Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
124 FXUS62 KGSP 081154 AFDGSP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC 654 AM EST Sat Nov 8 2025 .SYNOPSIS... Showers and isolated thunder continue through tonight, waning toward morning. On-and-off rain chances continue through Sunday. A strong cold front crosses the area by late Sunday, ushering in a cold Arctic air mass, and resulting in accumulating snowfall across parts of the North Carolina mountains, continuing into Monday. Thereafter, dry and chilly conditions persist into next weekend. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 650 AM Saturday: Rain has ended across the area, with enough clearing skies to allow areas of fog to develop. There are some patches of dense fog, including the I-40 corridor east of the Escarpment in which a Special Weather Statement is in effect until 8 am. The fog should start to lift after sunrise, but cannot rule out a brief period of some widespread dense fog. Otherwise, A leading shortwave trough will cross the Central Appalachians and exit off the Mid-Atlantic coast this morning, leaving the forecast area with a quasi-zonal flow ahead of another shortwave that is diving into the mean longwave trough over the Plains. This will effectively back the mid-level flow atop the forecast area and stall out a weak cold front somewhere invof the southern part of the CWFA. Currently, a band of convection associated with the front oriented nearly east-west is crossing the forecast area as expected. The northern part of the line is weakening to just some showers as it enters the I-77 corridor, while a few storms continue across the southern NC mountains. The latest RAP has MLCAPE of around 500 J/kg working into NE GA and the Upstate from the SW, which may allow for a tstm or two to continue as the convection pushes off the Escarpment. With that said, the severe threat should continue to wane, as storms become roughly parallel to the steering flow and lose the better bulk shear. The 00z CAMs are in good agreement that this activity will largely taper off and exit to the SE by 12z this morning. Patchy fog may form behind the rain, but widespread dense fog is not expected. Later this morning, residual stratus should mix out by midday, resulting in partly cloudy skies for the aftn. The front that triggered this morning`s convection will stall out across the forecast area, and may be a trigger for another round of convection late aftn thru this evening. The 00z guidance has all come in pretty agreement on scattered showers and possibly a few storms developing across the southern half of the forecast area by 00z and expanding/tracking NE across the NC foothills and Piedmont thru the evening hours. The initial activity will have up to 1000 J/kg of sbCAPE to work with, but track into less unstable air. Bulk shear of 50-60 kt may be enough for a few strong storms. The CAMs show a discrete storm mode with a few updraft helicity swaths, but they are weak. Highs will 5-10 deg above normal, mainly mid 70s east of the mountains. Tonight, convection should work NE of the area late evening, as a warm front lifts thru the area. Areas of low stratus and patchy fog will be possible across mainly the NC foothills and Piedmont before daybreak Sunday. Lows will remain well above normal. && .SHORT TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/... As of 1217 AM EDT Saturday... Key Messages: 1) Isolated showers may develop across the I-77 corridor, especially south of I-85, on Sunday afternoon and evening, ahead of a cold front. 2) Accumulating snowfall is expected across the higher elevations of the NC-TN border on Sunday night, and flurries may continue through Monday. 3) A hard freeze is expected Monday night, with temperatures falling well below freezing across the entire forecast area. By Sunday morning, several h50 vort lobes will be embedded in a broad baroclinic zone extending from the Ozark Plateau into the upper Ohio Valley and Quebec. The most notable of these features will migrate from the Ozarks into the Tennessee Valley during the day Sunday, amplifying as it does so, and driving a surface cold front across the western Carolinas in the process. For most of the day, zones ahead of the front will remain just capped enough that little to no convection is expected. However, there will be a very brief opportunity for some convection to fire across the southeastern Piedmont, where guidance suggests that daytime mixing may successfully break the cap. Deeper residual subsidence, however, still looks like it`ll limit the depth of the unstable layer, hindering instability and importantly, limiting effective shear such that even if convection does develop over the far southeastern tier of our counties, it`s unlikely any of it will be severe. Based on the latest CAM output, the better chances for any convection - even showers - are farther east. So, the bigger story is what comes behind the front. By late morning if not sooner, the front will have cleared the mountains and strong CAA will have developed. Surface temperatures will drop steadily through the day while a tight 4-6mb pressure gradient develops across the Appalachians. Despite this, even the higher end of guidance only depicts Advisory-criteria wind gusts at the higher elevations...though given breezy winds and chilly temps, it`s possible wind chills could warrant a cold-weather product as we get closer to the event. In any case, winds aside, it`s more certain that 850mb temps will be cold enough to support some ice nucleation in the mountains by sunset. So, would expect NW flow precipitation to begin as rain showers in the morning...but flurries are possible at the higher elevations as early as sunset, and by midnight, the entirety of the NC mountains will be under the gun for snow. Accumulations look tame in and north of the French Broad Valley. Across the Smokies and Balsams, however, there`s the complicating issue of a possible shallow unstable layer in the low levels, which will develop just as a second, trailing shortwave axis arrives from the Tennessee Valley. This could significantly raise snowfall rates in the southern NC mountains, albeit only for a short period of time...and so accumulations of 2-3 inches...with isolated, high-elevation spots in the Smokies seeing >3 inches...appear possible across these zones. Come morning, there`s the additional issue, raised in previous forecasts, of whether any of this snowfall could manage to escape into the NC Foothills. It still looks like the likely answer is: no. Several things would need to line up for this scenario to work out...first, enough lingering moisture would need to remain in place through dawn Monday that any precipitation is still falling in the Foothills, and second, the 850mb low would need to sag far enough south that temperatures in the Foothills fall to freezing before that moisture vanishes. Right now, fewer than 25% of long-range ensembles depict the Foothills getting cold enough to support snow flurries; fewer still get the cold air there in time to catch any lingering moisture. So the chances are low...but never zero. Finally, dry weather will push in for Monday. NW flow snow may continue across the Tennessee border for much of the day and into the first part of Monday night, but everywhere else, skies should clear, giving way to a dry and chilly Monday, with highs not making it out of the 30s in the mountains and only climbing into the mid 40s across the low terrain. Monday night, a steady 5-10kt WNW wind will continue. Despite the lack of radiative cooling, temperatures should fall well below normal amid persistent CAA...into the mid-20s across the low terrain, and well into the teens in the mountains...for our first hard freeze, and by far the coldest night of the season so far. && .LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 1232 AM EDT Friday... Key Messages: 1) Chilly conditions continue throughout the extended period. 2) Dry conditions linger through next weekend. The upper pattern will continue to deampify on Tuesday, with flat, WNW upper flow persisting through at least Wednesday on the periphery of residual longwave troughing over eastern Canada. Surface high pressure centered over the Gulf Coast will gently migrate eastward, slowly modifying and allowing lows to rebound slowly Tuesday and Wednesday night. Another shortwave appears likely to cross the Mid-Atlantic on Wednesday, but low-level convergence and theta-e fields indicate that no frontal passage will occur; rather, the new air mass should settle into the Deep South and Tennessee Valley...eventually expanding into the Carolinas late Thursday or Friday, but with no clearly-defined frontal boundary. Either way, profiles look to remain so dry through the period that no rain, nor even any extensive cloud cover, is likely. Get ready for a cold week! && .AVIATION /12Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... At KCLT and elsewhere: Areas of fog and low stratus have developed across the area in the wake of earlier rainfall. The fog and stratus should start to lift and scatter out after sunrise, with all sites going VFR by around noon. Whatever low clouds do develop should scatter out to VFR by noon, leaving a cu field around 4000-5000 ft. Late aftn thru this evening, scattered showers and possibly a few tstms are expected to develop, mainly across the Piedmont. Will continue with PROB30 for SHRA at all our sites, except KAVL. Thunder chances still look too low to mention in the TAFs, but may be needed if confidence increases. Precip will lift north overnight, and leave very moist low-levels to support fog and stratus development again before daybreak Sunday. Guidance is in good agreement on LIFR cigs in the NC Piedmont with possibly dense fog at KHKY. Wind will generally favor a SW direction thru the period, except NW at KAVL this morning. Outlook: A strong cold front will cross the area from the west on Sunday, bringing gusty winds with low clouds and RA/SN showers in the mountains. Precipitation may linger Monday across the mountains. Gusty winds linger through Monday into Tuesday. Dry conditions Wednesday and Thursday with afternoon gusts possible. && .GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...None. NC...None. SC...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...MPR NEAR TERM...ARK SHORT TERM...MPR LONG TERM...MPR AVIATION...ARK