067  
FXUS62 KGSP 290417  
AFDGSP  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GREENVILLE-SPARTANBURG SC  
1217 AM EDT SUN JUN 29 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
 
A TYPICAL SUMMER PATTERN CONTINUES INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK WITH  
SEASONABLE TEMPERATURES AND DAILY CHANCES FOR AFTERNOON AND EARLY  
EVENING THUNDERSTORMS. A COLD FRONT APPROACHES THE AREA ON TUESDAY  
AND DRIER WEATHER MAY RETURN FOR THE HOLIDAY WEEKEND.  
 

 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TODAY/
 
 
AS OF 1215 AM EDT SUNDAY: A FEW DECAYING STORMS ARE STILL TRYING TO  
HANG ON AS THEIR OUTFLOW BOUNDARIES SHOOT SOUTHWARD. THESE STUBBORN  
STORMS IN THE SOUTHERN ZONES HAVE BEEN PAINSTAKINGLY SLOW TO  
DIMINISH BUT SHOULD CALM DOWN IN THE NEXT HOUR. SATELLITE SHOWS A  
BROAD AREA OVER THE UPSTATE OF CONVECTIVE CLOUD DEBRIS SCATTERING  
SLOWLY. THERE ARE ALSO A FEW AREAS IN THE MOUNTAIN VALLEYS  
LIGHTING UP WITH FOG ALREADY. THIS WILL CONTINUE TO INCREASE  
THROUGH THE NIGHT AND DISAPPEAR AFTER DAYBREAK.  
 
OTHERWISE, WHILE GUIDANCE IS SHOWING THE AIR MASS WON'T BE AS  
UNSTABLE SUNDAY, IT WILL STILL BE MODERATELY UNSTABLE. PW VALUES  
REMAIN HIGH WITH EVEN LESS MID LEVEL DRY AIR LEADING TO LOWER DCAPE  
AND SFC DELTA THETA-E VALUES. HOWEVER, FORCING WILL BE ENOUGH FOR  
MORE DIURNAL CONVECTION FAVORING THE MOUNTAINS AND FOOTHILLS WITH  
SCATTERED COVERAGE ELSEWHERE. SEVERE CHANCE IS LOWER BUT HEAVY RAIN  
CHANCE HIGHER GIVEN THE PREVIOUSLY MENTIONED CONDITIONS. TRAINING OR  
ANCHORING OF CELLS WILL BE POSSIBLE ONCE AGAIN. HIGHS WILL BE NEAR  
NORMAL ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS AND A FEW DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL ELSEWHERE.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /TONIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY/
 
 
AS OF 1221 PM SATURDAY: THE FORECAST CONTINUES TOMORROW NIGHT WITH  
BROAD BERMUDA RIDGE EXTENDING ACROSS THE ATLANTIC AND INTO THE  
SOUTHEAST COAST. FARTHER UPSTREAM, A NORTHERN STREAM TROUGH WILL BE  
SWINGING ACROSS THE CANADIAN PRAIRIES AND NORTHERN PLAINS. THE TROUGH  
IS PROGGED TO SLIDE ACROSS THE MIDWEST ON MONDAY AND ACROSS THE  
GREAT LAKES INTO NEW ENGLAND ON TUESDAY. WEAK DEEP-LAYER SOUTHWEST  
FLOW WILL KEEP A MOIST SUB-TROPICAL AIRMASS ENTRENCHED ACROSS THE  
AREA WITH PWATS OF 1.75-2". A PERSISTENCE FORECAST SEEMS LIKELY ON  
MONDAY WITH SCATTERED TO NUMEROUS DIURNALLY DRIVEN THUNDERSTORMS  
WITH THE GREATEST RAIN CHANCES ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS. OUTFLOW  
BOUNDARIES PUSHING OUT OF THE MOUNTAINS MAY INITIATE NEW SCATTERED  
CONVECTION MAINLY ALONG AND NORTH OF I-85 WITH GENERALLY ISOLATED TO  
WIDELY SCATTERED COVERAGE FARTHER SOUTH/EAST. THE FORECAST TURNS  
WETTER ON TUESDAY AS THE PREVIOUSLY MENTIONED TROUGH PASSES NORTH OF  
THE AREA AND DRAGS A COLD FRONT WITHIN THE TROUGH AXIS TOWARDS THE  
AREA. DEEP MOISTURE POOLING AHEAD OF THE BOUNDARY ALONG WITH A  
SLIGHT UPTICK IN FLOW/WEAK FORCING WILL PROVE SUFFICIENT TO  
INSTIGATE NUMEROUS TO WIDESPREAD AFTERNOON/EARLY EVENING STORMS  
ACROSS MUCH OF THE AREA. STORMS MAY LOOSELY ORGANIZE INTO  
CLUSTERS/LINEAR SEGMENTS ALONG COMPOSITE COLD POOLS. AS WITH ANY  
SUMMER CONVECTION, A FEW STRONG TO ISOLATED SEVERE STORMS CANNOT BE  
RULED OUT WITH THE MAIN THREAT BEING WET MICROBURSTS. THE  
ENVIRONMENT WON'T BE OVERLY CONDUCIVE TO DAMAGING WINDS WITH POOR  
LAPSE RATES, DCAPE, SURFACE DELTA THETAE AND VERTICAL TOTALS - THUS  
ANY SEVERE THREAT SHOULD REMAIN FAIRLY ISOLATED.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY/
 
 
AS OF 1232 PM SATURDAY: THE LATEST SUITE OF GLOBAL MODEL GUIDANCE IS  
IN FAIRLY GOOD AGREEMENT THAT THE FRONTAL BOUNDARY WILL SLIDE INTO  
THE AREA ON WEDNESDAY WITH ANOTHER DAY OF FAIRLY HIGH COVERAGE OF  
DIURNAL THUNDERSTORMS. BY THURSDAY, THE BOUNDARY BEGINS TO PUSH  
SOUTH AND EAST OF THE AREA WITH MUCH LOWER THETAE AIR ARRIVING IN  
ITS WAKE. THIS WOULD SHUNT THE GREATEST RAIN CHANCES SOUTH OF THE  
AREA WITH A RETURN TO A MOSTLY DRY FORECAST. DEPENDING ON HOW FAR  
SOUTH THE BOUNDARY MAKES IT, THE FORECAST MAY REMAIN DRY THROUGH THE  
4TH OF JULY HOLIDAY WEEKEND. OF COURSE A FEW ISOLATED SHOWERS/STORMS  
CAN NEVER BE RULED OUT OVER THE MOUNTAINS EVEN IN A POST-FRONTAL  
AIRMASS. SHOULD THE BOUNDARY STALL OVER OR NEAR THE AREA, HOWEVER,  
THE FORECAST WOULD STAY ACTIVE THROUGH THE HOLIDAY WEEKEND. CURRENT  
MODEL TRENDS SUPPORT THE DRIER FORECAST, SO WILL KEEP RAIN CHANCES  
IN LINE WITH THE NATIONAL MODEL BLEND WITH ONLY ISOLATED CHANCES  
BEING ADVERTISED.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /04Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/
 
 
AT KCLT: OUTFLOW BOUNDARIES SOUTH OF THE FIELD WILL ALLOW STORMS  
TO PERSIST NEARBY IN THE FIRST HR OR TWO OF THE PERIOD, SO A RARE  
MENTION OF VCTS IS INCLUDED. A DIRECT TS HIT IS NOT OUT OF THE  
QUESTION BUT THIS IS HANDLED WITH TEMPO. WINDS WILL BE MAINLY ENE  
WITHIN COLD POOL, BUT SHOULD RETURN TO LIGHT SW BY LATE EVENING AS  
COLD POOL MIXES OUT. FOG TOO UNLIKELY TO MENTION AT DAYBREAK. SUNDAY  
EXPECTED TO EVOLVE SIMILARLY TO SATURDAY IN TERMS OF LOW VFR CU  
LIFTING AND WITH SCATTERED TSRA WARRANTING PROB30 IN THE AFTERNOON.  
 
ELSEWHERE: OUTFLOWS HAVE WORKED OVER ALL THE TERMINALS AND TSRA  
CHANCE IS NEAR ZERO, EXCEPT KAND WHICH STILL HAS SOME CU BUBBLING AT  
ISSUANCE TIME. MOSTLY LIGHT/VRB WINDS OVERNIGHT BUT KHKY/KGMU/KGSP  
STILL SEEING SOME EFFECTS OF COLD POOL WINDS. REMAINING OVERNIGHT  
CLOUDS WILL BE JUST CIRRUS CONVECTIVE DEBRIS. MOUNTAIN VALLEY FOG  
LIKELY ALTHOUGH KAVL DID NOT GET A DIRECT TS HIT, AND GUIDANCE HAS  
BACKED OFF EARLIER DEPICTION OF IFR. NOW PREVAILING MVFR VSBY WITH  
IFR LEVEL SCT DECK. KHKY HAD +RA VERY NEARBY AND FELT TEMPO WAS  
WARRANTED FOR SAME CONDITIONS AS KAVL. LOW VFR DIURNAL CU DEVELOP  
BY LATE MORNING SUN, WINDS COMING UP FROM THE SW, BOTH SIMILARLY  
TO SUNDAY. SEVERE WIND POTENTIAL LESSER THOUGH +RA MORE LIKELY  
WHERE TS DEVELOP. PROB30 FOR ALL SITES.  
 
OUTLOOK: DAILY CHANCES FOR AFTERNOON AND EVENING SHOWERS AND  
THUNDERSTORMS INTO NEXT WEEK. FOG AND/OR LOW STRATUS POSSIBLE  
EACH MORNING IN THE USUAL MOUNTAIN VALLEYS AS WELL AS NEAR LAKES  
AND RIVERS.  
 

 
   
GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
GA...NONE.  
NC...NONE.  
SC...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
SYNOPSIS...CP  
NEAR TERM...CP/RWH  
SHORT TERM...TW  
LONG TERM...TW  
AVIATION...WIMBERLEY  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab SC Page
The Nexlab NC Page
The Nexlab GA Page Main Text Page