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A joint service of the UK Ag Weather Center and the National Weather Service.
Click here for UKAWC Point Agricultural, Lawn & Garden Forecast/Outlook in case of corrupt tables. Regional Hourly Observations For County 200 AM CDT THU MAR 13 2025 NORTHWEST ARKANSAS CITY SKY/WX TMP DP RH WIND PRES REMARKS FAYETTEVILLE PTCLDY 62 53 72 CALM 29.70F FORT SMITH CLEAR 60 54 80 CALM 29.68S HARRISON PTCLDY 62 54 74 CALM 29.71F BENTONVILLE CLEAR 59 55 87 S5 29.72S ROGERS CLEAR 59 53 80 S7 29.71F SILOAM SPGS CLEAR 61 55 81 SE3 29.70F HIGHFILL CLEAR 60 54 80 S3 29.70S
Current Agricultural Weather Conditions in Arkansas Based on observations at 200am CDT, Thursday March 13, 2025 Across Arkansas...temperatures are near 63 degrees north, near 64 degrees central, and near 65 degrees south. Current sky conditions are partly cloudy north, thunderstorms central, and clear south. In the north, relative humidity is near 70%, and the dew point is near 53 degrees. In the central part of the state, relative humidity is near 80%, and the dew point is near 58 degrees. In the south, relative humidity is near 58%, and the dew point is near 50 degrees. Winds are from the southwest at 6 mph north, where conditions are favorable for spraying. Winds are from the south at 3 mph central, where conditions are not favorable for spraying due to thunderstorms. Winds are from the south at 12 mph with gusts at 23 mph south, where conditions are not favorable for spraying due to strong winds. Based on current available observations, the highest temperature is 67 degrees at West Memphis. The lowest temperature is 54 degrees at Mount Ida.
Current NOWCAST not available: Nowcasts are not issued routinely during fair weather. Only when precipitation or other significant weather is occuring in this county will these forecasts be issued. Currently, there is no short term forecast in effect. ![]() Hazardous Weather Outlook For County,AR 1039 PM CDT Wed Mar 12 2025 DAMAGING WIND AND FIRE EVENT EXPECTED FRIDAY This Outlook is for Northwest and West Central Arkansas as well as much of Eastern Oklahoma. DAY ONE Tonight. SEVERE THUNDERSTORM. RISK Limited. AREA West-Central Arkansas. ONSET Ongoing ending by 1 AM. DISCUSSION An upper storm system over the region could bring isolated to widely scattered strong to severe storms this evening over west-central Arkansas. Large hail and spotty damaging wind would be the main threats. The threat ends by 1 AM. SPOTTER AND EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT ACTION STATEMENT Local Spotter Activation May Be Needed. DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN Thursday through Tuesday. THURSDAY No Hazards. FRIDAY Thunderstorm Very High Fire Weather High Wind Potential. SATURDAY and SUNDAY No Hazards. MONDAY and TUESDAY Very High Fire Weather Potential High Wind Potential. EXTENDED DISCUSSION A powerful upper storm system will slide across the Plains on Friday. Current model trends are pointing toward an extreme wind event across northeast Oklahoma and far northwest Arkansas, with damaging gusts in excess of 60 mph expected. In addition to the wind, very low humidity and favorable fuel conditions will pose an extreme fire weather danger threat across all of eastern Oklahoma and western Arkansas. There is some potential for thunderstorm development over northwest Arkansas Friday afternoon before the storms race off to the northeast. There is a limited severe weather risk, with hail and wind the main threats. Gusty south winds return early next week, once again raising fire weather concerns across the region. EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT PLANNING STATEMENT Emergency managers and first responders will need to be on alert Friday for the potential for rapidly spreading fires, downed power lines from the wind, and potential damage to structures, especially across northeast Oklahoma and far northwest Arkansas. weather.gov/tulsa contains additional information.
7-Day Forecast For County, Arkansas 648 PM CDT Wed Mar 12 2025 REST OF TONIGHT THURSDAY THURSDAY NIGHT FRIDAY FRIDAY NIGHT SATURDAY SATURDAY NIGHT SUNDAY SUNDAY NIGHT MONDAY MONDAY NIGHT TUESDAY TUESDAY NIGHT WEDNESDAY
Medium & Long Range Outlook For Arkansas ARKANSAS --------------------------------------------- 6 TO 10 DAY 8 TO 14 DAY 30 DAY 90 DAY MAR 18-22 MAR 20-26 JUN JUN-AUG ----------- ----------- -------- --------- Temperature: Above Above Precipitation: Normal Above .... Medium and long range outlooks provided by NCEP/K. Thomas Priddy ![]() Almanac Information Historical Weather And Climate Facts For Today MARCH 13TH HISTORIC WEATHER EVENTS ...1907... A storm produced a record 5.22 inches of rain in 24 hours at Cincinnati OH. (12th-13th) (The Weather Channel) ...1951... The state of Iowa experienced a record snowstorm. The storm buried Iowa City under 27 inches of snow. (David Ludlum) ...1977... Baltimore MD received an inch of rain in eight minutes. (Sandra and Richard Sanders -1987) ...1987... A winter storm produced heavy snow in the Sierra Nevada Range of California, and the Lake Tahoe area of Nevada. Mount Rose NV received 18 inches of new snow. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) ...1988... Unseasonably cold weather prevailed from the Plateau Region to the Appalachians. Chadron NE, recently buried 33 inches of snow, was the cold spot in the nation with a low of 19 degrees below zero. (The National Weather Summary) ...1990... A major outbreak of tornadoes occurred in the Midwest. 59 tornadoes touched down. A tornado rated F5 on the Fujita Scale tore through Hesston, Kansas, killed one person and did 20 million dollars in damage. Another tornado formed close to the Hesston tornado while it was weakening and absorbed it. This new tornado was also an F5 and killed one person in Gossel, Kansas. A family of tornadoes up to F4 in intensity tracked 124 miles through Nebraska. In York County, 12 farms were hit and 10,000 geese were killed. This outbreak produced the strongest tornadoes on record for so early in the season so far northwest in the United States. ...1993... The "Great Super Storm Blizzard of '93" clobbered the eastern U.S. on this day and produced perhaps the largest swath of heavy snow ever recorded. Heavy snow was driven to the Gulf Coast with 3 inches falling at Mobile. 13 inches blanketed Birmingham, Alabama to set not only a new 24 hour snowfall record for any month, but also records for maximum snow depth, maximum snow for a single storm, and maximum snow for a single month. Tremendous snowfall amounts occurred in the Appalachians. Mount Leconte in Tennessee recorded an incredible 60 inches. Mount Mitchell in North Carolina was not far behind with 50 inches. Practically every official weather station in West Virginia set a new 24 hour record snowfall. Further to the north, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania measured 25 inches, Albany, New York checked in with 27 inches, and Syracuse, New York was buried under 43 inches. The major population corridor from Washington, DC to Boston, Massachusetts was not spared this time as all the big cities got about a foot of snow before a changeover to rain. A rather large amount of thunderstorm activity accompanied the heavy snow. Winds to hurricane force in gusts were widespread. Boston recorded a gust to 81 mph, the highest wind gust at the location since Hurricane Edna in 1954. Numerous cities in the South and Mid Atlantic recorded their lowest barometric pressure ever as the storm bottomed out at 960 millibars (28.35 inches) over Chesapeake Bay. 208 people were killed by the storm and total damage was estimated at 6 billion dollars -- the costliest extratropical storm in history. This storm left behind up to 30 inches of snow across far southeast Kentucky. The winds associated with the storm helped create 6 to 10 foot snow drifts in parts of Kentucky. At the Weather Service Office near Jackson, KY over 19 inches of snow fell on this date. ...1999... A big snowstorm dumped 19 inches of snow on Medford, Oklahoma. ...2001... One inch diameter hail fell at Bonnieville, KY (Hart County) and Albany (Clinton County), KY. (NWS Louisville)
Ag Weather Center, Department of Biosystems & Agricultural Engineering, University of Kentucky |