


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
401 FXUS62 KGSP 281735 AFDGSP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC 135 PM EDT Thu Aug 28 2025 .SYNOPSIS... High pressure remains in control through Friday then a weak cold front reaches our area from the north by Saturday. This front becomes stationary to the south of our region into early next week with isolated to scattered mainly afternoon and early evening mountain showers and storms. Temperatures remain just below seasonal normals through the first half of next week. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 130 PM EDT Thursday: The upper trough across the eastern CONUS begins to dig as an upper low strengthens over Canada. As a result, a shortwave cross the southeast tonight. However, the surface high pressure remains in place and shunts any available moisture in the area. Despite the moderate DPVA, there is no QPF response, keeping PoPs through the near term unmentionable (<14%). Given all this, confidence is high for a dry forecast tonight and Friday. By tomorrow, the trough starts to lift northward, resulting in much broader flow across the southeast. There are pockets of shortwaves that quickly move through the CWA, but again, moisture remains adrift. Guidance struggles to get the 1 inch PWAT line into the southern counties by the end of the forecast period. So, again, expecting a dry forecast. Other than a few mid to upper level clouds during the afternoons, nothing of significance is forecasted. As the center of the surface high pushes out of the area, winds become more southerly today but very light, becoming calm to VRB tonight. Similar story for tomorrow. Temperatures east of the mountains top out in the low to mid 80s with Friday being the warmest day since the cooldown. && .SHORT TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH SUNDAY/... As of 1215 PM Thu: Height falls still look to occur Friday night as next vort lobe rotates into the eastern CONUS trough. Overnight into Saturday morning, PoPs return to the forecast mainly for the possibility of a weak low moving along the stalled front north of the Gulf Coast near the base of the trough. Such a development could induce some degree of warm upglide over the CWA, potentially resulting in light precip or even an elevated t-storm. Mentionable chance mainly in the southern half of the area thru Sat morning. Partly via the height falls, lapse rates will be marginally favorable thru a deeper layer, so some deep diurnal convection is plausible. Weak easterly flow associated with sfc high over the eastern Great Lakes should provide slight mechanical lift leading to an uptick in PoPs along the east-facing Escarpment. A chance also continues nearer the frontal zone, in NE GA and portions of the Upstate. PWATs nor DCAPE appear favorable for either torrential rainfall or notable downburst potential, and PoPs remain no better than the chance range as it is, with model support for precip having fallen a bit. Less cloud cover and potential for diabatic cooling than before, so temps have also trended slightly warmer Sat, topping out at or a little below normal. Cyclonic flow will persist overhead as trough is reinforced by another vort lobe. Surface high will push east to the NE CONUS by late Sunday which should drive a backdoor cold front south into the CWA that day. As we have seen over the past couple of days, there remains some spread among models as to how deep the weak low to our south gets and how quickly it moves toward the Atlantic, although that spread has diminished. Based on the pattern of QPF response it appears models key more on the backdoor front. Any way you slice it, a relatively moist easterly flow will continue Sunday, allowing continued mechanical lift and/or weak upglide. Temps trend slightly downward, but PoPs tick upward from Saturday. Chances are highest along the Escarpment, but at a mentionable value in all zones. Potential for thunder and heavy rainfall increase more appreciably compared to the previous day, with moisture return ahead of the backdoor front increasing PWAT and lowering LCLs, and thereby boosting SBCAPE. Models vary as to whether the front arrives soon enough to have a stabilizing effect before peak heating Sunday, so confidence remains low, but the chance for impactful t-storms Sunday looks a little greater than it once had. && .LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY/... As of 120 PM Thu: Backdoor front associated with NE CONUS sfc high looks likely to have settled thru most or all of the Piedmont by Monday (Labor Day) morning, with eastern trough regime still in place. Easterly flow into the Blue Ridge Escarpment and abundant low level moisture continue to be a factor for PoPs, maintaining mostly a high chance value across the mountains and foothills, although chances trend lower for the I-77 corridor and most areas SE of I-85. Temps and dewpoints will return to more fall-like values, maxes being 4-7 degrees below normal. Rain chances trend still lower Tue but temps similar, with the high remaining dominant. The upper trough will be reinforced circa Wednesday as another open wave swings into the lower OH Valley; an upper low also is shown to move out of the Canadian prairie and into the vicinity of Lake Superior. How soon those features merge is not yet well agreed upon, but of note the GFS brings in a sfc low with the leading shortwave and thus suggests widespread precip in our area by late Wednesday, compared to the largely dry 28/00z ECMWF and 28/12z GDPS. PoPs remain similar to Tuesday`s for now, with temps slightly warmer but still below normal. && .AVIATION /18Z THURSDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... At KCLT and elsewhere: VFR conditions prevail once again through the end of the TAF period as high pressure remains parked over the area. Winds have gently picked up out of the south and should remain through the evening. After 00z, expecting the winds to decrease again and become calm to VRB overnight. For Friday, if winds pick up, expect VRB through the morning before returning southerly. There could be some mountain valley fog/BR at the early morning hours but confidence is too low to include at KAVL/KHKY. Other than SCT250, not anticipating any impactful vsby/cig restrictions. Outlook: Showers and thunderstorms may return for the weekend into Monday. Fog and/or low stratus may develop each night, mainly in the mountain valleys. && .GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...None. NC...None. SC...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...DEO NEAR TERM...CP SHORT TERM...Wimberley LONG TERM...Wimberley AVIATION...CP