282  
FXUS62 KGSP 291800  
AFDGSP  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GREENVILLE-SPARTANBURG SC  
200 PM EDT FRI MAY 29 2026  
   
WHAT HAS CHANGED
 
 
NO MAJOR CHANGES TO THE FORECAST.  
 

 
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
1. THE POTENTIAL FOR ISOLATED HEAVY RAINFALL AND FLASH FLOODING  
RETURNS TONIGHT INTO SATURDAY, AS A FRONT MOVES BACK INTO THE  
AREA. BRIEFLY COOLER AND DRIER CONDITIONS SUNDAY, BUT ONE LAST  
ROUND OF CONVECTION IS ANTICIPATED MONDAY BEFORE THE FRONT FINALLY  
CLEARS THE REGION.  
2. DRY AND COOLER THAN NORMAL WEATHER IS EXPECTED TUESDAY THROUGH  
AT LEAST THURSDAY. SLIGHTLY WARMER WITH LOW CHANCE OF DIURNAL  
CONVECTION FRIDAY.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
KEY MESSAGE 1: THE POTENTIAL FOR ISOLATED HEAVY RAINFALL AND FLASH  
FLOODING RETURNS TONIGHT INTO SATURDAY, AS A FRONT MOVES BACK INTO  
THE AREA. BRIEFLY COOLER AND DRIER CONDITIONS SUNDAY, BUT ONE LAST  
ROUND OF CONVECTION IS ANTICIPATED MONDAY BEFORE THE FRONT FINALLY  
CLEARS THE REGION.  
 
WEAK HIGH PRESSURE WILL SHIFT SOUTH ACROSS VA/NC THIS AFTERNOON  
AND EVENING, VEERING LOW-LEVEL FLOW TO SOUTHEASTERLY. SHORTWAVE  
OVER THE LOWER MS VALLEY WILL SHIFT TOWARD THE CAROLINAS THROUGH  
TONIGHT, PROMOTING DEVELOPMENT OF SW FLOW ABOVE THE BOUNDARY LAYER,  
RESULTING IN WARM UPGLIDE OVER THE STALLED FRONT. PWATS TREND BACK  
UPWARD VIA THE ASSOCIATED MOISTURE FLUX WITH VALUES AT OR ABOVE  
1.75" BY EARLY SATURDAY MORNING (~150% OF NORMAL) OVER GA/SC IF  
NOT THE SOUTHERN TIER OF NC ZONES, AND THOUGH LAPSE RATES ARE  
ACCORDINGLY WEAK ALOFT, MOST MODEL RUNS SHOW AT LEAST A COUPLE  
HUNDRED JOULES OF MUCAPE, WITH POTENTIAL FOR EVEN HIGHER VALUES  
OVER THE SW CWA. WIND SPEEDS THROUGH THE COLUMN REMAIN PRETTY  
WEAK, SUGGESTING SLOW STORM MOTION, AND MBE VECTORS ARE SMALL SO  
BACKBUILDING ALSO WOULD APPEAR LIKELY. AS NOTED ON PREVIOUS FORECAST  
CYCLES, CAM CONVECTIVE RESPONSE WITH RAINFALL RATES CONCERNING FOR  
A FLASH FLOOD THREAT IS ISOLATED; THE REFS 3-HR PMM SHOWS SIMILAR  
COVERAGE OF 2-3" TOTALS FROM INDIVIDUAL STORMS COMPARED TO THE  
PAST FEW RUNS, AND VALUES FOR THE SAME FIELD FROM THE HREF HAVE  
TRENDED LOWER OVERALL ON THE LATEST RUN. THUS IT WILL BE WORTH  
MONITORING FOR A LOCALIZED FLASH FLOOD THREAT OVERNIGHT AND EARLY  
SATURDAY MORNING, BUT NOT LOOKING WORTHY OF A FLASH FLOOD WATCH.  
 
THERE LOOKS TO BE A LULL IN THE CONVECTION OVER THE STATIONARY FRONT  
AFTER DAYBREAK SATURDAY AS MIDLEVEL WINDS WANE DIURNALLY. A MATURE  
AREA OF LOW PRESSURE OFF THE NORTHEAST COAST STILL IS EXPECTED  
TO PULL A BACKDOOR COLD FRONT INTO NC EARLY IN THE DAY, AT THE  
LEADING EDGE OF A COOL/DRY HIGH BUILDING SOUTH FROM HUDSON BAY  
ACROSS THE GREAT LAKES. THE FRONT THEN PROGRESSES SOUTH ACROSS THE  
REST OF THE CWA THROUGH EVENING. PWATS WILL REMAIN SIMILARLY HIGH  
PRECEDING IT. DIURNAL DESTABILIZATION IS PUT SOMEWHAT IN QUESTION BY  
THE POTENTIAL FOR LOW STRATUS AND EARLY MORNING CONVECTIVE DEBRIS  
TAKING TIME TO SCATTER, BUT DESPITE ABUNDANT HIGH ALTITUDE CLOUD  
COVER LINGERING INTO AFTERNOON ON THE HREF, ITS SBCAPE PROBS STILL  
SUGGESTS 500+ J/KG ARE LIKELY TO DEVELOP NEAR PEAK HEATING, WITH  
1000+ J/KG MORE LIKELY OVER GA/SC. CAMS MOSTLY PRODUCE ISOLATED  
TO SCATTERED CELLS ALONG THE FRONT AS IT SINKS SOUTHWARD IN THE  
AFTERNOON. POTENTIAL FOR LOCALLY EXCESSIVE RAINFALL WILL PERSIST  
WITH THIS DIURNAL CONVECTION; STORM MOTION WOULD PROBABLY BE  
A LITTLE FASTER BUT WITH MORE POTENTIAL INSTABILITY, AND THE  
STORMS COULD OCCUR OVER AREAS WITH SOILS WET FROM HEAVY RAIN  
OVERNIGHT. 0-6KM SHEAR IS STRONGER TO OUR EAST WHERE THE GRADIENT  
ALOFT IS STRONGER AROUND THE OFFSHORE LOW. THE SEVERE THREAT WOULD  
APPEAR TO BE LIMITED IN OUR AREA ASSUMING THE SHEAR AND INSTABILITY  
REMAIN IN CHECK AS MOST GUIDANCE SUGGESTS. SO A SITUATION WHERE  
WE DESTABILIZE MORE DUE TO EARLIER SCATTERING OF CLOUDS, OR IF  
ANY STORMS ARE STILL ONGOING ALONG THE FRONT IN THE FAR SOUTHERN  
CWA DURING THE EVENING WHEN SHEAR BEGINS TO INCREASE, A THREAT OF  
DAMAGING WIND AND POSSIBLY MARGINALLY SEVERE HAIL COULD MATERIALIZE.  
 
SATURDAY'S FRONT WILL HAVE SETTLED TO A POSITION ON OUR SOUTHWEST  
FRINGE ONCE AGAIN BY SUNDAY MORNING, AND MOIST SE TO S FLOW AGAIN  
DEVELOPS OVER THE FRONT, PROBABLY PRODUCING SOME CLOUD COVER THAT  
WILL KEEP TEMPS ON THE ORDER OF 10 BELOW NORMAL, IN CONJUNCTION  
WITH THE COOLER/DRIER AIRMASS. LAPSE RATES ARE POOR UNDER THE HIGH,  
AND CONVECTION SHOULD BE SUPPRESSED OVER MOST OF THE AREA. SMALL  
POPS LINGER OVER THE FAR WESTERN MOUNTAINS AND IN PARTS OF THE  
SAVANNAH RIVER VALLEY NEAREST THE FRONT.  
 
THE FRIDAY-SATURDAY PATTERN EVOLUTION ALMOST REPEATS SUNDAY  
NIGHT INTO MONDAY AS THE FRONT ONCE AGAIN REVERSES, WARRANTING  
INCREASING POPS OVERNIGHT, AND THEN ANOTHER REINFORCING BACKDOOR  
COLD FRONT COMING IN FROM THE NORTH DURING THE DAY. HENCE POPS  
INCREASE. PWATS WILL START OUT GENERALLY LOWER SUNDAY EVENING,  
BUT BY MONDAY WILL HAVE REBOUNDED ENOUGH FOR ANOTHER POTENTIALLY  
LOCALIZED FLASH FLOOD THREAT WITH CONVECTION AS THE COLD FRONT  
MOVES THROUGH. TEMPERATURES RETURN TO NEAR NORMAL MONDAY.  
 
KEY MESSAGE 2: DRY AND COOLER THAN NORMAL WEATHER IS EXPECTED TUESDAY  
THROUGH AT LEAST THURSDAY. SLIGHTLY WARMER WITH LOW CHANCE OF  
DIURNAL CONVECTION FRIDAY.  
 
AN UPPER LOW OFF THE MID-ATLANTIC COAST WILL KEEP NORTHERLY FLOW AND  
ANOMALOUSLY LOW HEIGHTS OVER THE AREA TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY. THE LOW  
BEGINS TO PULL EAST THURSDAY AND FRIDAY WITH AN UPPER RIDGE AXIS  
MOVING EAST TOWARD THE AREA. COOL AND DRY HIGH PRESSURE BUILDS IN  
FROM THE NORTH TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY THEN SLIDES EAST THURSDAY AND  
FRIDAY WITH WEAK SOUTHERLY FLOW DEVELOPING. THE RESULT WILL BE DRY  
CONDITIONS WITH BELOW NORMAL TEMPS TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY. A SLOW  
WARMING TREND, BUT STILL BELOW NORMAL, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. WEAK  
MOISTURE RETURN BEGINS FRIDAY, LEADING TO A LOW END CHANCE OF  
DIURNAL CONVECTION, MAINLY ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /18Z FRIDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/
 
 
AT KCLT AND ELSEWHERE: LIGHT WINDS THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING,  
GENERALLY VEERING FROM EASTERLY TO SOUTHWESTERLY WITH TIME,  
THOUGH WITH PERIODS OF VRB LIKELY AT ALL SITES. MAINLY JUST  
LOW VFR CUMULUS THIS AFTERNOON. A NEARLY STATIONARY FRONT WILL  
REACTIVATE AND SHIFT SLOWLY NE'WD THIS EVENING, BRINGING BACK SHRA  
CHANCES FROM SW TO NE OVERNIGHT, PROMOTING WIND SHIFT TO SW. CIGS  
ASSOCIATED WITH THE FRONT ITSELF ARE LIKELY TO BE LOW VFR AT KCLT,  
AND MOST LIKELY MVFR AT KAVL/KGSP/KGMU THOUGH IFR NOT OUT OF THE  
QUESTION THERE. IFR MORE LIKELY AT KAND. SHRA LIKELY TO PRODUCE  
RESTRICTIONS AT LEAST BRIEFLY WHERE THEY OCCUR, BUT CONFIDENCE  
IS LOW ON OCCURRENCE AT THE TAF SITES SPECIFICALLY. PROB30S ARE  
GENERALLY USED IN THE EARLY SAT MORNING PERIOD FOR THE PRECIP  
RESTRICTIONS. TSRA CANNOT BE RULED OUT PRIOR TO DAYBREAK, THOUGH  
THE BETTER CHANCE IS DURING THE DAY SAT, WHEN A BACKDOOR FRONT MOVES  
IN FROM THE NORTH AND FOSTERS SCATTERED DIURNAL CONVECTION. RETURN  
TO NE WINDS AFTER 18Z BEHIND THE BACKDOOR FRONT.  
 
OUTLOOK: AFTER ANOTHER BRIEF DRYING PERIOD SUNDAY, CHANCES FOR  
MAINLY DIURNAL CONVECTION RETURN MONDAY BEFORE A LONGER TERM DRYING  
PATTERN BECOMES ESTABLISHED BEGINNING TUESDAY.  
 

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

 
 

 
 
JCW/RWH  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

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