Weather





Pittsfield, Illinois

National Weather Service: Flood Warning

Current Conditions

 
Temp: 21°
Dew Point: 19°
Humidity: 93%
Wind: East 6 mph
Visibility: 10.0 miles
Pressure: 29.89 in. -
Sky: Clear
Wind Chill: 14°

 

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Almanac

Average High: 31°

Average Low: 16°

Record high/year: 56° (1955)

Record low/year: -16° (1999)

Sunrise: 7:24 AM

Sunset: 4:53 PM

Detailed History

Sun and Moon

Sunrise: 07:24 AM (CST)

Moon Rise: 11:53 AM (CST) 1 5

Sunset: 04:53 PM (CST)

Moon Set: 01:17 AM (CST) 1 5

Moon Phase

Today
Jan. 10
Jan. 17
Jan. 26
Feb. 02

 

Local Radar

Local Satellite



Next 12 Hours

 
-2  am
1  am
4  am
7  am
10  am
Mostly Cloudy Mostly Cloudy
Mostly Cloudy Mostly Cloudy
Ice Pellets Ice Pellets
Ice Pellets Ice Pellets
Chance of Snow Chance of Snow
25°
25°
23°
25°
31°

 

Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database


5-Day Forecast

Tuesday Ice Pellets Hi 34° Lo 25° Ice Pellets
Wednesday Chance of Snow Hi 32° Lo 16° Chance of Snow
Thursday Partly Cloudy Hi 29° Lo 20° Partly Cloudy
Friday Chance of Rain Hi 45° Lo 18° Chance of Rain
Saturday Partly Cloudy Hi 27° Lo 11° Partly Cloudy

 

Forecast for Pike

Updated: 9:01 PM CST on January 5, 2009

Tonight

Becoming mostly cloudy. Low in the lower 20s. Southeast wind around 10 mph.

 

Tuesday

Cloudy. Chance of snow and patchy freezing drizzle in the morning...then chance of snow and patchy drizzle in the afternoon. High in the mid 30s. Southeast wind around 10 mph in the morning becoming light in the afternoon. Chance of measurable precipitation 30 percent.

 

Tuesday Night

Mostly cloudy. Low in the mid 20s. Light wind in the evening becoming west around 10 mph after midnight.

 

Wednesday

Mostly cloudy in the morning then becoming partly sunny. High in the lower 30s. West wind 10 to 15 mph with gusts to around 25 mph.

 

Wednesday Night

Partly cloudy. Low around 17. Northwest wind 10 to 15 mph.

 

Thursday

Partly cloudy. High around 30.

 

Thursday Night

Partly cloudy. Low around 20. Temperature steady or slowly rising after midnight.

 

Friday

Not as cool. Partly sunny. High in the mid 40s.

 

Friday Night

Partly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of snow and rain. Low around 17.

 

Saturday through Sunday

Partly cloudy. High in the upper 20s. Low around 12.

 

Sunday Night and Monday

Partly cloudy. Low around 18. High around 30.

 

 

 Flood Warning  Statement as of 9:24 PM CST on January 05, 2009


The Flood Warning continues for
the Illinois River at Valley City
* until further notice.
* At 8 PM Monday the stage was 18.4 feet.
* Moderate flooding is occurring and moderate flooding is forecast.
* Flood stage is 11.0 feet.
* Forecast... the river is forecast to crest near 18.6 feet from
Tuesday into Wednesday.
* Impact... at 18.0 feet... the commercial building is flooded.




924 PM CST Mon Jan 05 2009

The Flood Warning continues for
the Illinois River at Meredosia
* until further notice.
* At 8:15 PM Monday the stage was 438.6 feet.
* Major flooding is occurring and major flooding is forecast.
* Flood stage is 432.0 feet.
* Forecast... the river is forecast to crest near 438.7 feet from
tonight through Tuesday night.
* Impact... at 438.0 feet... the main Road in Valley City is
overtopped.





 Record Report  Statement as of 04:17 PM CST on January 05, 2009


... Record high temperature set at New Orleans Armstrong Airport...

a record high temperature of 78 degrees was set at New Orleans
Armstrong international Airport today. This ties the old record of
78 set in 1955.




Personal Weather Stations

Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]

Location: W0AJD, New London, MO

Updated: 10:59 PM CST

Temperature: 24.3 °F Dew Point: 13 °F Humidity: 61% Wind: East at 1.0 mph Pressure: 29.51 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 24 °F Historical Graphs

Location: Jacksonville St., White Hall, IL

Updated: 10:59 PM CST

Temperature: 24.2 °F Dew Point: 19 °F Humidity: 80% Wind: ESE at 2.3 mph Pressure: 29.87 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 24 °F Historical Graphs

MSN Maps of:

Temperature Dew Point Humidity Wind Pressure Hourly Precipitation -

NWS Forecaster Discussion




468 
fxus63 klsx 060316 
afdlsx 


Area forecast discussion...updated 
National Weather Service St Louis MO 
916 PM CST Monday Jan 5 2009 


Update... 
/903 PM CST Monday Jan 5 2009/ 
several recent acars soundings out of Lambert show that the 
elevated warm layer has progressed far enough northeast that some 
modifications to the ptype forecast are in order across the southern County Warning Area. 
Peak temperature on the latest sounding was near 0 degc between 
700-800 mb. Precipitation thus far across Arkansas into Tennessee has shown little 
if any northward motion...although with the short wave trough just moving out 
of The Rockies into the plains expect to see the low-middle tropopause flow 
begin backing some. This should either help with a northward shift to 
the current precipitation area or result in newer development. Indeed over 
the last hour...precipitation echoes aloft have been showing up in NE OK on 
the regional radar in NE OK. While there will be some diabatic 
cooling once the precipitation begins across southeast MO and southern Illinois...the 
strength of the warm air advection will be too great to be offset based on the 
aforementioned northward progression of the elevated warm layer. This 
suggests that the bulk of the precipitation across the Eastern Ozarks into southern 
Illinois will be freezing rain and possibly some sleet early on. I have 
modified the forecast with this in mind and the expectation of a 
light glaze of ice within the advisory area. At this time no changes to the 
northward extent of the main precipitation axis or advisory...but will have to 
monitor precipitation development during the remainder of the evening and 
overnight to see if this eventually could be warranted. 


Glass 


&& 


Discussion... 
/441 PM CST Monday Jan 5 2009/ 
still aprs that area will rcv glancing blow from precipitation associated with trough 
moving through area over the next 24 hours. Nwp output continues to indicate 
that the bulk of the precipitation will remain confined to our S...in vicinity of strong 
850 mb baroclinicity...with north fringes of precipitation shield just brushing our 
southeast counties. See no reason to disagree with this assessment since 
short range models seem to be handling current precipitation trends quite well. 


Although north fringes of precipitation shield is currently well S of our forecast area...this 
edge is expected drift north overnight as trough captures energy over SW U.S. 
And it begins to lift out. Forecast soundings certainly suggesting that that 
moisture acr much of the forecast area will be stratfied in the lowest 5-7kft. 
WRF/NAM has been hinting at this for several days over the northwest 2/3 of our 
County Warning Area...and the 12z GFS is now indicating this moisture stratification as 
well. So...with lack of ice nuclei it could be precipitation in most areas 
will be a combo of drizzle or freezing drizzle and light snow. Exception to this 
scenario should be in the far southeast counties...where deeper moisture lt tonight 
and early Tuesday morning should lead to colder cloud temperatures and btr chances for 
measurable precipitation. Although quantitative precipitation forecast will be light...temperature profile is such that 
ptype in the southeast counties could be light snow...sleet...or freezing 
rain/freezing drizzle. 


Have decided to issue advisory for the southeast counties for this light wintry 
mix for the overnight and early morning hours...06z-15z. It is also not out 
of the question that the advsy may need to be expanded northward lt tonight 
and early Tuesday...depending on if and/or how quickly and how widespread freezing 
drizzle development occurs. Evening...and especially middle shifts...will have to monitor 
short term trends to determine if a further expansion is 
necessary. 


The light precipitation should end acr the entire area Tuesday night with passage of upper air 
trough and weak cold front. 


Ovrall trends of the medium range models remain fairly similar to those 
of the last few days. However...with strong baroclinicity becoming 
established over area these subtle differences culd have a sizable 
impact...especially on temperatures. On Wednesday...models are dropping secondary shtwv 
into upper msvly which will briefly delay the southward surge of the coldest 
air...and as a result MOS maximum temperatures for Wednesday have warmed considerably 
from earlier runs. Have upped going temperatures for Wednesday acr the S and west in 
response to this...but have continued to lean toward the cold side for temperatures 
in our NE where strong cold air advection will have an impact during the afternoon. After a cold 
Wednesday night...models suggesting that warmer air will return a bit more rdply 
for Thursday and again have split the difference between going forecasts and 
guidance to lessen swings. There is gd agreement in the models that Friday 
should be a very warm day...and have pushed temperatures up to near the latest MOS 
output for this period. Cold air and below normal temperatures should return in 
the wake of Friday system. 


As far as precipitation is concerned...continued slight chance probability of precipitation in our NE areas 
Wednesday near the dynamics of the aforementioned shtwv. Also continued low 
probability of precipitation in the Friday/Friday night time frame with passage of cold front. 12z GFS 
run hinted at a clipper Wednesday night but this is not supported by 18z run 
or by European model (ecmwf)...so have held off on precipitation for that time period. 


Truett/Byrd 


&& 


Aviation... 
/541 PM CST Monday Jan 5 2009/ 
for the 00z tafs...light southeasterly surface winds should continue tgt with surface ridge 
just east of the County Warning Area. Cirrus shield across cou...stl and sus should 
expand northward with approach of positively tilted middle-upper level trough. 
Middle level cloudiness will also develop as low-middle level warm air advection increases over the 
area. More significant will be low level cloudiness now across southeastern Kansas 
eastern OK Arkansas into southern MO which will be spreading northward into cou...stl 
and sus around 09z Tuesday and in uin around 12z Tuesday. The lowest cloud 
ceiling should occur in stl/sus from 12-18z Tuesday with ceilings 
dropping to 1000-1500 feet. The northern edge of the precipitation shield will 
also spread into the stl metropolitan area by early Tuesday morning around 13z Tuesday 
and continuing until around 17z Tuesday. This precipitation should be light in the form of 
freezing drizzle or light snow/flurries. The surface wind will continue to be 
relatively light but should shift to a more westerly direction by lt Tuesday 
afternoon or evening as a weak surface low develops in the Tennessee Valley region and a weak 
surface trough moves southeastward through the region. 


Gks 


&& 


Lsx watches/warnings/advisories... 
MO...Winter Weather Advisory until 9 am CST Tuesday for Iron-Madison- 
Reynolds-St. Francois-Ste. Genevieve. 


Illinois...Winter Weather Advisory until 9 am CST Tuesday for Clinton Illinois- 
Fayette Illinois-Marion Illinois-Randolph Illinois-Washington Illinois. 


&& 


$$ 


Weather forecast office lsx 












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