


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
388 FXUS62 KGSP 130546 AFDGSP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC 146 AM EDT Mon Oct 13 2025 .SYNOPSIS... A coastal low will slowly drift offshore through mid week as dry high pressure builds in across the region. This will allow for a return of above normal temperatures through Wednesday. A backdoor cold front drops across the area Thursday bringing a brief cool down before temperatures warm again over the weekend. The next chance for rain may come on Sunday as a potent system swings across the country. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 130 am EDT Monday: Stacked/occluding cyclone just off the SC coast is forecast to finally accelerate to the east later today, as "kicker" low travels from the northern Great Plains to Hudson`s Bay. One last narrow band of deformation zone light rain/sprinkles impacting the southeast corner of our CWA will shift east by daybreak, while shield of stratocu is expected to steadily move east and lift/scatter through the morning. As such, most locations should see no worse than mostly sunny conditions by afternoon, with increasing thickness values/rising heights allowing max temps to warm to around 5 degrees above normal across much of the area. Less cloud cover and the relative dryness of the air mass brought about by N/NW low level flow along with decoupling surface winds are expected to allow tonight`s lows to settle to near normal. The better radiational cooling conditions should also pave the way for more fog/low stratus in the mountain valleys Tue morning. && .SHORT TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/... As of 1142 PM Sunday: The synoptic pattern will become increasingly amplified through mid week as an upper ridge builds from the Southern Plains through the Mississippi Valley. Farther upstream, a potent trough will be sliding across the Great Basin and lifting through the Rockies while a northern stream trough drops across the Great Lakes and into New England. Rising heights across the Southern Appalachians on the eastern flank of the upper ridge will promote warm temperatures in the mid 70s to low 80s both Tuesday and Wednesday. Otherwise, the forecast remains dry through the short term. && .LONG TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... As of 1202 AM Monday: By Thursday, sprawling surface high pressure dropping across the Great Lakes and into New England will send a backdoor cold front through the area. This will in turn result in temperatures falling back to or just below seasonal averages Thursday and Friday. Heading into the weekend, the upper trough axis is progged to traverse the Appalachians with a slight warmup on Saturday. The forecast becomes much more interesting on Sunday as the first in a series of potent troughs ejects across the Northern Plains and across the Midwest into the Great Lakes/Ohio Valley. Forecast confidence quickly wanes, however, as considerable differences in timing, location and evolution of the wave are apparent across the suite of guidance. Rain chances may eventually return to the area, so will leave the forecast in line with the national model blend for now until there`s better agreement. && .AVIATION /06Z MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/... At KCLT and elsewhere: Lingering moisture associated with a cyclone off the South Carolina coast is forecast to shift east through the morning, with gradually clearing skies and lifting cigs expected across the Terminal Forecast Area. MVFR/low VFR cigs are expected to linger until around daybreak at KCLT and KHKY before scattering and lifting by late morning. The most challenging aspect of this forecast is assessing how widespread any fog/low stratus will be in the mountain valleys...particularly in areas near KAVL. The main issue is that the back edge of the clouds associated with the coastal low is essentially right over the KAVL area. The timing of when these clouds will scatter will be essential, as earlier-than-anticipated clearing will result in higher potential for fog/low stratus. For now, we have hedged our bets a bit with a tempo for 3SM/SCT003...thinking that the higher chances for restrictions will be in the valleys to the W and N of KAVL. Otherwise, VFR conditions are expected. N/NE winds will remain gusty at KCLT through around daybreak, before speeds fall below 10 kts during late morning...in line with the other TAF sites. Directions will gradually shift from N/NE this morning to NNW during the afternoon. Outlook: VFR conditions are expected to persist thru the week, except for the continued potential for mountain valley low stratus and/or fog each morning. && .GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...None. NC...None. SC...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...TW NEAR TERM...JDL SHORT TERM...TW LONG TERM...TW AVIATION...JDL