342  
FXUS62 KGSP 051731  
AFDGSP  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GREENVILLE-SPARTANBURG SC  
1231 PM EST MON JAN 5 2026  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
HIGH PRESSURE KEEPS TEMPERATURES ABOVE NORMAL AND RAIN CHANCES LOW  
UNTIL A COLD FRONT ARRIVES AT THE END OF THE WEEK.  
 
 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TUESDAY/  
 
AS OF 1230 PM EST MONDAY...  
 
KEY MESSAGE #1: MOSTLY DRY WITH WELL ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES  
THROUGH TUESDAY.  
 
UPPER RIDGING REMAINS OVER THE REGION TODAY BEFORE FLATTENING OUT  
AND BECOMING MORE ZONAL TUESDAY IN RESPONSE TO AN UPPER TROUGH  
DIGGING ACROSS THE MIDWEST/OHIO VALLEY. HIGH PRESSURE REMAINS IN  
CONTROL AT THE SURFACE KEEPING MOSTLY DRY CONDITIONS AROUND. CLOUD  
COVER EAST OF THE MOUNTAINS WILL GRADUALLY SCATTER OUT THIS  
AFTERNOON WITH MOSTLY SUNNY SKIES EXPECTED ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS THE  
REST THE DAY. HIGHS THIS AFTERNOON WILL END UP ~8-15 DEGREES ABOVE  
NORMAL. CLOUD COVER WILL GRADUALLY INCREASE AGAIN THIS EVENING INTO  
TONIGHT AREA-WIDE, ALLOWING LOWS TO END UP ~10-15 DEGREES ABOVE  
NORMAL. A WEAK COLD FRONT APPROACHES OUT OF THE WEST THROUGHOUT  
TUESDAY WHICH MAY ALLOW SOME ISOLATED LIGHT RAIN TO DEVELOP ACROSS  
THE FAR SOUTHERN NORTH CAROLINA MOUNTAINS AND NORTHEAST GEORGIA  
TUESDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. CONFIDENCE ON WHETHER RAIN WILL  
ACTUALLY REACH THE GROUND REMAINS LOW SO NBM SLIGHT CHANCE POPS LOOK  
GOOD ACROSS THESE ZONES FOR NOW. BREEZY SOUTHWEST WINDS WILL ALSO  
DEVELOP AHEAD OF THE FRONT ON TUESDAY BUT GUSTS WILL REMAIN WELL  
BELOW ADVISORY CRITERIA. CLOUD COVER MOSTLY STICKS AROUND TUESDAY  
AHEAD OF THE FRONT BUT SHOULD SCATTER OUT SOMEWHAT DURING THE  
AFTERNOON. DESPITE LINGERING CLOUD COVER, HIGHS ON TUESDAY WILL BE  
WARMER, ENDING UP ~15-20 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL.  
 
KEY MESSAGE #2: PATCHY TO DENSE FOG AND LOW STRATUS RETURN OVERNIGHT  
INTO TUESDAY MORNING BUT COVERAGE OF DENSE FOG SHOULD BE LOWER  
COMPARED TO THIS MORNING.  
 
LINGERING LOW-LEVEL MOISTURE SHOULD ALLOW PATCHY TO LOCALLY DENSE  
FOG AND LOW STRATUS TO DEVELOP AGAIN OVERNIGHT INTO DAYBREAK  
TUESDAY. HOWEVER, COVERAGE OF DENSE FOG IS NOT EXPECTED TO BE AS  
WIDESPREAD AS WHAT WE SAW THIS MORNING. CLOUD COVER MAY SCATTER OUT  
ENOUGH ACROSS THE MOUNTAIN VALLEYS OVERNIGHT ALLOWING MOUNTAIN  
VALLEY FOG TO RETURN. FOG AND STRATUS SHOULD GRADUALLY LIFT DURING  
THE MID TO LATE MORNING HOURS ON TUESDAY.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/  
 
AS OF 1130 AM MON:  
 
KEY MESSAGE: TEMPERATURES TREND WARMER WEDNESDAY BUT COOL  
SLIGHTLY THURSDAY WITH RAIN CHANCES REMAINING VERY LOW.  
 
A LITTLE LOW LEVEL MOISTURE LINGERS TUESDAY NIGHT AS A COLD FRONT  
CROSSES THE AREA. A BRIEF PERIOD OF LIGHT RAIN MAY LINGER ACROSS THE  
MOUNTAINS. OTHERWISE, DRY CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED WITH DRY HIGH  
PRESSURE SETTLING OVER THE AREA WEDNESDAY THEN MOVING EAST ON  
THURSDAY.  
 
EXPECT WARMING TO TAKE PLACE WEDNESDAY WITH WEST TO NORTHWEST FLOW  
ACROSS THE AREA. LOWS WILL BE 10 TO 15 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL WITH  
HIGHS 15 TO 20 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL AND NEAR THE RECORD FOR GSP.  
COOLER, BUT CERTAINLY NOT COLD, THURSDAY WITH LOWS AROUND 10 DEGREES  
ABOVE NORMAL AND HIGHS 10 TO 15 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/  
 
AS OF 1155 AM MON:  
 
KEY MESSAGE 1: WARM TEMPERATURES CONTINUE UNTIL AFTER A COLD FRONT  
PASSES SATURDAY. PRECIP CHANCES INCREASE AHEAD OF THE FRONT.  
 
MOISTURE STEADILY INCREASES FRIDAY IN THE SOUTHERLY FLOW DEVELOPING  
AHEAD OF AN APPROACHING COLD FRONT. EXPECT PRECIP CHANCES TO REMAIN  
LIMITED MAINLY TO THE MOUNTAINS, WHERE MOISTURE AND FORCING ARE  
HIGHEST. PRECIP CHANCES THEN SPREAD ACROSS THE AREA FRIDAY NIGHT  
INTO SATURDAY AS MOISTURE AND FORCING MOVE IN WITH THE COLD FRONT.  
HEAVY RAIN IS POSSIBLE ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS GIVEN THE FORCING AND  
VERY HIGH PW VALUES. HOWEVER, THE CHANCE OUTSIDE OF THE MOUNTAINS IS  
LOWER. INSTABILITY REMAINS MINIMAL, EVEN MUCAPE, BUT FORCING MAY BE  
ENOUGH FOR SOME THUNDER. STILL, THE OVERALL SEVERE THREAT LOOKS LOW  
DESPITE THE HIGH BULK SHEAR VALUES. WILL HAVE TO KEEP AN EYE ON THIS  
AS AN INCREASE IN INSTABILITY CHANCES COULD LEAD TO AN INCREASE IN  
SEVERE STORM CHANCES.  
 
TEMPS RANGING FROM 10 TO 20 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL FRIDAY DROP A FEW  
DEGREES ON SATURDAY.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 2: AS TEMPERATURES RETURN TO NEAR NORMAL, LIGHT  
NORTHWEST FLOW SNOW IS POSSIBLE IN THE MOUNTAINS SATURDAY NIGHT AND  
EARLY SUNDAY.  
 
DRY AND COLDER HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS IN SUNDAY AND MONDAY. LINGERING  
MOISTURE AND NW FLOW MAY LEAD TO A BRIEF PERIOD OF NW FLOW SNOW LATE  
SAT NITE INTO SUNDAY. FOR NOW, NO SIGNIFICANT SNOWFALL IS EXPECTED.  
TEMPS COOL TO AROUND 5 DEGREES BELOW NORMAL FOR THE MOUNTAINS AND  
NEAR NORMAL ELSEWHERE AND AROUND 5 DEGREES BELOW NORMAL MOST LOCATIONS  
ON MONDAY.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /18Z MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/  
 
AT KCLT AND ELSEWHERE: SEEING SOME LINGERING IFR TO MVFR VSBYS AND  
LIFR TO IFR CIGS EAST OF THE MOUNTAINS AS OF 18Z. THE EXCEPTION IS  
KCLT WHERE MVFR CIGS ARE NOTED. CIGS AND VSBYS WILL CONTINUE TO  
GRADUALLY IMPROVE OVER THE NEXT 1-3 HOURS, BECOMING VFR BY MID-  
AFTERNOON. WINDS WILL PICK UP OUT OF THE S/SW THIS AFTERNOON. DRY  
CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED AGAIN THROUGH THE TAF PERIOD WITH ANOTHER  
ROUND OF FOG AND LOW STRATUS DEVELOPING OVERNIGHT INTO DAYBREAK  
TUESDAY. COVERAGE OF DENSE FOG WILL NOT BE AS WIDESPREAD AS WHAT WE  
SAW THIS MORNING SO WENT WITH MVFR TO IFR VSBYS. CIGS SHOULD DROP TO  
IFR TO LIFR OVERNIGHT INTO DAYBREAK TUESDAY. CONFIDENCE ON STRATUS  
AND FOG AT KAVL IS LOW SO WENT WITH MVFR CIGS AND VSBYS FOR NOW.  
CONDITIONS WILL ONCE AGAIN BE SLOW TO IMPROVE TUESDAY MORNING. VSBYS  
SHOULD RISE TO VFR LEVELS BY MID-MORNING TUESDAY WITH VFR CIGS  
RETURNING EAST OF THE MOUNTAINS BY TUESDAY AFTERNOON. WIND DIRECTION  
WILL BE SW ACROSS THE TERMINALS ON TUESDAY, WITH SPEEDS GRADUALLY  
INCREASING THROUGHOUT THE DAY. LOW-END GUSTS WILL DEVELOP BY LATE  
TUESDAY MORNING OR EARLY TUESDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
OUTLOOK: DRY, VFR CONDITIONS EXPECTED THROUGH MUCH OF THE WEEK.  
 
 
   
CLIMATE  
 
RECORDS FOR 01-07  
 
MAX TEMPERATURE MIN TEMPERATURE  
STATION HIGH LOW HIGH LOW  
------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ----------  
KAVL 70 1913 20 2014 58 1913 -1 2014  
KCLT 77 1890 24 1988 62 1998 6 2014  
KGSP 71 2012 27 2014 59 1998 5 2014  
1988  
1912  
 
 
   
GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
GA...NONE.  
NC...NONE.  
SC...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
SYNOPSIS...DEO  
NEAR TERM...AR  
SHORT TERM...RWH  
LONG TERM...RWH  
AVIATION...AR  
CLIMATE...GSP  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab SC Page
The Nexlab NC Page
The Nexlab GA Page
Main Text Page