Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Charleston, SC

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080 FXUS62 KCHS 050744 AFDCHS Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Charleston SC 344 AM EDT Wed Jun 5 2024 .SYNOPSIS...
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High pressure will extend across the area through today. A cold front will approach from the northwest on Thursday, then slowly move through on Friday. High pressure returns for the weekend, then another cold front will move through Monday.
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&& .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
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Today: Aloft, the ridge axis will be off to the east with a shortwave approaching from the west in the morning and starting to nudge into the forecast area in the afternoon. At the surface, high pressure over the Atlantic will continue to be the primary feature extending westward into the forecast area. Once again we will be largely devoid of any real surface features to serve as a trigger or focusing mechanism for convective development, though the aforementioned shortwave arriving in the afternoon should help aloft. The morning looks as though it will be quiet with no development expected. As we get into the early afternoon, isolated thunderstorms should start to percolate across south-central Georgia just ahead of the shortwave. These thunderstorms will then steadily track to the east and into southeast Georgia during the mid to late afternoon hours. Hi-res model runs continue to hint at this with each run, and there is enough consensus to advertise 60 percent chances for southeast Georgia and the counties in southeast South Carolina along the Savannah River. Model soundings depict an environment with CAPE values on the order of 1,500-2,000 J/kg and DCAPE values in the 800-1,000 J/kg range. It is possible that 1 or 2 of the developing thunderstorm clusters become strong enough to produce damaging wind gusts. Temperatures should continue their day- to-day gradual climb, with 88-92 degrees expected everywhere away from the immediate coast. Tonight: As the early evening begins, there will likely be ongoing thunderstorms that extend southward from between Allendale and Walterboro to the entire southeast Georgia coast. This activity could continue to spread eastward through the evening, especially if outflow boundaries can track into untapped area of southeast South Carolina. We will have to wait and see how thunderstorms evolve through the afternoon, but it is possible there could be more coverage through the evening into southeast South Carolina than currently depicted in the forecast. Any severe threat should steadily diminish with the loss of heating. The focus for showers and thunderstorms should then shift offshore for the latter part of the overnight. Look for mild temperatures, with lows likely not falling below 70 in most areas.
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&& .SHORT TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/...
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A weak shortwave will move through Thursday afternoon and evening, then a cold front will cross the area Friday morning. Deep moisture will exist over the area Thursday with PWATs around 1.75". Decent instability will develop in the afternoon given high temps in the low to mid 90s, though some mixing out of dewpoints inland will somewhat reduce total buoyancy. Low- level flow out of the WSW will keep the sea breeze pinned near the coast for much of the day, then it may move slightly inland late in the afternoon. Weak mid-level subsidence may develop during the afternoon as the shortwave trough axis shifts to the coast. This may be why much of the guidance only shows scattered convection on Thursday. We bumped PoPs down a tad, though still anticipate at least 40-50% coverage at some point on Thursday. Considerably drier air will move in on Friday. Downslope flow will push highs into the low to mid 90s, but surface dewpoints dropping into the upper 50s inland to lower 60s coastal will make for a noticeable change in airmass. Another weak shortwave will drop through the area Friday afternoon. Although subsidence and drier air should severely limit the convective potential, we could have just enough moisture across the southern half of the area to support an isolated shower or tstm. Saturday looks dry. Downslope flow will again push highs into the lower 90s, though the air will feel relatively dry given surface dewpoints mixing down into the 50s during the day.
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&& .LONG TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY/...
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Another cold front will approach on Sunday, then stall near the area Monday before eventually dissipating. Moisture will be on the increase late weekend into early next week. This, along with some shortwaves and decent sea breezes each afternoon, should support scattered convection.
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&& .AVIATION /07Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
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VFR conditions are expected to prevail at KCHS, KJZI, and KSAV through 06z Thursday. The main forecast challenge will be afternoon and evening shower and thunderstorm activity and if it can impact any of the terminals. KSAV seems to be the primary candidate and we have introduced VCTS in the 21-00z time period. This activity could shift eastward into the vicinity of KCHS and KJZI later in the evening, but confidence is too low to add anything into the TAF`s at this time. Extended Aviation Outlook: Aside from brief flight restrictions in showers/tstms Thursday afternoon, VFR conditions expected.
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&& .MARINE...
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Today and tonight: Southerly flow will prevail across the local waters through the period with speeds mostly in the 10-15 knot range. Gusts up to around 20 knots are expected along the land/sea interface with the afternoon sea breeze. Overnight, winds will pick up a bit thanks to modest nocturnal surging, with speeds around a solid 15 knots or even 15-20 knots at times. Seas are expected to average 2-3 feet. SW winds Thursday and Thursday night will transition to W on Friday, then a brief period of northerly flow expected Friday night and Saturday behind a cold front. Winds return to southerly by late weekend as Atlantic high pressure rebuilds. No headlines anticipated.
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&& .TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...
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Astronomical tides will remain elevated today and again on Thursday. Although the wind direction along the coast isn`t ideal for driving large positive tidal departures, conditions should still be sufficient to produce departures in the 0.4 to 0.6 ft. Therefore, the upcoming evening high tide and again Thursday evening could peak right around 7.0 ft MLLW in Charleston. Coastal Flood Advisories could be needed for Charleston and coastal Colleton counties.
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&& .CHS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...None. SC...None. MARINE...None. && $$ NEAR TERM...BSH SHORT TERM...JRL LONG TERM...JRL AVIATION...BSH/JRL MARINE...BSH/JRL