152  
FXUS62 KILM 080555  
AFDILM  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WILMINGTON NC  
1255 AM EST THU JAN 8 2026  
   
SYNOPSIS  
 
A BACKDOOR COLD FRONT WILL STALL SOUTH OF THE REGION TODAY  
BEFORE LIFTING BACK NORTH ON FRIDAY. A SIGNIFICANT WARMING  
TREND COULD BRING RECORD HIGHS ON FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. A STRONG  
BUT MOISTURE-STARVED COLD FRONT WILL PUSH THROUGH EARLY SUNDAY,  
WITH TEMPERATURES FALLING TO BELOW-NORMAL VALUES FOR MONDAY  
BEFORE MODERATING TO AROUND NORMAL THEREAFTER.  
 
 
   
NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/  
 
DENSE FOG ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT FOR A PORTION OF THE FORECAST  
AREA. SEEING PLENTY OF REPORTS OF VISIBILITY QUARTER MILE OR LESS IN  
THE ADVISORY AREA AND CAMS ARE SHOWING FOG IN SOME OF THE AREAS.  
VISIBILITIES WILL CONTINUE DROPPING AS THE FOG EXPANDS DURING THE  
OVERNIGHT HOURS. FARTHER INLAND SOMEWHAT LOWER BOUNDARY LAYER  
MOISTURE MAY LEAD TO PATCHY, TRANSIENT DENSE FOG.  
 
DRY COLD FRONT MOVING IN FROM THE NORTH WILL PUSH SOUTH OF THE AREA  
AROUND DAYBREAK. HIGH PRESSURE WILL BUILD SOUTHEAST FOLLOWING THE  
FRONT, LEADING TO A SOMEWHAT COOLER DAY AS NORTHERLY FLOW SETS UP.  
DO WONDER IF GUIDANCE MIGHT BE A LITTLE TOO WARM, ALTHOUGH HIGHS  
WILL STILL END UP ABOVE NORMAL. MAY SEE MOST AREAS END UP IN THE MID  
TO UPPER 60S VS LOW TO MID 70S SEEN WED. THE FRONT MAY END UP  
LINGERING SOUTH OF THE AREA A BIT LONGER THAN FIRST THOUGHT. IF  
TEMPERATURES DO END UP A LITTLE COOLER THAN EXPECTED, THE FRONT  
WOULD TAKE A BIT LONGER TO OVERCOME THE STUBBORN COOLER AIR. RATHER  
THAN IT RETURNING NORTH LATE TONIGHT IT MAY END UP DOING SO JUST  
BEYOND THE END OF THE FORECAST PERIOD. COLUMN IS TOO DRY AND THE AIR  
MASS IS TOO STABLE FOR ANY RAINFALL WITH THE FRONT, EVEN AS A WEAK  
SURFACE COASTAL TROUGH AND WAVE DEVELOP ALONG THE COAST. SKIES END  
UP PARTLY TO MOSTLY CLOUDY, BUT WITH A LOT OF HIGH CLOUD. FORECAST  
SOUNDINGS SUGGEST THE HIGH CLOUD COULD BE QUITE THICK AT TIMES,  
WHICH IS SUPPORTED BY CURRENT SATELLITE IMAGERY WEST OF THE AREA.  
THICK HIGH CLOUD COULD ALSO CONTRIBUTE TO HIGHS A BIT COOLER THAN  
FORECAST. VARYING AMOUNT OF CLOUD TONIGHT AND WIND WILL KEEP LOWS  
ABOVE NORMAL. FOG ALSO LOOKS LIKE IT COULD BE AN ISSUE AGAIN  
TONIGHT, ESPECIALLY ALONG THE COAST.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/  
 
AS MID-UPPER TROUGHING AMPLIFIES OVER THE NATION'S MIDSECTION AND  
TRANSLATES EASTWARD, RIDGING OVER THE WESTERN ATLANTIC WILL BUILD  
AND SHIFT EASTWARD AS WELL, HELPING TO PUSH SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE  
OFF THE MID-ATLANTIC COAST ON FRIDAY. A STALLED FRONT WILL DRIFT  
BACK NORTHWARD ON FRIDAY, WITH WEAK ISENTROPIC ASCENT OVER THE  
STALLED FRONT THROUGH A SHALLOW MOIST LAYER KEEPING LOW CLOUDS IN  
PLACE DURING THE MORNING WHILE COASTAL TROUGHING MAY ALLOW FOR  
SOME LIGHT NORTHWARD-MOVING SHOWERS OVER THE OCEAN TO REACH  
COASTAL AREAS AS WELL. THIS FRONT SHOULD LIFT BACK THROUGH  
BY THE AFTERNOON WITH SOUTHEAST WINDS VEERING TO SOUTHERLY AND  
CLOUDS BREAKING UP TO A PARTLY SUNNY COVERAGE. ONCE CLOUDS  
BREAK, WARM 925MB TEMPS OF 14-15C WILL PERMIT WELL-ABOVE NORMAL  
HIGHS, WITH MIDDLE 70S EXPECTED, AND UPPER 70S POSSIBLE WHERE  
ENOUGH SUNSHINE CAN OCCUR. ANY LIGHT SHOWERS WHICH DO MAKE IT  
ONSHORE SHOULD BE SHORT-LIVED AND INCONSEQUENTIAL.  
 
OVER FRIDAY NIGHT AND SATURDAY MORNING, NORTHWARD-MOVING COASTAL  
SHOWERS WILL REMAIN POSSIBLE AS SURFACE LOW PRESSURE DEEPENS OVER  
THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND BANDS OF CONFLUENCE FORM OVER THE  
OCEAN BETWEEN THIS LOW AND OFFSHORE HIGH PRESSURE. MILD TEMPERATURES  
WILL CONTINUE IN THIS WARM ADVECTION REGIME WITH FRIDAY NIGHT'S LOWS  
IN THE UPPER 50S TO LOW 60S. THE TIGHTENING PRESSURE GRADIENT WILL  
ALSO LEAD TO INCREASING WINDS, WITH GUSTS AS HIGH AS 25-35MPH ON  
SATURDAY AFTERNOON AMIDST VERY WARM TO RECORD HIGHS IN THE  
UPPER 70S TO AROUND 80F INLAND AND LOW-MID 70S NEARER TO AND  
ALONG THE COAST.  
 
ALTHOUGH THE AFOREMENTIONED LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM WILL DRAG A COLD  
FRONT TOWARDS THE AREA ON SATURDAY NIGHT, THE LOW IS EXPECTED TO  
LIFT ALONG THE SPINE OF THE APPALACHIANS WHILE A CLOSED UPPER LOW  
SHIFTS FROM THE UPPER MIDWEST INTO THE OHIO VALLEY. THUS, SURFACE  
CONVERGENCE ALONG THE FRONT WILL BE WANING AS IT APPROACHES AND  
DESPITE SEEING A SOLID BAND OF SHOWERS OVER THE PIEDMONT ON  
SATURDAY, THIS SHOULD GRADUALLY DRY OUT WITH TIME THROUGH  
SATURDAY NIGHT, WITH A MUCH SPARSER BAND OF SHOWERS SLOWLY  
PUSHING THROUGH DURING THE OVERNIGHT WITH THE FRONTAL BOUNDARY.  
OVERNIGHT LOWS IN THE MIDDLE 50S ARE FORECAST AS THE FRONT WILL  
BE SLOW TO PUSH THROUGH AND COLD ADVECTION WILL RAMP UP DURING  
THE DAY ON SUNDAY.  
 
 
   
LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/  
 
THE COLD FRONT SHOULD BE MOVING OFF THE COAST EARLY ON SUNDAY,  
TAKING THE BAND OF SHOWERS OFFSHORE WITH IT DURING THE MORNING  
HOURS. STRONG COLD AND DRY ADVECTION WILL RAMP UP IN THE WAKE OF  
THIS FRONT IN THE FORM OF GUSTY WEST TO NORTHWEST WINDS WHICH WILL  
BRING PWATS FROM AROUND 1.4-1.5 INCHES IN THE BAND OF SHOWERS AHEAD  
OF THE FRONT TO AS LOW AS 0.1-0.2" BY SUNDAY EVENING. WINTER WILL  
MAKE QUITE THE RETURN AS DAYTIME MAX TEMPS IN THE LOW-MID 60S ON  
SUNDAY CRASH INTO THE UPPER 20S TO LOW 30S ON SUNDAY NIGHT, WITH  
DEWPOINTS FALLING INTO THE TEENS. THIS CHILLY AIRMASS WILL MAKE FOR  
AN ABNORMALLY COLD MONDAY WITH COLD ADVECTION CONTINUING THROUGH THE  
DAY, POTENTIALLY KEEPING HIGHS FROM REACHING 50F DESPITE SUNNY  
SKIES. AS THE HIGH PRESSURE SYSTEM RESPONSIBLE FOR THIS AIRMASS  
MOVES OVERHEAD ON MONDAY NIGHT, LOWS SHOULD DIP INTO THE 20S AWAY  
FROM THE COAST AMIDST LIGHT OR CALM WINDS AND VERY LOW DEW POINTS.  
BEYOND THIS POINT, MID-UPPER TROUGHING WILL REMAIN IN PLACE ALOFT,  
BUT AS HIGH PRESSURE MOVES OFFSHORE, SOME REBOUND IN TEMPERATURES  
CAN BE EXPECTED. THIS SHOULD YIELD TEMPS THAT ARE AROUND NORMAL FOR  
THIS TIME OF YEAR (HIGHS IN THE UPPER 50S, LOWS IN THE MID-30S).  
 
WITH RESPECT TO PRECIP CHANCES, A STRONG SHORTWAVE TROUGH IS  
DEPICTED BY GUIDANCE TOOLS DIVING THROUGH THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY ON  
TUESDAY AND DIPPING INTO THE GULF BY LATE WEDNESDAY. CLUSTER  
ANALYSIS ON THIS PATTERN USING 12Z GUIDANCE INDICATES THE MOST  
LIKELY OUTCOME IS FOR PRECIP TO STAY OFFSHORE, BUT AN ALTERNATE  
SCENARIO IS FOR A DEEPER AND FURTHER WEST TROUGH, WHICH WOULD BRING  
SOME PRECIP ONSHORE. THUS, TEMPERATURES AND PRECIP CHANCES ARE  
SUBJECT TO SUBSTANTIAL CHANGES FROM WEDNESDAY ONWARD.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /06Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/  
 
PLENTY OF LIFR FOG AND STRATUS ALONG THE COAST AS WEAK COLD FRONT  
MOVES IN FROM THE NORTH. NOT MUCH WIND WITH THE FRONT AND THE  
BOUNDARY LAYER REMAINS RATHER MOIST. EXPECT TO SEE FOG EXPAND,  
ESPECIALLY ALONG THE COAST, REACHING MYR IN THE NEXT HOUR OR SO.  
INLAND AREAS ARE ALSO LIKELY TO SEE A MIX OF IFR VISIBILITIES AND  
CEILINGS CLOSER TO DAY BREAK. SLIGHTLY LOWER BOUNDARY LAYER MOISTURE  
IN THESE AREAS MAY LEAD TO SLIGHTLY HIGHER AND LESS PERSISTENT IFR  
VISIBILITIES/CEILINGS. IFR CONDITIONS WILL BE TENACIOUS ALONG THE  
COAST, TAKING UNTIL LATE MORNING, AND POSSIBLY EVEN MIDDAY, TO  
FINALLY MIX OUT WHILE INLAND AREAS SHOULD DO SO BY MID-MORNING.  
AFTERNOON WILL SEE WIDESPREAD VFR WITH NORTHEAST TO EAST WINDS AT  
ALL TERMINALS. INLAND SITES WILL SEE VFR CONTINUE THROUGH 06Z BUT  
ALONG THE COAST MVFR AND EVEN IFR IS POSSIBLE BETWEEN 00Z AND 06Z AS  
THE MOIST BOUNDARY LAYER ALLOWS FOG/STRATUS DEVELOPMENT. CANNOT RULE  
OUT SOME SEA FOG, DEPENDING ON WIND DIRECTION, LATE IN THE TAF  
PERIOD.  
 
EXTENDED FORECAST...COASTAL FOG POSSIBLE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY.  
IMPACTS ARE MOST LIKELY TO OCCUR DURING THE NIGHTTIME HOURS, HOWEVER  
DEPENDING ON WIND DIRECTIONS EVEN DAYTIME FOG CANNOT BE RULED OUT AT  
KCRE AND KMYR. CONFIDENCE IN SEA FOG IMPACTS IS LOW.  
 
 
   
MARINE  
 
THROUGH TONIGHT...  
NOT MUCH OF A GRADIENT OVER THE WATERS TODAY AND TONIGHT AS WEAK  
FRONT SLIPS SOUTH AND HIGH PRESSURE TO THE NORTH BUILDS IN. THE HIGH  
WILL RESULT IN NORTHERLY FLOW ACROSS THE WATERS TODAY. WEAK COASTAL  
TROUGH MAY DEVELOP TONIGHT WHICH COULD LEAD TO MORE EAST OR  
SOUTHEAST WINDS ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE WATERS, BUT THE WEAK GRADIENT  
WILL KEEP SPEEDS UNDER 10 KT. SEAS 2 FT OR LESS WILL BE A MIX OF TWO  
WIND WAVES, SOUTHERLY AND EASTERLY WITH NEITHER BEING PARTICULARLY  
DOMINANT.  
 
FRIDAY THROUGH MONDAY... A STALLED FRONT IS EXPECTED TO LIFT BACK  
NORTHWARD ON FRIDAY MORNING, VEERING WINDS FROM SOUTHEASTERLY IN THE  
MORNING TO SOUTHERLY IN THE AFTERNOON WITH SPEEDS AROUND 5-10 KTS.  
SOUTH WINDS WILL CONTINUE THROUGH SATURDAY AS A COLD FRONT SLOWLY  
APPROACHES FROM THE WEST. A TIGHTENING PRESSURE GRADIENT WILL LEAD  
TO INCREASING SPEEDS ON SATURDAY, ESPECIALLY AS THE FRONT DRAWS NEAR  
DURING THE NIGHT, WITH SPEEDS PEAKING AROUND 15-20 KTS. THE FRONT  
WILL CROSS THE WATERS ON SUNDAY MORNING WITH WINDS INITIALLY VEERING  
TO WESTERLY AND REMAINING AROUND 15-20 KTS. A SURGE OF COLD AND DRY  
AIR ON SUNDAY NIGHT WILL LEAD TO BREEZY CONDITIONS WHICH MAY RESULT  
IN SCA CONDITIONS. THE PRESSURE GRADIENT WEAKENS ON MONDAY AND WINDS  
SUBSIDE AS A RESULT.  
 
SEAS AROUND 1-2 FT ON FRIDAY RESPOND TO THE INCREASING WINDS BY  
RISING TO AROUND 2-4 FT BY LATE SATURDAY AND REMAINING ELEVATED  
THROUGH THE FRONTAL PASSAGE. WITH THE SURGE IN WINDS EXPECTED ON  
SUNDAY NIGHT, SEAS SHOULD PEAK AROUND 3-5 FT BEFORE QUICKLY  
SUBSIDING ON MONDAY. WIND WAVES WILL BE THE PRIMARY CONTRIBUTOR TO  
THE WAVE SPECTRUM.  
 
 
   
CLIMATE  
 
MAX TEMPERATURES ON FRIDAY AND SATURDAY MAY REACH OR EXCEED THE  
DAILY RECORDS. SEE BELOW FOR MAX TEMP RECORDS ON EACH DAY...  
SITE JAN 9 JAN 10  
WILMINGTON, NC: 78F (1974) 80F (1974)  
N. MYRTLE BEACH, SC: 74F (2013) 79F (1957)  
FLORENCE, SC: 78F (1974) 80F (1974)  
LUMBERTON, NC: 78F (1907) 78F (1957, 1930)  
 
 
   
ILM WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
NC...DENSE FOG ADVISORY UNTIL 9 AM EST THIS MORNING FOR NCZ099-  
107>110.  
SC...DENSE FOG ADVISORY UNTIL 9 AM EST THIS MORNING FOR SCZ039-  
054>056-058-059.  
MARINE...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
 
SYNOPSIS...ILM  
NEAR TERM...III  
SHORT TERM...ABW  
LONG TERM...ABW  
AVIATION...III  
MARINE...III/ABW  
CLIMATE...ABW  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab NC Page
The Nexlab SC Page
Main Text Page