Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
639 FXUS62 KGSP 071823 AFDGSP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC 123 PM EST Fri Nov 7 2025 .SYNOPSIS... Rain chances return tonight and continue off and on through Sunday. A strong cold front makes a full passage Sunday and will filter in an arctic airmass Sunday night through Tuesday. Mountain snow along the NC/TN border is expected Sunday night through Monday. Temperatures gradually rebound after Tuesday, with dry conditions expected. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY/... As of 1057 AM Friday: A broad mean trough remains draped across the country with several embedded shortwave troughs. The first in the series of troughs is currently dropping across the middle Mississippi Valley and into the Ohio Valley. This feature will slide across the Appalachians tonight with an associated surface cold front encroaching on the mountains. Moisture pooling ahead of the boundary across the Tennessee Valley will foster a reservoir of 500- 750 J/kg of mixed-layer CAPE over east Tennessee within a moderately sheared environment. The 12z suite of CAMs is in good agreement that a band of deep convection will blossom ahead of the frontal boundary across Middle Tennessee late this afternoon and move east towards the area this evening. Convection is expected to move into the mountains late evening into the early overnight hours with at least scattered showers surviving east of the mountains into the foothills and Piedmont. Any lingering showers should push east of the area by or just after sunrise tomorrow morning. The main focus will be the potential for a few strong to isolated severe storms over the mountains late this evening. 200-400 J/kg of mixed-layer CAPE is being progged by guidance with 40-50 kts of deep-layer vertical wind shear. This should be sufficient to maintain at least some degree of linear structure into the first tier of counties along the Tennessee border. Any bowing segments and/or surges in the line will be prime candidates for locally gusty winds with an isolated severe storm not out of the question. Any isolated severe threat will quickly diminish as the remnant line pushes east as instability further wanes. Heading into tomorrow, the lead shortwave trough will be quickly pulling away from the area with a second trough diving out of the central Rockies and into the central Plains. This will leave the Southern Appalachians within a broad area of nebulous forcing and quasi-zonal flow in the base of the trough. The trailing surface cold front will become increasingly oriented parallel to the upper flow and will likely stall in the vicinity or over portions of the area. This will support a rather warm day with afternoon highs climbing into the low to mid 70s outside of the higher elevations. Modest instability will likely reside along and south of I-85 within a well sheared environment, but a dearth of forcing and rather muted QPF response will preclude any severe threat due to a lack of convection to begin with. && .SHORT TERM /SATURDAY NIGHT THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 104 PM EDT Friday: A digging trough will be in the midst of sinking southward across the central CONUS at the start of the forecast period. A weak stationary boundary should help to activate some showers and a couple of thunderstorms Saturday night before the attendant, reinforcing cold front encroaches the area by the daytime period Sunday. Strong height falls will accompany the front as it makes a full fropa by the Sunday evening. Ahead of the front, guidance is depicting some convection developing with an environment consisting of a couple hundred J/kg of instability and strong deep layer shear (50-60+ kts of 0-6km bulk shear). This may lead to a few strong to possibly s severe storm, but this threat seems to become more realized just east of the I-77 corridor and mostly out of the CWFA. Afternoon highs should end up near-normal ahead of the front. Behind the front, mostly Sunday evening and beyond, temperatures will crash as very strong CAA accompany an Arctic surface high that slides over the central CONUS. Much colder air will filter in, while northwest flow precipitation picks up along the NC/TN border. Freezing levels will lower quickly Sunday evening, so the northwest flow precipitation will quickly turn to snow, especially in the higher elevations (=>3500`). Hysplit model runs detect a Great Lakes connection, which only upticks the northwest flow snow overnight Sunday as the setup becomes dynamically enhanced with strong vort lobes shifting over the region as model guidance form a closed low within the trough. Some differ on how far south the closed low actually drifts, but higher snowfall totals can be associated with closer proximity of the closed low. All of the deterministic guidance except for the GFS brings the low across the CWFA, while the GFS keeps it to the north. Either way the setup is a typical northwest flow event and should lead to lingering snow showers into the daytime period Monday, especially in the northwest facing slopes along the TN border and Smokies. Can`t ruled out some light accumulations below 3500` into the valleys before the event is over with by Monday night as these locations in the mountains will be at or slight above freezing, with very cold vertical profiles that suggest if anything were to fall out the sky, that it will be in the form of snow. If the closed low sags far enough south that it cross the area on Monday, don`t be surprised to see a few snow flurries break containment east of the mountains, with flurries possible across the foothills and Piedmont Monday evening. The chance is low, but definitely nonzero. Snow accumulations will vary, but the highest amounts are likely in the northwest facing slopes of the Smokies and in the Roan Mountain area, where 1-3" of snow is currently forecasted, with locally higher amounts at elevations above 4500`. Less than one inch is expected elsewhere along the NC/TN border for now until more guidance from the CAMs come in on Saturday. Overnight lows Sunday should end up 5-10 degrees below normal, with an uptick in winds and wind gusts with the onset of CAA. Only Advisory criteria gusts exist above 3500` at this time. That combined with the snow Sunday night could create borderline blizzard conditions above 3500` along the immediate TN border. Continued northwest flow snow along the immediate TN border Monday, while the rest of the area remains partly to mostly sunny. Despite maximum insolation, anomalously cold thicknesses will be in place as continued CAA filters in. In this case, temperatures will run 15-20+ degrees below normal, with 20-30 degrees below normal being possible in the mountains, making this the coldest air of the season and feeling the middle of Winter across the western Carolinas and northeast Georgia. && .LONG TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/... As of 115 PM EDT Friday: The upper trough axis will be in the midst of slipping across the CWFA Monday night as the surface high over the Lower MS Valley and Deep South helps to relax the winds and create an environment for really strong radiational cooling conditions. Factor in very cold thicknesses still in place and overnight lows will flirt with record low values across parts of the CWFA, with the higher elevations in the single digits, teens and twenties in the major mountain valleys, and twenties for locations outside of the mountains, leading to a widespread hard freeze that will kill any plant or vegetation that is left standing outside. Will need a Freeze Watch for the active growing season zones over the weekend, which is basically all locations outside of the mountains. Drier air will filter in and the incoming trough axis will essentially shutoff the northwest flow snow, but wouldn`t be surprised if that still lingers half the night on Monday in the favorable upslope regions. Broad upper troughiness lingers through a good portion of the rest of the week starting Tuesday as the airmass gradually modifies. Tuesday should be the last really cold day as highs will be in 40s over the mountains and 50s outside of the mountains. Model guidance look to send another cold front during the middle part of the week, but should be mostly moisture starved without a real return flow out ahead of it. Otherwise, dry conditions expected through the end of the workweek as temperatures return to near-normal values by next Thursday and Friday. && .AVIATION /18Z FRIDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... At KCLT and elsewhere: A band of low stratus continues to scatter our across the area with all terminals expected to return to VFR within the next hour or so. VFR conditions continue through the rest of the day and into the evening ahead of an approaching cold front from the west. A band of showers will accompany the front overnight into early Saturday morning with temporary visibility restrictions possible at all terminals. There are some indications that fog could develop behind the showers prior to sunrise, but confidence is low at this time as it will depend on timing of the rain and dissipation of enough cloud cover for radiation fog to develop. If fog does develop, some patches of dense fog cannot be ruled out. VFR conditions return by mid morning Saturday and persist through the remainder of the TAF period. Winds will be generally light out of the southwest. Outlook: Scattered showers may bring isolated restrictions through the remainder of the weekend as another cold front approaches from the west. Low clouds and precipitation may linger Monday across the mountains. Dry conditions return Tuesday. Gusty winds develop Sunday ahead of the second front and linger through Monday into Tuesday. && .GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...None. NC...None. SC...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...CAC NEAR TERM...TW SHORT TERM...CAC LONG TERM...CAC AVIATION...TW