Weather
Columbus, Mississippi
National Weather Service: Flood Warning
Current Conditions
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Almanac
Average High: °
Average Low: °
Record high/year: ° ()
Record low/year: ° ()
Sunrise: 6:58 AM
Sunset: 5:02 PM
Detailed History
Sun and Moon
Sunrise: 06:58 AM (CST)
Moon Rise: 02:20 PM (CST)
Sunset: 05:02 PM (CST)
Moon Set: 04:28 AM (CST)
Moon Phase
Next 12 Hours
Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database
5-Day Forecast
Forecast for Lowndes
Tonight
Clear. Lows in the lower 30s. Northeast winds around 5 mph becoming east after midnight.
Friday
Sunny. Highs in the mid 60s. Southeast winds 10 to 15 mph.
Friday Night
Slight chance of showers in the evening...then showers likely after midnight. Becoming mostly cloudy. Warmer. Lows in the lower 50s. South winds 10 to 15 mph and gusty. The chance of showers 60 percent.
Saturday
Showers likely and isolated thunderstorms in the morning...then a chance of light rain in the afternoon. Becoming partly cloudy. Cooler. Highs in the mid 50s. Northwest winds around 15 mph with higher gusts. The chance of rain 60 percent.
Saturday Night
Partly cloudy. Much colder. Lows in the upper 20s. Northwest winds 10 to 15 mph.
Sunday
Sunny. Highs in the upper 40s.
Sunday Night
Partly cloudy. Lows around 30.
Monday
Mostly sunny in the morning...then becoming partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 50s.
Monday Night
A 20 percent chance of light rain in the evening. Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 20s.
Tuesday
Windy. A 20 percent chance of light rain in the afternoon. Partly cloudy. Colder. Highs in the lower 40s.
Tuesday Night
Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s.
Wednesday
Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 40s.
Wednesday Night
Becoming mostly cloudy. Lows in the upper 20s.
Thursday
Becoming partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 40s.
Flood Warning
Statement as of 9:56 am CST on January 08, 2009
The Flood Warning continues for
the Buttahatchie river near Aberdeen
* until early Monday morning
* at 08 am Thursday the stage was 16.7 feet and rising
* minor flooding is occurring and minor flooding is forecast
* maximum forecast stage of 18.3 feet after midnight tomorrow
* flood stage is 13.0 feet
* the river rose above flood stage Tuesday afternoon and will
continue rising to near 18.3 feet by after midnight tomorrow. The
river will fall below flood stage early Monday morning.
* At 18.0 feet... water is flowing over airbase Road on the West Bank
of the river
944 am CST Thu Jan 08 2009
... Flood Warning extended until Saturday afternoon...
The Flood Warning continues for the luxapallila creek near Columbus
* until Saturday afternoon... or until the warning is cancelled.
* At 7:15 am Thursday the stage was 23.0 feet.
* Minor flooding is occurring and moderate flooding is forecast.
* Flood stage is 15.0 feet.
* Forecast... the river will continue rising to near 23.5 feet by this
afternoon.
* Impact... evacuations are occurring for residents along sand Road,
Steens/Vernon Road, and gunshoot Road. Flooding from magby creek
is occurring and access to several homes may be restricted due to high
water.
Flood observed forecast 6am crest
location stg stg day time Fri Sat sun crest day time
Luxapallila creek
Columbus 15 23.0 Thu 07 am 21.2 15.8 10.9 23.5 Thu 12 PM
Personal Weather Stations
Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]
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Location: Sand Road, Columbus, MS Updated: 5:31 PM CST |
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| Temperature: 50.4 °F | Dew Point: 30 °F | Humidity: 46% | Wind: Calm | Pressure: 30.01 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.01 in | Windchill: - | Historical Graphs |
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Location: APRSWXNET Millport AL US, Millport, AL Updated: 5:03 PM CST |
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| Temperature: 48 °F | Dew Point: 36 °F | Humidity: 63% | Wind: Calm | Pressure: 29.99 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 48 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: RAWS MONROE MS US, Greenwood Springs, MS Updated: 4:14 PM CST |
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| Temperature: 53 °F | Dew Point: 26 °F | Humidity: 35% | Wind: NNW at 8 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: - | Historical Graphs |
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Location: APRSWXNET Starkville MS US, Starkville, MS Updated: 5:04 PM CST |
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| Temperature: 53 °F | Dew Point: 29 °F | Humidity: 39% | Wind: North at 2 mph | Pressure: 30.03 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: - | Historical Graphs |
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MSN Maps of: |
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| Temperature | Dew Point | Humidity | Wind | Pressure | Hourly Precipitation | - | |
NWS Forecaster Discussion
817 fxus64 kjan 082156 aaa afdjan Area forecast discussion National Weather Service Jackson MS 356 PM CST Thursday Jan 8 2009 Discussion...a quiet dry start to the forecast will give way to rains followed by cold...colder and coldest as we head through the 7-day cycle ahead. Unfortunately a pattern shift away from our more tolerable Pacific air mass regimes comes into play next week. This amplifying pattern will result in at least 2 Arctic intrusions for the deep south...a brief incursion Monday night/Tuesday and then the motherload arriving Thursday. In the short term(tonight through saturday)...weak high pressure(1017mb) along the MS River Valley this afternoon will move east tonight with near calm winds and clear skies over the County warning forecast area. Radiational cooling will yeild a decent rural frost for locations east of I-55 but lows should only approach the freezing mark along the Alabama border. Southerly breezes returning along the MS River Valley late tonight should allow readings to hold closer to around 40. On Friday...we will see plenty of sunshine early with a rapid warmup for the most gorgeous day we'll see for the next week to ten days. High temperatures will be in the upper 60s to lower 70s as warm air advection pattern kicks in. Isentropic upglide develops in the 295-300k layers in the late afternoon hours for some increase in cloud cover by dark...especially over western half of County warning forecast area. Expect these cloud layers in the 5-8k foot range to gradually thicken through Friday evening. The warm air advection increases Friday night to keep lows early on Saturday some 12-20f warmer than tonight. A few rain showers could break out over the Delta before midnight but rain showers/isolated thunderstorms and rain should really begin after midnight working their way from northwest to southeast across the County warning forecast area. A 35-45kt 850mb transport of 324k Theta-E air should combine with 5.5-6c 7-500mb lapse rates and k indexes of around 30 for the rainfall. This pre frontal axis of rains moves across the region with quantitative precipitation forecast amounts of maybe one half to one inch from precipitable waters that peak close to 1.3-1.4 inches. Even though favorable low level wind shear profiles will exist from late Friday night through early Saturday...MLCAPE/sbcapes prognosticated to be less than 150j/kg ahead of the frontal passage. On Saturday...that front arrives in the Delta just after daybreak and moves through the Natchez trace area by midday and then southeastern MS before sunset. There could be a few briefly stronger storms in southeastern MS Saturday afternoon if the front is slower per the nam12. For now we are staying with the sref/GFS timing of the boundary with much cooler air settling across the region heading into Saturday night. Highs Saturday should generally occur by early afternoon with falling readings into the evening hours as we head toward the first of several freezes starting Sunday morning. Sunday should be sunny and dry but temperatures will top out several degrees below normal and mainly 48-53f. Long term remains generaly on track with slight adjustments to the details on the Arctic air mass intrusions. The sharpening mean longwave trough axis in the eastern Continental U.S. Has several weak short waves moving through Sunday night and Monday. These help weaken the Pacific surface high over the Southern Plains as it shifts eastward. Low level southerly flow on Monday should do little to increase moisture over the region and no rain is expected with the shortwaves. Meanwhile...the deepening upper trough to our east will send the first chunk of Arctic air breaking off with a cold front leading the charge into our County warning forecast area Monday evening with increasing cold air advection all day Tuesday. The GFS appears to be having difficulty with the old shallow cold regime and once again tries to develop a Central Plains surface low in an erroneous attempt to hold back the dense Arctic air. Have leaned more heavily on the GFS ensemble means/European model (ecmwf) from midday Monday Onward with near 1030mb high over southern MS by Tuesday night. While we catch our breath on Wednesday with below normal temperatures...the next motherload of Arctic air takes over first thing Thursday on gusty northwest winds with temperatures dropping through the day. A massive 1045-1055mb high descends into the northern plains Wednesday night with the leading edge marching into our region before Thursday morning. This system should deliver the coldest air we have seen thus far this winter as it plunges down the MS valley through Friday under a strong polar jet on the east side of a very impressive Gulf of Alaska upper ridge axis. Considering the current strength of the air mass heading our way...we expect the coldest readings to be about 15-20f below normal next Thursday or Friday morning(i.E. Lows 11-17f). Earlier model runs also hinted at some winter style precipitation during the end of next week and we will need to be watching closely for that potential. /22/40/ && Aviation...VFR conditions will persist at all taf sites over the next 24 hours. /19/ && Preliminary point temps/pops... Jackson 37 70 52 55 / 0 3 59 65 Meridian 33 68 53 59 / 0 1 47 71 Vicksburg 40 71 50 53 / 0 4 67 53 Hattiesburg 40 73 55 63 / 0 1 27 75 Natchez 45 73 55 55 / 0 2 57 60 Greenville 37 67 45 49 / 0 15 78 36 Greenwood 35 69 47 51 / 0 9 76 46 && Jan watches/warnings/advisories... MS...none. La...none. Arkansas...none. && $$