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Noxubee County, MS Weather and Climate Synopsis

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36 Hr. Forecast Map
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Weather Summary Hourly Observations Nowcast Agricultural Weather Outlook
7 Day Forecast Medium & Long Range Outlook Almanac Historical Facts





US Weekly Rainfall Departure



US Weekly Temperature Departure
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A joint service of the UK Ag Weather Center and the National Weather Service.

104 AM CDT Sun Jun 22 2025

...New AVIATION...

.MESOSCALE UPDATE...
Issued at 909 PM CDT Sat Jun 21 2025

Rest of tonight...

Upper level ridge is in place over the region, with a weak
easterly wave across the northern Gulf. This combined with deep 
moisture around 1.6-1.9 inches, provided the impetus for showers
and storms today that are persisting into the early evening. For 
now, this should continue through the next hour or so. With low 
level moisture across the region and dewpoints hovering in the low
to mid 70s overnight, lows will be some 5-8F above normal 
(71-76F). Can't rule out some fog in east to southeast MS but
dense fog probs remain low. This will be probable in areas that
received decent rain this evening and low-lying river valleys. 
Updates are out. /DC/

National Ag. Weather Outlook, International Ag. Weather Summary
Current Surface Map, [2nd Source TWC]

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Regional Hourly Observations For NOXUBEE County
300 AM CDT SUN JUN 22 2025
GOLDN TRIANGLE CLEAR     76  75  97 SE5       30.12S                  
IUKA           CLEAR     76  76 100 CALM      30.13S                  
LOUISVILLE     MOCLDY    73  73 100 S6        30.16R                  
STARKVILLE     CLEAR     73  73 100 CALM      30.10S FOG              
TUPELO         CLEAR     76  71  85 CALM      30.11S                  

Current Temperatures, Dewpoint, RH, Wind, Regional Obs, Surface 4-Panel


Current Agricultural Weather Conditions in Mississippi
Based on observations at 300am CDT, Sunday June 22, 2025

Across Mississippi...temperatures are near 76 degrees north, near 75 degrees central, and near 76 degrees south. Current sky conditions are clear north, partly cloudy central, and partly cloudy south. In the north, relative humidity is near 85%, and the dew point is near 71 degrees. In the central part of the state, relative humidity is near 87%, and the dew point is near 71 degrees. In the south, relative humidity is near 82%, and the dew point is near 70 degrees. The livestock heat stress category is no stress north, no stress central, and no stress south. Winds are calm north, where conditions are favorable for spraying. Winds are from the south at 7 mph central, where conditions are favorable for spraying. Winds are from the north at 8 mph south, where conditions are favorable for spraying. Based on current available observations, the highest temperature is 76 degrees at and Tupelo. The lowest temperature is 70 degrees at Pinebelt.


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.

US Radar, All NWS Radars (In near-real time), Current Livestock Heat Stress Index (LSI), Current Wind Chill Map
Hazardous Weather Outlook For NOXUBEE County
Hazardous report currently not available
NWS Severe Weather Map , Convective Outlook

7-Day Forecast For NOXUBEE County, MS
258 AM CDT Sun Jun 22 2025

TODAY
Mostly sunny. Patchy fog after midnight. A chance of showers and thunderstorms this afternoon. Highs in the lower 90s. Light and variable winds, becoming southeast around 5 mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.

TONIGHT
Mostly clear. A chance of showers and thunderstorms in the evening. Lows in the lower 70s. Southeast winds around 5 mph in the evening, becoming light and variable. Chance of rain 30 percent.

MONDAY
Sunny. A chance of showers and thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the lower 90s. East winds around 5 mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.

MONDAY NIGHT
Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 70s. Southeast winds around 5 mph in the evening, becoming light and variable.

TUESDAY
Sunny. Highs in the lower 90s. East winds around 5 mph.

TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT
Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 70s. Highs in the mid 90s.

FRIDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT
Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 90s. Lows in the lower 70s.

SATURDAY
Mostly sunny. A chance of showers and thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the lower 90s. Chance of rain 40 percent.

12-48 Hr Surface Forecast Maps, TWC 4-Panel Surface Forecast, Fire Danger, Day 1 Precip, Day 2 Precip, Days 1-5 Precip, Severe Weather Pot.-Day 1, Day 2


Medium & Long Range Outlook For Mississippi
                          MISSISSIPPI                                                                     
                 ---------------------------------------------
                 6 TO 10 DAY  8 TO 14 DAY   30 DAY    90 DAY 
                JUN 27-JUL 1 JUN 29-JUL 5    JUN       JUN-AUG                      
                 -----------  -----------  --------  ---------
   Temperature:      Above        Above                                            
 Precipitation:      Above        Above                                            

....  Medium and long range outlooks provided by NCEP/K. Thomas Priddy
5 Day Rainfall Forecast, 6 to 10 Day , 8 to 14 Day , Text, 30-Day Outook, 90-Day Outook, 120-Day Outlook
Almanac Information


Historical Weather And Climate Facts For Today

/////////////////////////
JUNE 22ND...HISTORIC WEATHER EVENTS
...1947...
Twelve inches of rain fell in forty-two minutes at Holt MO establishing a
world rainfall record. That record was tied on January 24-25, 1956, at the
Kilauea Sugar Plantation in Hawaii, as their state record was established
with 38 inches of rain in 24 hours. (The Weather Channel)
...1972...
Hurricane Agnes deluged Pennsylvania and New York State with torrential
rains resulting in the most costly flood in U.S. history. In the Middle
Susquehanna Valley of Pennsylvania, 24 hour rainfall amounts were generally
8 to 12 inches, with up to 19 inches in extreme southwestern Schuylkill
County. At Wilkes-Barre PA the dike was breached destroying much of the
town. Flooding resulted in 117 deaths and 3.1 billion dollars damage.
(David Ludlum)
...1981...
A young woman from Lubbock TX was struck by lightning. The bolt of
lightning struck just above her right shoulder near her neck, and passed
right to left through her body, tearing her warm-ups, causing her tennis
shoes to explode, and lifting her two feet into the air. (The Weather
Channel)
...1992...
Record cold prevailed in the eastern U.S. with 67 low temperature records for 
the date tied or broken.  Indianapolis, Indiana dipped to 37 degrees to set a 
new all-time record low temperature for June and the coldest summer temperature 
ever.  In sharp contrast, it was a furnace in the Pacific Northwest with Eugene 
and Medford, Oregon setting new all-time record high temperatures for June with 
102 and 111 degrees, respectively.

Ag Weather Center, Department of Biosystems & Agricultural Engineering, University of Kentucky