday afternoon and evening. No significant accumulations are expected at this time, although our eastern counties from around Center Hill Lake eastward could see a dusting Tuesday night.










The storm on Friday is going to have to come WAY, WAY, WAY north for us to see any snow. I’m betting “Snow?” won’t show up on Friday in the 7-day forecast after it is updated.
Dear Snowman,
The reason I put snow with the question mark is that often the models are biased to far south (but nor always). It mays stay to our south, but we had better keep a close eye on it as the week wears on. By the way, Who Dat Say Day Gonna Beat Dem Saints, Who Dat, Who Dat?
HAHA Like the saying Davis! Go SAINTS!
Davis,
I hope you didn’t take my comment the wrong way. Like I said before, I do this just for fun, and message boards allow me to share my novice approach. My comment is simply a prediction of what I think will happen, not a questioning of your forecast.
I respect you guys and the awesome job you do. Otherwise, I wouldn’t visit this website. And I agree, models do tend to trend to the north as we get closer to the event. I am a huge snow lover and it hurts seeing this thing so far south (as it stands right now). If it pans out that way, then in one week, we will have one storm go to our north and one to our south. That would be a big bummer.