Weather
Mount Vernon, Illinois
Current Conditions
Customize Your Weather
Get weather by ZIP code, city, state, airport code or country:
Weather by E-mail: Get forecasts and storm alerts delivered to you.
Almanac
Average High: 85°
Average Low: 64°
Record high/year: 95° (2002)
Record low/year: 51° (1996)
Sunrise: 5:38 AM
Sunset: 8:22 PM
Detailed History
Sun and Moon
Sunrise: 05:38 AM (CDT)
Moon Rise: 08:29 AM (CDT) 7 5
Sunset: 08:22 PM (CDT)
Moon Set: 10:28 PM (CDT) 7 5
Moon Phase
Next 12 Hours
Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database
5-Day Forecast
Forecast for Jefferson
Tonight
Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 60s. Light winds.
Sunday
Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 90s. South winds 5 mph.
Sunday Night
Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 60s. South winds around 5 mph.
Monday
Partly sunny with a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower 90s. South winds 5 to 10 mph.
Monday Night
Partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the lower 70s. South winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tuesday
Partly sunny with a 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower 90s.
Tuesday Night
Mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows around 70.
Wednesday
Partly sunny with a 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the upper 80s.
Wednesday Night
Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s.
Thursday
Partly sunny with a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the upper 80s.
Thursday Night
Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s.
Friday and Friday Night
Mostly clear. Highs in the upper 80s. Lows in the lower 70s.
Saturday
Partly sunny. Highs around 90.
Personal Weather Stations
Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]
|
Location: MesoWest Kell IL US UPR, Dix, IL Updated: 8:00 PM CDT |
|||||||
| Temperature: 75 °F | Dew Point: - | Humidity: - | Wind: Calm | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Heat Index: 73 °F | Historical Graphs |
|
Location: Buckner, IL Updated: 9:01 PM CDT |
|||||||
| Temperature: 70.7 °F | Dew Point: 53 °F | Humidity: 76% | Wind: Calm | Pressure: 29.91 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Heat Index: 73 °F | Historical Graphs |
|
MSN Maps of: |
|||||||
| Temperature | Dew Point | Humidity | Wind | Pressure | Hourly Precipitation | - | |
NWS Forecaster Discussion
126 fxus63 kpah 051905 afdpah Area forecast discussion National Weather Service Paducah Kentucky 205 PM CDT Sat Jul 5 2008 Discussion... Quiet day today with decent cloud cover...but not enough to block the sun completely. Clouds mostly likely aided by the upper level wave rotating across the area today. Convection is to our south along the frontal boundary that caused our area some showers and storms yesterday. The front is actually very close by as dewpoints tell the tale...with 72 degree dewpoint at Walnut Ridge Arkansas and a 64 dewpoint in Poplar Bluff. It is this front that will be only real weather feature of concern over the next 24 to 36 hours. 12z GFS and NAM indicate that convection will continue firing along that front tonight...but most of it should stay to our south. However...the front will be lifting back northward on Sunday and then dissipating. The NAM and GFS hardly indicate any precipitation breaking out as this occurs. Dont feel right dropping the low pop for tonight with a front in the vicinity. Even tomorrow...models are really not real excited about painting any quantitative precipitation forecast. Guess its possible to see something isolated right along the front across southeast Missouri. We will mostly likely keep that pop going for Sunday just in case...and to give a little weight to the latest sref which indicates some precipitation across semo tomorrow. The 12z NAM run is showing much of the same scenario for Sunday night as it did with yesterdays 12z run. It indicates convection firing way to our north on Sunday and Sunday evening...and then tracking it southward into the area. Looking back on the 00z NAM run last night...it tried to do this very same thing...but by 12z Monday...the convection was still not to our northern counties. But still...the NAM is really consistent on that type of solution. Mondays forecast will really be dependent on what happens upstream. The differences in the upper level flow pattern also differ somewhat between the GFS and NAM...which might be another cause for their quantitative precipitation forecast differences. The GFS keeps the area dry for Monday. Feel better keeping a slight chance in for Monday just given the two difference scenarios. By Monday night...the next frontal system to affect our area will be impinging on our area. The NAM continues painting convection in the warm sector during Monday night...which might be aided by increasing low level flow throughout the night. The GFS paints a drier picture as far as quantitative precipitation forecast...but looking at the frontal position...it is similar to the NAM. Believe the northwestern sections of the County Warning Area have the best chance of seeing any precipitation. We remain in the warm sector most of the day on Tuesday...with models hinting at a pretty dry day actually. Will trim probability of precipitation back a bit to indicate a slower arrival of the front. Will follow the European model (ecmwf)/HPC timing for the cold front which brings it to just northwest of the Ohio River at 7 am Wednesday. The GFS is slower and much messier with this system in part due to its pairing of the main precipitation chance with a 500mb short wave which is likely to alter between now and then. All guidance has trended toward eliminating rain chances across the north for Wednesday night and Thursday but the picture becomes less clear across the south part of the forecast area. Given July climatology with the southward progression of surface fronts I plan to leave in chance probability of precipitation across the southern part of the forecast area Wednesday night and Thursday and parts of semo Thursday night as return moisture creeps in from the southwest. Will continue a small chance on Friday but will again limit to the S/SW part of the forecast area given the influence of the Great Lakes surface high that ridges SW across our forecast area...especially the NE part of the forecast area. By next Sat...our airmass is likely to become increasingly capped as middle level temperatures warm with a 500mb high setting up over the lower miss valley. As a result...hotter and drier conditions still appear on target next weekend. Trimmed maximum temperatures a degree for 2 days following frontal passage...otherwise the main change was for min temperatures Wednesday night which were reduced about 5 degrees to account for the Post frontal airmass. && Aviation... Scattered-broken cumulus about today across the entire area. Should see this diurnal cumulus dissipate by sunset. There is some fog potential late tonight/tomorrow morning...so have tempo groups at all sites for either MVFR or IFR visibilities. Much of the same weather tomorrow with cumulus developing by late morning and winds shifting around to the south...as a frontal boundary to our south lifts back northward at US. Threat for convection appears limited at this time for late tonight and Sunday morning to include in the 18z tafs. && Pah watches/warnings/advisories... Kentucky...none. MO...none. Illinois...none. In...none. && $$ Short term...CW long term....Shanklin aviation...CW