


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
Issued by NWS Greer, SC
541 FXUS62 KGSP 021810 AFDGSP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC 210 PM EDT Sat Aug 2 2025 .SYNOPSIS... Cold air damming setup will keep temperatures well below normal through the early part of the next week. A gradual warming trend is expected by the middle part of next week into the weekend. Shower and thunderstorm chances stick around each day through next week, with the best chances likely after Monday. && .NEAR TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY/... As of 145 PM EDT Saturday: The synoptic scale feature of interest this weekend remains the uncommon summer CAD regime. With the NE sfc flow, lingering ovc conds and showers, Foothill and Piedmont temperatures are struggling to climb into and/or thru the 70s this afternoon. Thunderstorms along with a heavy rain possibility will be limited to the wedge periphery which in our case is in the Smokies where the 12z HREF progs 30% or greater chances of localized 3 inches of rainfall within this instability axis. Elsewhere, scattered showers will continue to generate within the upglide/upslope flow above the sfc based stable layer. As tonight wears on, shower chances will linger regionwide within the Easterly flow with sensible wx featuring ongoing considerable cloudiness and patchy fog and drizzle. Despite the lingering cool air wedge and NE sfc flow on Sunday, impingement of drier air from the NNE will give rise to increasing chances of brightening skies along and east of I- 77 but more a pessimistic sky and shower fcst exists the further south one travels along the Appalachian chain. Showers should become numerous again on Sunday acrs the SW cwfa and much of the mountains and fthls will see 70s once again for maxes. && .SHORT TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY/... As of 100 PM EDT Saturday: In-situ CAD will be steadily locked in over the area to start the forecast period as a surface high located offshore the New England Coast continues to nose in from the northeast. Dry surface layer and weak Atlantic Fetch atop the surface will hold the CAD dome strong, especially with a LI between 4-6 per the SREF keeping high static stability in place. In this case, CAD should stick around through the short-term period without an obvious erosion mechanism. Model guidance have been persistent over the past 24-36 hours of drier conditions for Monday as a second surface high shifts over New England and Atlantic Canada and reinforces the CAD dome and drier air at the surface. PoPs only remain in the slight chance to chance range in this setup as light on and off drizzle and showers still can`t be ruled out in the presence of CAD. However, a slug of better deep layer moisture will return Monday night into Tuesday as a digging shortwave trough marches east from the central CONUS, toggling the flow above the surface layer to a south-southwesterly component. As a result, an uptick in PoPs is evident, especially by Tuesday with the return of better moisture and isentropic lift. Instability will be very low, but there is evidence of elevated instability, which could result in heavier showers and isolated thunder during the diurnal period Tuesday. PoPs ramp back up into the likely category, especially in the southwest mountains and locations west of I-26, where the better isentropic forcing is located. The driest air will be present Sunday night and Monday, leading dewpoints to drop into the upper 50s to lower 60s. In combination with the cooler, drier subcloud layer and extensive cloud cover settled in Sunday night, expect overnight values to end up 4-8 degrees below normal. Continued CAD conditions will keep afternoon highs on Monday 10-15 degrees below normal. Slightly better moisture transport will help to uptick dewpoints a few degrees by Monday night to go along with continued cloud cover. Overnight lows will run 3-6 degrees below normal as a result. With better WAA filtering in above the CAD dome, helping to raise dewpoints, temperatures are forecasted to uptick a few degrees and only run 8-12 degrees below normal. && .LONG TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 145 PM EDT Saturday: The aforementioned shortwave trough in the short term is shown shifting over the Deep South and breaking down as the feature gets mushed in between an anticyclone over the southwestern CONUS and another over the western Atlantic Wednesday and Thursday. In response, deep moisture will continue to translate over the southeastern CONUS through a good portion of the workweek. The middle part of the week will keep a weak in-situ CAD in place, but the stalled boundary to the south will have a surface low ride along it and potentially deepen offshore the Carolina Coast once it taps into the Gulf Stream. In this case, the CAD dome should begin to gradually erode by next Thursday and Friday per the GFS and Canadian from the coastal low, leading to better surface divergence. The ECMWF isn`t as excited about the coastal low potential, but all of the deterministic filter in a strong Atlantic Fetch in the presence of the stalled boundary through much of the workweek. Expect higher PWAT values (~2.00") and for the overall setup to be unsettled through a good portion of the forecast period, with diurnal enhancement. Better solar heating will likely erode any true CAD by the end of the workweek as only a residual cold pool possibly holds steady. Temperatures for Wednesday remain 5-10 degrees below normal, but a gradual warming trend is evident through the rest of the forecast period, but values should stay a few ticks or so below normal as elevated PoPs and cloud cover hold steady with the presence of a weak residual cold pool. && .AVIATION /18Z SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... At KCLT and elsewhere: Flight restrictions, mainly in the form of IFR/MVFR cigs, remain present acrs much of the FA this afternoon within the cool NE flow. Scattered to numerous, but mainly light showers, will continue to develop near all terminal locations into this evening. Numerical guidance is in decent agreement with respect to an overall improvement in cigs by this evening, however for time being, I am leery about latching onto this fast improvement in conditions within the lingering CAD regime. At any rate, overall, still will be dealing with showers and cigs on Sunday as the NE sfc winds continue, but the consensus is a return to widespread VFR conditions tomorrow. Outlook: Sct to numerous showers will be possible again on Sunday, especially over the mtns and western SC Upstate. A return to more typical summertime weather is expected early next week. && .GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...None. NC...None. SC...None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...CAC NEAR TERM...CSH SHORT TERM...CAC LONG TERM...CAC AVIATION...CSH