589  
FXUS62 KGSP 030525  
AFDGSP  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GREENVILLE-SPARTANBURG SC  
1225 AM EST SAT JAN 3 2026  
   
SYNOPSIS
 
 
A COOL WEDGE OF HIGH PRESSURE, AND DEVELOPING LOW PRESSURE SOUTH OF  
THE AREA, TOGETHER RESULT IN A CHILLY AND DAMP SATURDAY FOR THE  
FORECAST AREA. DRY AND WARMER CONDITIONS RETURN SUNDAY, WITH  
TEMPERATURES TRENDING WELL ABOVE NORMAL FOR MOST OF NEXT WEEK.  
 

 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/
 
 
AS OF 1044 PM FRIDAY:  
 
KEY MESSAGE #1: SHOWERS CONTINUE THROUGH THIS MORNING WITH A FEW  
SCATTERED SHOWERS/DRIZZLE LINGERING THROUGH THE AFTERNOON AS A WEAK  
COLD AIR DAMMING WEDGE DEVELOPS. FOG WILL BE POSSIBLE EARLY SUNDAY  
MORNING.  
 
THE FORECAST REMAINS LARGELY ON TRACK THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT AND INTO  
THE EARLY MORNING HOURS AS A WEAK, BUT PERTURBED BELT OF SOUTHERN  
STREAM WESTERLIES EXTENDS FROM THE SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE  
SOUTHEAST STATES. A LEAD IMPULSE AND ASSOCIATED SURFACE LOW  
CONTINUES TO SLIDE EAST ALONG THE I-20 CORRIDOR AND WILL BRING  
INCREASING RAIN CHANCES ACROSS MUCH OF THE AREA THROUGH SATURDAY  
MORNING. FORCING AND MOISTURE TRANSPORT AREN'T ANYTHING TO WRITE  
HOME ABOUT, SO GENERALLY LIGHT PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS OF 0.1-0.25"  
ARE EXPECTED WITH THE HIGHEST AMOUNTS CLOSER TO 0.5" OVER THE FAR  
SOUTHERN TIER OF COUNTIES FROM ELBERT TO GREENWOOD. TEMPERATURES  
WILL WETBULB OVERNIGHT AND WILL STRUGGLE TO WARM DURING THE DAY AS A  
WEAK IN-SITU CAD WEDGE DEVELOPS EAST OF THE MOUNTAINS, ESPECIALLY  
ACROSS THE I-40 CORRIDOR. THIS WILL ALSO KEEP DRIZZLE AND SCATTERED  
SHOWERS AROUND INTO THE AFTERNOON WITHIN THE CAD WEDGE. SUBSEQUENT  
TEMPERATURES WILL BE NOTICEABLY COOLER COMPARED TO YESTERDAY WITH  
HIGHS IN THE LOW 40S TO LOW 50S. HEADING INTO TONIGHT, SPRAWLING  
SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE SETTLING ACROSS THE GREAT PLAINS WILL HELP TO  
PUSH A STALLED FRONTAL BOUNDARY INTO THE MOUNTAINS AND PERHAPS THE  
FOOTHILLS BY DAYBREAK. THIS WILL BE A DRY BOUNDARY WITH JUST A WIND  
SHIFT AND ARRIVAL OF DRIER AIR. MID-LEVEL MOISTURE WILL GET SCOURED  
OUT WITH JUST A SHALLOW POOL OF SURFACE MOISTURE HANGING ON. THIS  
WILL FOSTER THE POTENTIAL FOR FOG DEVELOPMENT AHEAD OF THE BOUNDARY  
EAST OF THE MOUNTAINS.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/
 
 
AS OF 1120 PM FRI:  
 
KEY MESSAGE: DRY SUNDAY AND MONDAY WITH ABOVE-NORMAL TEMPERATURES AND  
MODERATELY LOW RELATIVE HUMIDITY.  
 
THERE STILL MAY BE SOME AREAS OF LOW CLOUD COVER LINGERING OVER THE  
CWA AT DAYBREAK SUNDAY, THE LAST VESTIGE OF CAD, BUT NW FLOW SHOULD  
CLEAR THAT OUT IN TIME FOR A DAY GENERALLY FREE OF LOW CLOUDS, AS  
CONTINENTAL SFC HIGH BUILDS FROM THE OHIO VALLEY TOWARD THE EAST  
COAST. SOME CIRRUS MAY RETURN BY AFTERNOON AS JET STREAK ROUNDS THE  
UPPER RIDGE CENTERED OVER THE PLAINS. AFTERNOON MIXING SHOULD ALLOW  
DEWPOINTS TO DROP A BIT WITH DIURNAL HEATING ALTHOUGH EVEN ONE TAKES  
INTO ACCOUNT THE OFTEN "REASONABLE WORST CASE" NBM 10TH PERCENTILE  
VALUES, MOST AREAS SHOULD SEE RH REMAIN ABOVE 30% AND THUS NOT  
CRITICALLY LOW FOR FIRE WX. MAX TEMPS WILL BE ON THE ORDER OF 5 ABOVE  
NORMAL.  
 
500MB SHORTWAVE WILL ROUND THE RIDGE AXIS AND CROSS THE NORTHERN  
GREAT LAKES EARLY MONDAY MORNING. A BROAD AREA OF SOUTHWESTERLY WAA  
WILL OCCUR DOWNSTREAM OF THE RIDGE ACROSS THE INLAND EAST, AND  
RESULTANT UPGLIDE OVER THE SFC HIGH IS LIKELY TO DEVELOP SOME CLOUD  
COVER OVER PARTS OF THE UPSTATE AND NC ESCARPMENT/FOOTHILLS, AT  
LEAST. THE MOISTURE AND LIFT ARE TOO SHALLOW TO RESULT IN MODEL QPF  
SO POPS REMAIN NEAR ZERO, BUT THE ASSOCIATED CLOUD COVER IS ENOUGH TO  
BRING MAX TEMPS SLIGHTLY COOLER THAN SUNDAY; SLIGHTLY LOWER PARTIAL  
THICKNESSES ALSO OCCUR UNDER THE HIGH. HOWEVER, TEMPS STILL ARE  
FORECAST A FEW DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL. MOISTURE ALOFT SUGGEST LESSER  
POTENTIAL FOR DEWPOINT MIXING SO MIN RH IS EVEN LESS OF A CONCERN.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/
 
 
AS OF 1210 AM FRI:  
 
KEY MESSAGE 1: TEMPERATURES TREND WARMER TUESDAY AND REMAIN  
CONSIDERABLY ABOVE NORMAL THROUGH THE END OF THE PERIOD.  
 
AS EAST COAST SFC HIGH AND GREAT LAKES SHORTWAVE BOTH MIGRATE EAST,  
QUASI-ZONAL UPPER FLOW IS LEFT OVERHEAD. WEAK SW'LY LOW-LEVEL FLOW  
WILL RESULT IN SLIGHT WAA TUESDAY, POSSIBLY RESULTING IN PARTIAL  
CLOUD COVER BUT NOTABLY GIVING TUESDAY A WARMER START, AND THUS  
WARMER AFTERNOON TEMPERATURES ALSO. ANOTHER SHORTWAVE PASSING NORTH  
OF THE REGION WILL BE ASSOCIATED WITH A WEAK COLD FRONT ENTERING THE  
OHIO VALLEY BUT SEEMINGLY STALLING AT THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND  
PIVOTING ACROSS VA/NC WEDNESDAY AS THE SHORTWAVE MOVES OFFSHORE.  
SMALL POPS CONTINUE TO BE FORECAST ALONG THE NC/TN BORDER.  
DOWNSLOPING AND MODIFICATION OF THE EXISTING AIRMASS SUGGEST STILL  
WARMER TEMPS WEDNESDAY, ENDING UP AROUND 15 ABOVE NORMAL DESPITE  
POSSIBILITY OF SOME CLOUD COVER NEAR THE BOUNDARY.  
 
THE PATTERN AMPLIFIES WED-THU AS FULL-LATITUDE TROUGH COMES TOGETHER  
OVER THE WESTERN CONUS AND NEXT CYCLONE GINS UP IN THE PLAINS OR MS  
VALLEY, WITH HEIGHTS RISING OVER THE EASTERN SEABOARD. EXCEPT FOR THE  
POSSIBILITY OF CAD OR A LOOKALIKE UPGLIDE EVENT HAPPENING IN OUR AREA  
THURSDAY, THE WARMING TREND SHOULD CONTINUE THROUGH THE END OF THE  
PERIOD. EVEN THOSE SOLUTIONS SHOWING CLOUDS AND COOLER TEMPS THU  
DEPICT TEMPS BEING ABOVE NORMAL.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 2: ACTIVE WEATHER GENERALLY TO REMAIN OVER OR WEST OF THE  
APPALACHIANS THROUGH THURSDAY, WITH RAIN CHANCES TICKING UPWARD  
THURSDAY NIGHT AS FRONTAL ZONE INCHES CLOSER.  
 
THERE IS INSUFFICIENT FORCING TO WARRANT ANY POP EAST OF THE  
APPALACHIAN SPINE UNTIL THURSDAY. BY THEN, AS NOTED ABOVE, WAA SHOULD  
BEGIN ACROSS THE SOUTHEAST AHEAD OF THE DEVELOPING CENTRAL CONUS  
SYSTEM, AND A WEAK SFC HIGH MAY BE IN PLACE OVER NC/SC/GA TO ENHANCE  
UPGLIDE AND PRODUCE LIGHT PRECIP EAST OF THE MOUNTAINS. THE CANADIAN  
GDPS IS ONE MODEL DEPICTING THAT ALONG WITH AN AREA OF COOLER  
AFTERNOON TEMPS ASSOCIATED WITH DIABATIC COOLING; THE ECMWF AND GFS  
ARE A LITTLE FURTHER WEST WITH THE FRONTAL ZONE, SO THE CHANCES  
REMAIN VERY LOW AND MAINLY JUST OVER THE ESCARPMENT/FOOTHILLS.  
CHANCES INCREASE THU NIGHT THRU FRIDAY NIGHT AS MODELS COME IN LINE  
IN DEPICTING THE FRONT DEVELOPING AND SHIFTING EAST TOWARD THE CWA.  
PER ENSEMBLES, THE SURFACE FRONT HOWEVER DOES LOOK LIKELY TO REMAIN  
TO OUR WEST UNTIL AFTER THE END OF THE PERIOD AT 12Z NEXT SATURDAY.  
BEST CHANCE OVERALL THUS DOES REMAIN 30-50% OVER THE NC MOUNTAINS AND  
NEAR THE SOUTH-FACING ESCARPMENT ALONG THE SOUTHWEST BORDER OF NC.  
BETTER DYNAMIC FORCING MAY DEVELOP NEXT SAT AND/OR SUN AS THE  
SHORTWAVE AXIS AND JET STREAK ADVECT CLOSER TO THE AREA SO THE NEXT  
COUPLE OF CYCLES MAY INCORPORATE MORE IMPACTS FROM RAINFALL OR EVEN  
THUNDER.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /06Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
 
 
AT KCLT AND ELSEWHERE: THINGS START OFF VFR BUT HEAD DOWNHILL  
QUICKLY OVERNIGHT AS SHOWERS OVERSPREAD THE AREA IN CONJUNCTION WITH  
LOWERING CEILINGS AS A COLD AIR DAMMING WEDGE BECOMES ESTABLISHED.  
THIS WILL RESULT IN REDUCED VISIBILITY FROM RAIN/MIST AND CEILINGS  
EVENTUALLY LOWERING TO IFR AND THEN LIFR. MIST/FOG WILL PERSIST  
THROUGH THE AFTERNOON AND OVERNIGHT INTO SUNDAY MORNING WITHIN THE  
COLD AIR DAMMING WEDGE KEEPING FLIGHT RESTRICTIONS IN PLACE.  
SOUTHWEST WINDS WILL SHIFT TO OUT OF THE NORTHEAST.  
 
OUTLOOK: CEILING AND VIS RESTRICTIONS SHOULD LIFT ENTIRELY BY SUNDAY  
MORNING INTO THE AFTERNOON HOURS. DRY AND VFR CONDITIONS WILL  
LINGER THROUGH THE MIDDLE OF NEXT WEEK.  
 

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

 
 

 
 
SYNOPSIS...JCW  
NEAR TERM...TW  
SHORT TERM...JCW  
LONG TERM...JCW  
AVIATION...TW  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

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