Weather
Ada, Oklahoma
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: 61°
Average Low: 38°
Record high/year: 82° (1955)
Record low/year: 20° (1964)
Sunrise: 7:07 AM
Sunset: 5:17 PM
Detailed History
Sun and Moon
Sunrise: 07:07 AM (CST)
Moon Rise: 02:24 AM (CST)
Sunset: 05:17 PM (CST)
Moon Set: 02:17 PM (CST)
Moon Phase
Nowcast as of 4:16 am CST on November 22, 2008
Now
regional weather discussion... Cold weather continued early this morning. Dry and cold high pressure was centered over the lower Mississippi River valley...but stretched westward across the plains. At 4 am...temperatures throughout western North Texas and Oklahoma...were in the 20s and 30s. Winds were from the southeast at 5 to 15 mph...producing wind chills about 5 to 10 degrees colder than the air temperatures. After sunrise...winds will increase from the south. Be sure to wear multiple light layers of clothing if heading outdoors this morning.
Next 12 Hours
Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database
5-Day Forecast
Forecast for Pontotoc
Today
Sunny. Not as cool. Highs in the mid 50s. South winds around 10 mph.
Tonight
Mostly clear. Not as cool. Lows in the lower 40s. Southeast winds around 10 mph.
Sunday
Cloudy with a 20 percent chance of rain showers. Highs in the upper 50s. South winds 10 to 15 mph.
Sunday Night
Partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of rain showers. Lows in the lower 40s. Northeast winds up to 10 mph.
Monday
Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 60s. North winds 10 to 15 mph.
Monday Night and Tuesday
Clear. Lows in the upper 30s. Highs in the mid 60s.
Tuesday Night
Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 40s.
Wednesday and Wednesday Night
Partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 60s. Lows in the upper 40s.
Thanksgiving Day
Mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms. Highs in the upper 50s.
Thursday Night
Mostly cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms. Lows in the mid 40s.
Friday
Mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms. Highs in the upper 50s.
Public Information Statement
Statement as of 12:49 am CST on November 22, 2008
... Record lows set at gage and Hobart in western Oklahoma...
On Friday morning... November 21... the temperature at gage plummeted
to 13 degrees. This broke the previous record for the date... which
had been 17 degrees set back in 1988.
Also on Friday morning... Hobart dropped to 21 degrees. This broke
the previous record low for the date... which had stood at 22 degrees
since 1964.
Interestingly... Hobart had tied a record high temperature as
recently as Wednesday of this week... when the Mercury peaked at
79 degrees just before the arrival of a strong cold front.
Personal Weather Stations
Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]
There are no weather stations in your area, find out more information!
NWS Forecaster Discussion
423 fxus64 koun 220926 afdoun Area forecast discussion National Weather Service Norman OK 326 am CST Sat Nov 22 2008 Discussion... forecast over the next several days remains pretty much unchanged. Returning S winds and gradual modification of the cold air mass will lead to a gradual warming trend. Low probability of precipitation are maintained Sunday and Sunday night for some -ra/-shra ahead of Pacific cold front... mainly over east/southeast OK. Drier and somewhat cooler air moves in by Monday followed by another slow warmup as upper ridge axis moves from The Rockies into the plains by around midweek. Met guidance temperatures have been followed closely through Monday. It is notable that the next cooler/drier air mass is not forecast to go very far into the western Gulf. This has implications for the speed and quality of expected low-level moisture return late in the week. Our attention is turning more and more to the system forecast to affect the area late next week. This system appears destined to be a significant player in one way or another over Thanksgiving. The good news is that it easily looks to remain warm enough to keep all precipitation rain /barring any T-storms with hail/. We will trend the probability of precipitation upward a bit more from Thursday into Friday... but keep them in the chance range due to a number of inherent uncertainties in details. General longwave pattern evolution for next week remains the same - big upper low closing off over the northeast and a Pacific system dropping into the SW. Latter will nudge the upper ridge axis east of the area by Thanksgiving... opening the way for moisture return and increasing rain/T-storm chances beginning as early as Wednesday night. While the models are on the same general Page with the big picture... devil is in the details. European model (ecmwf) is among the slowest to move the SW system east into the plains... which makes sense to US given the overall blocky character of the pattern. However we are a bit concerned that the European model (ecmwf) essentially has lost most of the upstream kicker. Most of the models drop a good chunk of it into the SW... while the European model (ecmwf) now takes most of it into British Columbia. That and the ecmwf's somewhat suspect handling of the low over the northeast - moving it northwest/north to James Bay and building a ridge over the southeast states - lowers our confidence in the European model (ecmwf) toward the end of next week. Thus we are leaning a little more toward the GFS... which brings strongest kinematic forcing across the area Thursday and Thursday night before shutting down any lingering precipitation by late Friday. GFS has backed off on surface moisture return Wednesday into Thursday... keeping trajectories initially from the Gulf Coast states and thus keeping surface dewpoints in the 30s/40s over most of OK/ntx. European model (ecmwf) may be overdone with 60+ dewpoints to the Red River by Friday morning. What verifies is apt to be somewhere in between the two models. That still would be enough to support a potential for some embedded convection... but instability is likely to be limited this far north. Increasing dewpoints and clouds will act to keep nighttime temperatures up... while precipitation and the same clouds keep daytime temperatures down. GFS has mean-layer relative humidity over 90 percent by late Thursday... suggesting a cloudy cool and occasionally rainy Thanksgiving. Behind this system... GFS builds another 1040 Canadian high down through the plains by next Saturday as a double-vortex block sets up near the West Coast. Or... if the European model (ecmwf) is right... there will be a 590 upper high off the West Coast with ridging into west Canada. Either way... looks colder again by the end of next week. Temperatures next weekend may well be similar to - or lower than - what we've had the past couple days. 24 && Preliminary point temps/pops... Oklahoma City OK 54 35 59 37 / 0 0 10 10 Hobart OK 54 37 64 38 / 0 0 0 0 Wichita Falls Texas 60 42 65 38 / 0 0 10 0 gage OK 58 29 66 28 / 0 0 0 0 Ponca City OK 53 34 60 35 / 0 0 10 10 Durant OK 54 40 60 52 / 0 10 20 30 && Oun watches/warnings/advisories... OK...none. Texas...none. && $$ 22/24