Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Greer, SC

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981 FXUS62 KGSP 260801 AFDGSP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC 401 AM EDT Sun May 26 2024 .SYNOPSIS... Temperatures remain above normal through the holiday weekend. A chance of thunderstorms Sunday afternoon and into the overnight, with a cold front bringing another chance of showers and thunderstorms on Monday. Cooler and drier conditions return through the end of the week. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH MONDAY/...
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As of 342 AM EDT Sunday: All quiet across the fcst area for the time being. Still some concern about fog thru daybreak, but that is becoming more questionable as a thickening cirrus shield from the central Plains convection drifts overhead. We will monitor. Temps will remain mild. The severe thunderstorm potential is the main concern over the next 24-36 hours, with more than one wave/episode of greater severe risk. Our brief quiet period should come to an end starting in the west late this morning as the latest in a series of remnant MCVs moves in from the west. This wave is the one responsible for the severe weather over the srn Plains this past evening, and it should move over our region in the afternoon/early evening. The convective environment will be no slouch for this time of year. The models develop most-unstable CAPE upwards of 2500-3500 J/kg during peak heating, while increasing mid-level flow raises the deep layer/effective shear into the 40-50kt range. Any storm that develops in that environment stands a good chance to acquire supercell characteristics. Storms will be moving right along in the fast westerly flow, so the primary concern will be damaging wind gusts, particularly if cold pools merge east of the mtns as convection grows upscale in the evening. The upscale growth may become more of a factor east of our fcst area, however, so we will also have to deal with large hail. The trend in the HRRR is to show more potential for updraft helicity streaks, which raises the risk for brief tornadoes in any embedded supercells. However, the 0-1km shear/storm-relative helicity looks...wanting...over the area east of the mtns, so we will keep the tornado mention isolated for now. Be on the lookout for the strong/severe storms in the mid-afternoon to mid-evening time period, and anticipate a severe weather watch at some point later today. High temps will be nearly ten degrees above normal. After this first wave passes, we should enter into a relative lull in the action for late evening/early morning Monday, during which time our attention turns to the west in anticipation of the next wave of severe potential. The CAMs show good agreement with a squall line developing along or ahead of the cold front/main short wave axis across the TN Valley region late tonight, which would ram into the mtns some time between midnight and daybreak Monday. The HRRR in particular suggests a good potential for a line of severe storms with embedded pockets of wind damage all along the line moving over the mtns roughly 09Z-12Z Monday, before it runs out of fuel and outruns the mid/upper support crossing the mtns around daybreak. Interests over the NC mtns should anticipate the potential for another Severe Watch in the early morning hours Monday, mainly for wind gusts. Low temps will remain mild. Monday becomes more of a toss-up, with a dying MCS over the fcst area in the morning hours that should bring extensive cloudiness. The question becomes...will we be able to get rid of the clouds and destabilize in the afternoon? The HRRR seems to think so. That being the case, there would be another round of severe storm potential mainly east of the mtns in the afternoon. The RAP develops sfc-based CAPE 2000-2500 J/kg and retains enough shear to loosely organize storms and push them along. Colder mid-level temps suggest this could have better large hail potential. Confidence in this scenario is less than the previous two discussed, so precip probs will be limited mainly to the chance range. High temps should once again be 5-10 deg above normal.
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&& .SHORT TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/... As of 200 AM Sunday: Picking up Monday night, the upper low lifts off toward the NE and any remaining boundary should be out of the area by this time. A few lingering showers are depicted by the GFS and EURO, but should dissipate overnight. The FROPA starts to allow drier air to filter into the CWA, dropping the humidity a bit and bringing temperatures closer to normal. Tuesday could see a stray shower over the mountains during the daytime hours, however confidence is very low given the decreased moisture availability. Will keep unmentionable PoPs at this point. Temps will be warmest Tuesday during the short term and decrease a tick or two closer to climo by Wednesday. && .LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... As of 200 AM Sunday: By Wednesday, a semi-strong omega blocking pattern continues over the CONUS, leaving the CWA in a weak quasi- zonal regime from the base of the trough to the north. Synoptically, this will leave the area open for NW flow aloft through at least the end of the work week. There could be some remnant moisture and unsettled forcing exiting the area by Wednesday night with a chance for precip, but confidence is low as models continue to trend drier. After Wednesday night, the ridge axis from the central CONUS propagates eastward toward the CWA and shunts rain chances with strong subsidence aloft. By Saturday, the ridge axis should be over the region, continuing quieter weather. Temperatures should remain close to climo through the period as well. && .AVIATION /08Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... At KCLT and elsewhere: VFR conditions will continue at all terminals through the early morning hours, but there remains concern about fog restrictions developing in the pre-dawn hours. Satellite imagery shows the fog in the Little TN River valley, but the fog development might be halted by the arrival of a cloud deck moving in from the west before sunrise. We will monitor, but starting to look like a lower threat at KAVL. For today, wind should remain light S to SW. Scattered thunderstorms develop in the afternoon hours so all terminals get a PROB30 for now until we can nail down the timing with more certainty. Cloud debris after sunset with storms dissipating. After that, our attention turns to the west with the arrival of a line of storms well after midnight. Outlook: A unsettled pattern will linger into the early part of the week, allowing for diurnal shower and thunderstorm chances each day and at least patchy fog development each night/morning. && .GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...None. NC...None. SC...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...CP NEAR TERM...PM SHORT TERM...CP LONG TERM...CP AVIATION...PM