Fairfield, Iowa
Current Conditions
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Almanac
Average High: 49°
Average Low: 31°
Record high/year: 79° (2009)
Record low/year: 2° (1906)
Sunrise: 7:16 AM
Sunset: 7:16 PM
Detailed History
Sun and Moon
Sunrise: 07:16 AM (CDT)
Moon Rise: 07:39 AM (CDT) 3 17
Sunset: 07:16 PM (CDT)
Moon Set: 09:29 PM (CDT) 3 17
Moon Phase
Next 12 Hours
Clear
Clear
Fog
Fog
Fog
Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database
5-Day Forecast
Hi 56°
Lo 38°
Partly Cloudy
Hi 63°
Lo 43°
Clear
Hi 59°
Lo 32°
Chance of Rain
Hi 36°
Lo 23°
Snow
Hi 40°
Lo 23°
Partly Cloudy
Forecast for Jefferson
Tonight
Mostly clear. Areas of fog after midnight. Low in the upper 30s. West wind 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday
Sunny. Areas of fog in the morning. High in the mid 60s. West wind 10 to 15 mph.
Thursday Night
Partly cloudy. Low in the lower 40s. Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
Friday
Partly sunny. A 20 percent chance of light rain in the afternoon. High in the lower 60s. Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph shifting to the northwest 10 to 15 mph in the afternoon.
Friday Night
Brisk. Occasional rain and snow in the evening... then snow with rain likely after midnight. Light snow accumulations possible. Low in the mid 30s. North wind 15 to 25 mph. Chance of precipitation 90 percent.
Saturday
Blustery. Much colder. Snow in the morning...then snow likely in the afternoon. High in the upper 30s. Chance of snow 90 percent.
Saturday Night
Cloudy. A chance of snow in the evening. Low in the mid 20s. Chance of snow 50 percent.
Sunday
Blustery. Mostly cloudy. High in the lower 40s.
Sunday Night and Monday
Blustery. Partly cloudy. Low in the mid 20s. High in the lower 40s.
Monday Night
Mostly clear. Low in the upper 20s.
Tuesday and Tuesday Night
Partly cloudy. High in the lower 50s. Low in the lower 40s.
Wednesday
Mostly cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain showers. High in the upper 50s.
Personal Weather Stations
Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]
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Location: HADS CEDAR CREEK NEAR OAKLAND MILLS 3 IA US, Mount Pleasant, IA Updated: 6:30 PM CDT |
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| Temperature: °F | Dew Point: - | Humidity: - | Wind: Calm | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: - | Historical Graphs |
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Location: IADOT Mount Pleasant (US 218), Salem, Dry Updated: 7:44 PM CDT |
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| Temperature: 50 °F | Dew Point: 42 °F | Humidity: 72% | Wind: WNW at 3 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: - | Historical Graphs |
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Location: HADS DES MOINES RIVER NEAR OTTUMWA IA US, Ottumwa, IA Updated: 7:20 PM CDT |
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| Temperature: °F | Dew Point: - | Humidity: - | Wind: Calm | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: - | Historical Graphs |
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Location: IADOT Ottumwa (US 63), Ottumwa, Moist Updated: 7:44 PM CDT |
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| Temperature: 47 °F | Dew Point: 43 °F | Humidity: 88% | Wind: WSW at 2 mph | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 47 °F | Historical Graphs |
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Location: HADS SKUNK RIVER NEAR SIGOURNEY 2S IA US, Sigourney, IA Updated: 6:30 PM CDT |
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| Temperature: °F | Dew Point: - | Humidity: - | Wind: Calm | Pressure: - | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: - | Historical Graphs |
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Location: Ottumwa, Ottumwa, IA Updated: 7:55 PM CDT |
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| Temperature: 41.4 °F | Dew Point: 34 °F | Humidity: 75% | Wind: Calm | Pressure: 30.11 in | Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in | Windchill: 41 °F | Historical Graphs |
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MSN Maps of: |
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| Temperature | Dew Point | Humidity | Wind | Pressure | Hourly Precipitation | - | |
NWS Forecaster Discussion
570 fxus63 kdvn 172043 afddvn Area forecast discussion National Weather Service quadrant cities Iowa Illinois 342 PM CST Wednesday Mar 17 2010 Synopsis... the last remnants of the widespread stratus and fog from this morning was dissipating across the south at 19z. This was in a somewhat narrow axis of 40 plus surface dewpoints that ran from southern Minnesota through central and southeast Iowa to Tennessee...along the eastern periphery of high pressure parked over north central Kansas. Much drier air with dewpoints in the teens has been slowly advecting westward from Lake Michigan...reaching into the Freeport area this afternoon. Aloft...12z analysis indicated an 500 mb ridge extending from Arizona north-NE through the northern plains. A broad cyclonic flow was over the southeast Continental U.S....with a closed upper low centered just south of Kansas City and another over la. Subsidence downstream from the northern plains ridge was resulting in sunshine and rapidly warming temperatures where the stratus had finally cleared in the forecast area this afternoon. && Short term...tonight and Thursday... main short term challenges center on potential for fog again tonight...and high temperatures Thursday. Deep middle level subsidence...between the shortwave ridge to the north and departing trough to the south...will be waning after midnight tonight as the center of the ridge axis builds south. At the surface...the Kansas high is prognosticated to drop south-southeast with its Northern Ridge axis riding across the forecast area early Thursday morning. The resulting light westerly low level flow and subsidence will likely result in another night of weak moisture advection and convergence which may saturate the low levels under the inversion...in a setup not too dissimilar from the previous two nights. However...today there is more widespread afternoon clearing and thus drying of the surface and low levels than the past couple days. For now will go with areas of fog wording in the south and west in the axis of higher afternoon dewpoints where clearing was latest to occur today and patchy fog wording over all but the far northeast. With little airmass change temperatures should again cool into the 30s north to around 40 in the south. Thursday is still shaping up to be breezy and mild as middle level flow turns more zonal and prefrontal warm advection commences at the surface. Forecast soundings support mixing to at least 900 mb... which would support MOS guidance highs in the middle 60s and this looks reasonable. This deeper mixing and increasing pressure gradient will likely bring gusty winds in 12 to 22 knots range by afternoon. .Sheets.. Long term...Thursday night through next Wednesday... still a lot of uncertainty with Friday-Sat storm system. Most of the 12z models...09z sref...and 7 of 12 12z GFS ensemble members continue recent trends of depicting more progressive system. This would present colder scenario and thus more snow than rain... but also shorten window of precipitation to 24 hours or less with bulk occurring late Friday afternoon-Sat am. Still concerns that amplified western ridge may result in stronger... digging system that eventually closes off as shown by 12z European model (ecmwf) which has been pretty consistent past several runs. This would yield heavier quantitative precipitation forecast as well as extend precipitation well into Sunday mainly southeast 1/2... with rain going to snow with potential for significant accums with fairly substantial deformation zone. Given the uncertainties stayed close to HPC... which generally sided with blend... adjusting the timing about halfway toward more progressive GFS/UK/Gem. Thursday night... surface cold front arrives in northwest late. Winds to drop off with approaching front and thus sided toward guidance blend on mins. Friday-Friday night... Friday represents the transition day and represents a very challenging forecast with respect to temperatures and precipitation type/amounts. Strong elevated warm advection and moisture overrunning surface cold front to result in precipitation becoming widespread near 850 mb frontal zone... overtaking much of the area by afternoon and Friday night from northwest to southeast. Temperature forecast is extremely challenging Friday with potential for big bust depending on location of boundary... as likely to be as much as 20-25 degree temperature gradient across the frontal zone. In general coolest northwest (40s) to warmest southeast (60s)... with temperatures falling most areas in the afternoon. Transition from rain to snow still difficult and quite dependent on surface temperatures as couple degrees either way makes all difference. If system remains progressive and thus colder... then temperatures still too warm northwest third Friday afternoon with mix or changeover to snow. For now have kept all precipitation as rain during day... but did speed up changeover Friday night. Could see a few inches of snow accumulate especially northwest of quadrant cities Friday night. Sat-Sat night...precipitation continues during day Sat being forced along 850 mb frontal zone... and may shift to the southeast 1/3-1/2 by Sat night depending on eventual movement of upper level energy. Thermal parameters support snow... possibly mixing with rain far southeast. Warm ground temperatures and surface temperatures above freezing will support some melt and make accums difficult... though some accumulate possible with potential for moderate to locally heavier banded snow given degree of strong baroclinicity and forcing. Temperatures only rising few degrees from am lows. Sun-Sun night...kept precipitation chances for snow or rain/snow mix southeast half on sun given uncertainties with storm system. If more progressive scenario pans out then most if not all area will be dry. Trending this direction have removed precipitation for Sun night. Mon-Wed...area will reside in northwest flow to start with generally dry conditions and below normal temperatures. Ensemble mean forecasts of ao/nao index down in negative territory through end of month. This likely to result in strong thermal gradient with cold air lurking to the north and with strong El Nino energized subtropical jet persisting... the recipe is favorable for very active/unsettled weather with one or more strong systems. The first of which is suggested by medium range late day 6 (tue) and day 7 (wed) and have gone with chance probability of precipitation for rain at this time. Likely to see cold intrusions in wake of systems and so typical Spring roller coaster. ..McClure.. && Aviation... VFR conditions will prevail through this evening as area remains under high pressure. Lingering low level moisture and clear skies may again set the stage for late night and early morning fog. Conditions will less favorable than the past couple days and at this time have potential for MVFR visibilities limited to the Cid and dbq terminals. Will continue to monitor trends through evening for inclusion of IFR or worse ceilings and visibilities that would be most likely in the 08z to 14z timeframe. ..sheets.. && Dvn watches/warnings/advisories... Iowa...none. Illinois...none. MO...none. && $$ Sheets/McClure