Miss Walls has a backside like none other and yes she is attractive.

The models are everywhere and I do mean everywhere. If I had to take a stab at it now I'm going with a 4 to 8 inch swath in central Kentucky. Down towards the Cumberland parkway could see 10 plus. Up in your neck of the woods Prowler MUCH less snow as it will vacate your area before the warm air aloft goes cold enough for snow although it wouldn't surprise me at all if you saw a 1 to 3 inch total. Louisville could very well get pounded out of this with double digit snow totals wide spread.

The deal breaker or bust potential is in the warmth of the air aloft. If the warm air erodes quickly and turns cold sooner than we are in for a major snowfall. If it doesn't and the warm air holds on then an extended period of sleet will occur lessening snow fall totals.This is a very hard one to call and now casting will take place. There is one thing for sure tremendous moisture is heading this way from the south and that spells one thing and that is a lot of something. I do know the NWS feels that tomorrow during the day central Ky could see several hours of continued non stop snow fall with rates of 1 to 2 inches per hour. Chris Bailey which is very good at these kind of events even feels that those rates could last in some spots as much as 7 to 9 hours so do the math.

Sorry for sounding wishy washy but this is a bear to call. Hang on tight, Friday morning the low at your house could be around zero again. After next week the NAO goes major positive that usually means a warm up and normal to above normal temps. The winds of change may finally be blowing.....

And thanks for any confidence as I am a hack at best but it is fun trying to nail these down. The RPM model right now shows Louisville getting between 1 and 2 inches of a nuicance snow. The NAM is showing over 16 inches. The GFS has surpressed some but is still showing over 9 inches...