529  
FXUS62 KGSP 161742  
AFDGSP  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GREENVILLE-SPARTANBURG SC  
142 PM EDT TUE SEP 16 2025  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
LOW PRESSURE ON THE NORTH CAROLINA COAST WEAKENS AS IT DRIFTS  
NORTHEAST TO BE ALONG THE VIRGINIA COAST WEDNESDAY AND THEN THE LOW  
DISSIPATES ON THURSDAY. WARM AND DRY HIGH PRESSURE RETURNS FOR THE  
REST OF THE WEEK WITH FRIDAY BEING THE WARMEST DAY. EXPECTING LOW  
CHANCES OF SHOWER AND THUNDERSTORMS BY EARLY NEXT WEEK AS MOISTURE  
SLOWLY INCREASES.  
 
 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH WEDNESDAY/  
 
AS OF 138 PM EDT TUESDAY...  
 
KEY MESSAGES:  
 
1) SHOWERS WILL DEVELOP ACROSS THE NC MOUNTAINS TODAY, AND MAY  
SPILL OUT INTO THE UPSTATE THIS EVENING.  
 
2) QUIETER CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED ON WEDNESDAY.  
 
3) TEMPERATURES WILL BE AROUND NORMAL FOR MOST OF THE AREA ON  
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY.  
 
THE REGIME REMAINS UNDER THE CONTROL OF AN UPPER LOW CHURNING OVER  
THE CAROLINS AND LOWER MID-ATLANTIC. AT THE SURFACE, A COASTAL  
LOW IS ANALYZED NORTHEAST OF CAPE HATTERAS, DRIVING GENERALLY N  
FLOW OVER THE AREA...AND SUPPORTING A BROAD SURFACE RIDGE EAST  
OF THE APPALACHIANS. SHOWERS NEVER QUITE DIED OFF THIS MORNING  
WEST OF I-26, AND AT THIS POINT MESOANALYSIS DEPICTS A GROWING  
LOBE OF 500+ J/KG SBCAPE, MAINLY OVER THE SMOKIES AND BALSAMS BUT  
EXPANDING...SO ACTIVITY MAY RAMP UP AGAIN SOON.  
 
STILL EXPECT A SHORTWAVE (OR, REALLY, A SERIES OF WEAK RIPPLES) TO  
ROTATE ACROSS THE AREA FROM THE NORTH THIS AFTERNOON. AREAS WEST  
OF I-26 CAN EXPECT 500-1000 J/KG SBCAPE TO DEVELOP OVER THE NEXT  
FEW HOURS; WITH THE SHORTWAVE CROSSING THE AREA AT PEAK HEATING,  
SHOWERS AND AT LEAST SOME THUNDERSTORMS APPEAR LIKELY. THE BULK OF  
THIS ACTIVITY SHOULD REMAIN CONFINED TO THE MOUNTAINS, BUT THERE'S  
AN INCREASINGLY CONSISTENT SIGNAL IN THE 12Z HREF FOR SOME CELLS  
BREAKING CONTAINMENT AND SPILLING OVER INTO THE WESTERN UPSTATE AND  
SAVANNAH RIVER VALLEY AS THE AFTERNOON WEARS ON. NEITHER SHEAR  
NOR DCAPE PARAMETERS LOOK IMPRESSIVE...SO EXPECT LITTLE SEVERE  
RISK, AND ANY HEAVY RAIN TO BE ISOLATED AND SHORT-LIVED...TO  
THE POINT THAT SIGNIFICANT IMPACTS AREN'T EXPECTED. OTHERWISE,  
HIGH TEMPERATURES ARE STILL EXPECTED TO TOP OUT IN THE LOWER 80S  
ACROSS THE UPSTATE, THOUGH SOME LOCATIONS MAY REMAIN COOLER OWING  
TO THE UNEXPECTED LONGEVITY OF THIS MORNING'S SHOWERS THERE.  
FORECAST HIGHS WERE RAISED ALONG THE I-77 CORRIDOR, WHERE IT'S  
CURRENTLY CLEAR AND WHERE CAMS INDICATE MINIMAL CHANCE OF ANY  
RAINFALL TODAY, COMPARED TO PREVIOUS FORECASTS.  
 
TONIGHT, AS THE SURFACE LOW SLIPS NORTH INTO THE CHESAPEAKE REGION,  
WINDS WILL BECOME INCREASINGLY NW, THE SHORTWAVE WILL EXIT THE AREA,  
AND CONVECTION SHOULD COME TO AN END. LINGERING MOISTURE WILL KEEP  
THE CLOUDS AROUND, BUT ANOTHER ROUND OF MOUNTAIN VALLEY FOG SHOULD  
OCCUR NONETHELESS. LOWS WILL DROP INTO THE UPPER 50S. TOMORROW,  
COVERAGE OF RAINFALL LOOKS MUCH LOWER THAN TODAY; THE LACK OF ANY  
GOOD SYNOPTIC SUPPORT AS THE LOW MOVES NORTH WILL MAKE INITIATION  
MORE DIFFICULT, EXCEPT FOR RIDGETOP SHOWERS IN THE MOUNTAINS.  
HIGHS TOMORROW SHOULD BE SIMILAR TO TODAY'S.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/  
 
AS OF 100 PM EDT TUESDAY:  
 
KEY MESSAGES:  
 
1) WARMING TREND CONTINUES AS DRIER CONDITIONS RETURN  
 
2) HIGHS ~3-5 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL.  
 
3) PRECIP CHANCES LESS THAN 20% THROUGH THE PERIOD.  
 
UPPER LOW OVER THE MID-ATLANTIC WILL KICK OUT AND BECOME ABSORBED  
IN THE POLAR JET, AS LARGE SCALE HEIGHT FALLS OVERSPREAD EASTERN  
CANADA AND THE NORTHEAST CONUS EARLY IN THE PERIOD. THE AXIS OF A  
BAGGY TROUGH WILL BE LEFT BEHIND FROM THE MID-ATLANTIC INTO THE  
SOUTHEAST WHICH WILL LINGER OVER THE REGION WHILE CONTINUING TO  
WEAKEN. THIS PATTERN WILL TEND TO SHUNT ANY NOTEWORTHY MOISTURE  
EAST AND SOUTHEAST OF OUR FORECAST AREA, AND INDEED, FORECAST  
SOUNDINGS ARE RELATIVELY DRY (PWATS < 1.25") AND STABLE THROUGH THE  
PERIOD. THUS, DESPITE THE FACT THAT SHORT TERM GUIDANCE GENERALLY  
AGREES IN DROPPING A VORT MAX ACROSS THE AREA ON THURSDAY, PROFILES  
ARE FORECAST TO BE UNSUPPORTIVE OF DEEP CONVECTION, AND POPS OF <  
20% ARE CARRIED THROUGH THE PERIOD. PROGGED THICKNESS VALUES WILL  
SUPPORT THE CONTINUATION OF A WARMING TREND, AND MAX TEMPS ARE  
EXPECTED TO BE AROUND 3-5 DEGREES ABOVE CLIMO. A RELATIVELY DRY  
AIR MASS AND GOOD RADIATIONAL COOLING CONDITIONS EACH NIGHT ARE  
EXPECTED TO RESULT IN MIN TEMPS NEAR-TO-SLIGHTLY-BELOW CLIMO.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/  
 
AS OF 120 PM EDT TUESDAY:  
 
KEY MESSAGES:  
 
1) SLIGHTLY COOLER EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 
2) SMALL CHANCES FOR MAINLY MOUNTAIN SHOWERS OR A STORM MOST  
AFTERNOONS, BUT OTHERWISE REMAINING DRY.  
 
WEAK UPPER TROUGH CENTERED OVER THE REGION AT THE START OF THE  
PERIOD WILL CONTINUE TO WEAKEN OVER THE WEEKEND, BECOMING DISPLACED  
BY WEAK RIDGING EARLY IN THE NEW WEEK. MEANWHILE 1030-ISH MB SURFACE  
HIGH PRESSURE BUILDING INTO THE NORTHEAST CONUS WILL RESULT IN AN  
INVERTED SURFACE RIDGE DEVELOPING DOWN THE EASTERN SEABOARD SATURDAY  
THROUGH SUNDAY, WITH EFFECTIVE WEAK BACKDOOR COLD FRONT FORECAST TO  
PUSH INTO OUR CWA LATE SATURDAY/EARLY SUNDAY. THIS WILL ACT TO SHAVE  
A FEW DEGREES OFF OF TEMPERATURES FOR SUNDAY/MONDAY, BRINGING THEM  
MORE IN LINE WITH SEASONAL NORMALS...IF NOT SLIGHTLY COOLER THAN  
NORMAL. OTHERWISE, THE AIR MASS IS EXPECTED TO REMAIN RELATIVELY DRY  
AND STABLE THROUGH THE PERIOD, AND POPS ARE LIMITED TO (AT MOST) 20%  
CHANCES FOR DIURNAL SHOWERS OR A STORM ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS EACH  
AFTERNOON. TEMPERATURES ARE FORECAST TO REBOUND TO ABOVE-NORMAL  
CONDITIONS BY TUESDAY, WHEN GLOBAL MODELS ARE IN GOOD AGREEMENT IN  
DEPICTING SIGNIFICANT WEAKENING OF THE INVERTED RIDGE...AS SURFACE  
HIGH PRESSURE PROGRESSES RATHER QUICKLY OFF THE NEW ENGLAND COAST.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /18Z TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/  
 
AT KCLT AND ELSEWHERE: SHOWERS ARE ONGOING ACROSS THE NC FOOTHILLS  
AND NORTHERN SC UPSTATE CIRCA 1730Z, AND SHOULD SEE A MARGINAL  
INCREASE IN COVERAGE OVER THE NEXT COUPLE HOURS...ESPECIALLY ACROSS  
THE NC MOUNTAINS. THIS EVENING, THERE IS A CHANCE THAT CONVECTION  
WILL ESCAPE THE MOUNTAINS AND SLIDE SOUTH ACROSS THE SC UPSTATE, BUT  
CONFIDENCE IS LIMITED. WHATEVER SHOWERS DEVELOP WILL DISSIPATE BY  
LATE EVENING, GIVING WAY TO DRY AND MOSTLY-VFR CONDITIONS OVERNIGHT.  
AS USUAL, THE EXCEPTION IS THE MOUNTAIN VALLEYS, WHERE THERE'S A  
STRONG SIGNAL IN BOTH THE OPERATIONAL AND STATISTICAL GUIDANCE FOR  
REDUCED VISIBILITY AND LOW CEILINGS; FOR NOW, FOG LOOKS SOMEWHAT  
FAVORED OVER LOW STRATUS...SO WENT WITH MVFR FOG MENTION AT KAVL AND  
ONLY HINTED AT IFR-LEVEL NON-CIG CLOUDS. CONVECTION CHANCES APPEAR  
MORE ISOLATED ON WEDNESDAY, AND ENTIRELY CONFINED TO THE MOUNTAINS.  
N/NW WIND EXPECTED THROUGH MOST OF THE PERIOD...POSSIBLY BECOMING  
WSW ACROSS THE UPSTATE NEAR THE END OF THE PERIOD WEDNESDAY  
AFTERNOON.  
 
OUTLOOK: DRY CONDITIONS EXPECTED THROUGH SATURDAY. SOME MOUNTAIN  
VALLEY FOG WILL REMAIN POSSIBLE EACH MORNING WHEREVER CLOUDS DO NOT  
INHIBIT NOCTURNAL RADIATION.  
 
 
   
GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
GA...NONE.  
NC...NONE.  
SC...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
SYNOPSIS...JDL  
NEAR TERM...MPR  
SHORT TERM...JDL  
LONG TERM...JDL  
AVIATION...MPR  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab SC Page
The Nexlab NC Page
The Nexlab GA Page
Main Text Page