634  
FXUS62 KCHS 081343  
AFDCHS  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CHARLESTON SC  
843 AM EST SAT NOV 8 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
HIGH PRESSURE WILL EXTEND ACROSS THE REGION THROUGH THE  
WEEKEND. A STRONG COLD FRONT WILL CROSS THE REGION BY SUNDAY  
NIGHT BRINGING MUCH COLDER CONDITIONS TO THE AREA NEXT WEEK.  
 
 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/  
 
UPDATE: KCLX SHOWS SHOWERS BREAKING OUT SOUTH OF I-16 THIS  
MORNING WITH WEAK WARM AIR ADVECTION/ISENTROPIC ASCENT ONGOING.  
ACTIVITY SHOULD INCREASE A BIT LATER THIS AFTERNOON AHEAD OF A  
850-700 HPA SHORTWAVE THAT IS CURRENTLY PROPAGATING ACROSS THE  
DEEP SOUTH. MODIFIED RAP SOUNDINGS YIELD MODERATE LEVELS OF  
INSTABILITY WITH SBCAPE 1500-2000 J/KG WITH IN A MODERATELY  
SHEARED ENVIRONMENT FEATURING 0-6KM BULK SHEAR VALUES AROUND 40  
KT. ALTHOUGH MID-LEVEL LAPSE RATES WILL REMAIN FAIRLY MUTED, A  
FEW STRONG TSTMS CAN NOT BE RULED OUT LATER THIS MORNING AND  
ESPECIALLY THIS AFTERNOON AS SURFACE TEMPERATURES RISE AND LOW-  
LEVEL LAPSE RATES INCREASE. GUSTY WINDS AND SMALL HAIL ARE THE  
MOST LIKELY HAZARDS. THE RISK FOR TSTMS REACHING SEVERE LEVELS  
REMAINS LOW GIVEN THE LESS THAN IDEAL MID-LEVEL LAPSE RATES.  
NEAR TERM POPS WERE ADJUSTED SLIGHTLY TO REFLECT CURRENT RADAR  
AND SHORT TERM MODEL TRENDS.  
 
OUT AHEAD OF AN APPROACHING COLD FRONT, WEAK POSITIVE THETA-E  
ADVECTION IN THE MID-LEVELS IS RESULTING IN SCATTERED TO BROKEN  
CLOUD COVERAGE, WITH WINDS REMAINING JUST MIXY ENOUGH TO KEEP  
OVERNIGHT LOWS IN THE MID 50S INLAND INTO THE LOWER 60S ALONG  
THE COAST. ALONG THE COLD FRONT, SCATTERED TO AREAS OF SHOWERS  
AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS ARE OCCURRING, THOUGH MODEL CONSENSUS  
REMAINS ON THE LOWER END OF WHAT EXACTLY THE RAINFALL COVERAGE  
WILL LOOK LIKE AS THE FRONT STALLS TO OUR NORTHWEST. DESPITE THE  
WEAK POSITIVE THETA-E ADVECTION CONTINUING ALONG WITH SOME  
INSTABILITY, THE NBM ONLY GAVE SLIGHT CHANCES FOR THE  
SHOWERS/STORMS TO CONTINUE INTO THE LATE MORNING HOURS,  
PRIMARILY FOR FAR SOUTHEAST GEORGIA. CONVECTION ALLOWING MODELS  
WOULD SUGGEST THE PROBABILITIES FOR RAIN WOULD EXTEND INTO  
PORTIONS OF SOUTHEAST SOUTH CAROLINA AS WELL, SO GIVEN THE  
SIMILAR ENVIRONMENT CONTINUING DID EXTEND THE COVERAGE OF  
SHOWERS IN BOTH SPACE AND TIME MUCH FURTHER NORTH INTO SOUTH  
CAROLINA.  
 
WHILE WE'LL LIKELY SEE A BREAK IN RAIN COVERAGE, CONVECTION  
ALLOWING MODELS HAVE NOTICEABLY INCREASED THE CHANCES FOR  
SHOWERS AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS THROUGHOUT THE MORNING AND  
INTO THE AFTERNOON HOURS. THIS IS DUE TO CONTINUED MODEST LIFT  
FROM THE POSITIVE THETA-E ADVECTION, DECENT INSTABILITY OF  
750-1500 J/KG, HIGH SHEAR OF UP TO 50 KNOTS, AND K-INDEX VALUES  
IN THE MID-30S. SPC NOTED A SIMILAR TREND, AND EVEN INTRODUCED A  
LEVEL 1 OUT OF 5 (MARGINAL) RISK FOR SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS  
ACROSS INLAND SOUTHEAST SOUTH CAROLINA AND SOUTHEAST GEORGIA.  
GIVEN THE LACK OF POPS FROM THE NBM, WENT AHEAD AND INCREASED  
CHANCES FOR SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS TO 30% TO ACCOUNT FOR THE  
POSSIBILITY OF THUNDERSTORMS, WITH A LOW PROBABILITY FOR SEVERE  
THUNDERSTORMS. GIVEN THE WARM-AIR ADVECTION AND BREEZY  
SOUTHWESTERLY WINDS, AFTERNOON HIGH TEMPERATURES STILL LOOK TO  
PEAK INTO THE LOWER 80S ACROSS SOUTHEAST GEORGIA AND UPPER 70S  
IN SOUTHEAST SOUTH CAROLINA, WHILE THOSE ALONG THE COAST WILL  
STAY IN THE MID 70S.  
 
INTO THE EARLY OVERNIGHT HOURS, EXPECT ANOTHER ROUND OF LIGHT  
SCATTERED SHOWERS AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS, PRIMARILY LIMITED  
TO INLAND AREAS. AS A STRONG COLD FRONT APPROACHES FROM THE  
WEST- NORTHWEST, THE SURFACE PRESSURE GRADIENT INCREASES, AND  
WILL KEEP WINDS ON THE SEMI-BREEZY SIDE. THIS WILL ALSO KEEP  
TEMPERATURES ON THE WARMER SIDE, WITH OVERNIGHT LOWS IN THE  
LOWER TO MID 60S, WARMEST ALONG THE COAST.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/  
 
SUNDAY: A DEEP 525DM CLOSED LOW WILL DIVE ACROSS THE GREAT  
LAKES REGION THROUGH THE DAY. THE LONGWAVE TROUGH WILL EXTEND  
SOUTH TO THE GULF, WITH THE AXIS REMAINING TO THE WEST. AT THE  
SFC, A DEEPENING LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM WILL TRACK ACROSS THE OHIO  
RIVER VALLEY DURING THE MORNING, REACHING PA/NY BY THE  
AFTERNOON. A STRONG COLD FRONT WILL SWEEP ACROSS THE SOUTHEAST  
U.S. DURING THE DAYLIGHT HOURS, TIMED TO REACH SE GA AND SC  
LOWCOUNTRY DURING THE LATE AFTERNOON TO EARLY EVENING HOURS. THE  
LATE ARRIVAL OF THE FRONT SHOULD ALLOW HIGH TEMPERATURES TO  
RANGE AROUND 80 ACROSS THE SC LOWCOUNTRY TO THE LOW 80S ACROSS  
SE GA. FORECAST SOUNDINGS INDICATE A SIGNIFICANT INVERSION WILL  
REMAIN AROUND H75 THROUGH MUCH OF THE DAY. HOWEVER, BY THE LATE  
AFTERNOON, THE INVERSION SHOULD WEAKEN AS THE COLD FRONT  
APPROACHES FROM THE WEST, CAPE VALUES MAY RANGE BETWEEN 500-800  
J/KG. SHEAR SHOULD INCREASE ALONG AND AHEAD OF THE COLD FRONT,  
WITH 6KM BULK SHEAR REACHING AROUND 55 KTS BY SUNSET. ML/AI  
GUIDANCE INDICATES THAT THE REGION MAY SEE THE POTENTIAL FOR  
15-30 PERCENT OF SEVERE WEATHER WITH 25 NM OF ANY GIVEN POINT.  
SPC CURRENT HIGHLIGHTS THE REGION WITH A MARGINAL RISK FOR  
SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS.  
 
THE COLD FRONT WILL PUSH OFFSHORE LATE SUNDAY EVENING, WITH  
STRONG CAA EXPECTED ACROSS THE FORECAST AREA THROUGH THE REST OF  
THE NIGHT. IN FACT, NAM12 INDICATES THAT H85 TEMPS FALL BELOW  
0C FOR PORTIONS OF INLAND GA AND SC. LOW TEMPERATURES MONDAY  
MORNING ARE FORECAST TO RANGE FROM THE UPPER 30S ACROSS INLAND  
GA TO THE MID 40S ALONG THE COAST.  
 
ON MONDAY, GFS INDICATES THAT 12Z H85 TEMPS ALONG A LINE FROM  
KSAV TO KCHS WILL RANGE AROUND 4C. H85 TEMPERATURES SHOULD FALL  
THROUGH THE DAY, FALLING TO AROUND -4C BY SUNSET. TEMPERATURES  
WILL STRUGGLE TO WARM WITH THE ONGOING STRONG CAA, DESPITE THE  
FULL SUN. HIGH TEMPERATURES SHOULD REMAIN AROUND 15 DEGREES  
BELOW NORMAL, HIGHS GENERALLY IN THE MID 50S. THE SURGE OF CAA  
MAY LEAD TO GUSTY WINDS ACROSS THE REGION, POSSIBLY REACHING  
LAKE WIND ADVISORY CRITERIA DURING THE LATE AFTERNOON.  
 
MONDAY NIGHT, THE H5 TROUGH SHOULD RIPPLE OVER ACROSS THE  
FORECAST AREA DURING THE OVERNIGHT HOURS. THE CENTER OF 1030 MB  
HIGH SHOULD REMAIN OVER DEEP SOUTH, MAINTAINING A 2 MB PRESSURE  
GRADIENT. THE COMBINATION OF LINGERING COLD LLVL THICKNESSES AND  
CLEAR SKY SHOULD ALLOW TEMPERATURES TO STEADY COOL THROUGH THE  
NIGHT. USING A BLEND OF GUIDANCE, LOW TEMPERATURES ARE FORECAST  
TO RANGE IN THE 20S ALONG AND WEST OF I-95, VALUES IN THE LOW  
30S TO THE EAST. ONLY AREAS ALONG THE IMMEDIATE COAST AREA  
FORECAST TO REMAIN ABOVE FREEZING BY DAYBREAK TUESDAY MORNING.  
THESE TEMPERATURES WILL CHALLENGE RECORD LOW VALUES, SEE CLIMATE  
SECTION BELOW. IN ADDITION, WIND SPEEDS SHOULD GENERALLY REMAIN  
BETWEEN 5 TO 10 MPH, YIELDING WIND CHILL VALUES IN THE LOW TO  
MID 20S, SOME POCKETS IN THE UPPER TEENS ARE POSSIBLE. THE  
FORECAST HARD FREEZE SHOULD END THE GROWING SEASON FOR THE  
MAJORITY OF THE FORECAST AREA. THERE IS ALSO A CHANCE THAT A  
COLD WEATHER ADVISORY COULD BE NEEDED FOR A FEW AREAS.  
 
TUESDAY, THE CENTER OF HIGH PRESSURE SOURCED FROM CENTRAL  
CANADA WILL PUSH OVER THE FORECAST AREA. HIGH TEMPERATURES ARE  
FORECAST TO REMAIN AROUND 20 DEGREES BELOW NORMAL, GENERALLY IN  
THE LOW TO MID 50S. IN FACT, WE COULD SEE A NEW RECORD LOW MAX  
AT KCHS, SEE CLIMATE SECTION BELOW. IN ADDITION, DEWPOINTS MAY  
FAVOR VALUES IN THE TEENS ACROSS SE GA TO AROUND 20 ACROSS THE  
SC LOWCOUNTRY DURING THE AFTERNOON. AFTERNOON RH VALUES MAY FALL  
INTO THE LOW TO MID 20S ACROSS SE GA TO AROUND 30 PERCENT  
ACROSS THE LOWCOUNTRY. FORTUNATELY, THE WEAK PRESSURE GRADIENT  
SHOULD KEEP WIND SPEEDS BETWEEN 5 TO 10 MPH.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/  
 
TUESDAY NIGHT, CLEAR SKY WITH LIGHT TO CALM WINDS SHOULD  
PROVIDE STRONG RADIATIONAL COOLING CONDITIONS THROUGH THE NIGHT.  
LOW TEMPERATURES SHOULD FALL TO AROUND 30 DEGREES ALONG AND  
WEST OF I- 95, WITH MID TO UPPER 30S TO THE EAST.  
 
TEMPERATURES SHOULD TREND WARMER THROUGH THE REST OF THE WORK  
WEEK. IN FACT, TEMPERATURES SHOULD RETURN TO MID NOVEMBER  
NORMALS BY THURSDAY, REMAINING NEAR NORMAL THROUGH THE REST OF  
THE FORECAST PERIOD. CONDITIONS SHOULD REMAIN DRY UNDER DRY NW  
MID-LEVEL FLOW.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /13Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/  
 
08/12Z: VFR THROUGH THE DAY AT ALL TAF SITES. AREAS IN INLAND  
SOUTHEAST GEORGIA MAY SEE SOME MVFR CIGS THROUGHOUT THE MORNING  
HOURS, BUT NOT EXPECTED TO REACH THE SAV TERMINAL. ISOLATED TO  
SCATTERED SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS MAY FORM LATER THIS MORNING  
INTO THE AFTERNOON HOURS, HAVE INCLUDED PROB30S AT SAV AND CHS  
AS THEY ARE NOT EXPECTED TO BE PREVAILING AT THIS TIME. LATE  
OVERNIGHT INTO SUNDAY, AN MVFR TO IFR STRATUS DECK MAY BE  
PUSHING INTO THE REGION FROM EASTERN GEORGIA.  
 
EXTENDED AVIATION OUTLOOK: PREVAILING VFR INTO THE WEEKEND.  
ISOLATED SHOWERS OR THUNDERSTORMS COULD IMPACT THE TERMINALS ON  
SUNDAY AFTERNOON, POSSIBLY BRINGING BRIEF FLIGHT RESTRICTIONS.  
GUSTY NW WINDS AROUND 20 KNOTS WILL DEVELOP MONDAY, DIMINISHING  
INTO TUESDAY.  
 
 
   
MARINE  
 
THROUGH TONIGHT: WINDS WILL BECOME MORE UNIFORMLY SOUTHERLY  
LATER THIS AFTERNOON INTO TONIGHT AS HIGH PRESSURE SHIFTS  
FARTHER OFFSHORE AND A COLD FRONT APPROACHES FROM THE WEST AND  
NORTHWEST. SPEEDS WILL GENERALLY REMAIN 10 KT OR LESS, BUT WILL  
INCREASE CLOSER TO 10-15 KT AS DAYBREAK APPROACHES. SEAS WILL  
AVERAGE 4 FT OR LESS THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT HOURS.  
 
SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY: A STRONG COLD FRONT WILL APPROACH THE  
MARINE ZONES ON SUNDAY. RETURN FLOW AHEAD OF THE FRONT SHOULD  
YIELD SOUTHWEST WINDS BETWEEN 10 TO 15 KTS, SOME GUSTS TO 20 KTS  
POSSIBLE. SEAS ARE FORECAST TO RANGE BETWEEN 2 TO 4 FT. A  
STRONG COLD FRONT WILL SWEEP ACROSS THE REGION SUNDAY NIGHT INTO  
MONDAY. IN THE WAKE OF THE FRONT, WINDS SHOULD TURN FROM THE  
NORTHWEST AND STRENGTHEN TO 20 TO 25 KTS, WITH GUSTS NEAR 30  
KTS. SEAS WILL BUILD SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY, REACH 3 TO 5  
FT ACROSS THE NEARSHORE WITH 6 FT SEAS ACROSS THE OUTER GA  
WATERS.  
 
MONDAY NIGHT, A SURGE OF CAA WILL PUSH ACROSS THE ATLANTIC  
WATERS. NORTHWEST WINDS MAY INCREASE ABOVE 25 KTS WITH GUSTS  
INTO THE LOW 30S ACROSS THE ATLANTIC WATERS. SPEEDS APPEAR CLOSE  
TO GALE FORCE MONDAY EVENING OUTSIDE THE CHS HARBOR, WITH SMALL  
CRAFT CONDITIONS ACROSS THE HARBOR. SEAS SHOULD PEAK MONDAY  
NIGHT, RANGING BETWEEN 4 TO 8 FT. SMALL CRAFT ADVISORIES ARE  
LIKELY FOR ALL WATERS, WITH A GALE WATCH/WARNING NOT OUT OF THE  
QUESTION FOR A PORTION OF THE WATERS. CONDITIONS SHOULD IMPROVE  
ON TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY AS HIGH PRESSURE SETTLES OVER THE AREA.  
 
 
   
CLIMATE  
 
UPCOMING RECORD LOW TEMPERATURES:  
 
NOVEMBER 11 (TUESDAY):  
KCHS: 29/1943  
KCXM: 32/1913  
KSAV: 31/1968  
 
NOVEMBER 12 (WEDNESDAY):  
KCHS: 27/1943  
KCXM: 33/1894  
KSAV: 30/2011  
 
UPCOMING RECORD LOW MAXIMUM TEMPERATURES:  
 
NOVEMBER 10 (MONDAY):  
KCHS: 46/1991  
KCXM: 47/1991  
KSAV: 49/1968  
 
NOVEMBER 11 (TUESDAY):  
KCHS: 54/1968  
KCXM: 46/1913  
KSAV: 49/1913  
 
 
   
CHS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
GA...NONE.  
SC...NONE.  
MARINE...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab SC Page
The Nexlab GA Page
Main Text Page