Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Greer, SC

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227
FXUS62 KGSP 031047
AFDGSP

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg SC
647 AM EDT Wed Jul 3 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
Hot and humid conditions will become established once again for the
second half of the week.  Afternoon showers and thunderstorms will
be possible each afternoon starting Thursday, especially over the
mountains.  A cold front may enhance thunder chances on Saturday.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
As of 641 AM EDT Wednesday: Satellite imagery shows multiple
patches of low clouds at daybreak, but they should mix out by
mid-morning. Temps were in decent shape.

The upper pattern should slowly evolve over the next 24 hours,
with the axis of a mid/upper ridge over the Appalachians to start
the day getting tilted over positively and pushed to the East Coast
by a nrn stream short wave that trails off across the OH Valley
region. Altho the sfc high centered over New England this morning
gets steadily pushed offshore as a result, it should still be able
to ridge back and control our weather thru tonight. The movement
of the sfc high should allow for some moisture to trickle back
in from the Atlantic this afternoon, thus beginning our return
to more typical humidity. Won`t rule out a few ridgetop showers
during peak heating if the moisture makes it far enough west. High
temps will creep back up above normal this afternoon and mild low
temps can be expected as well.

&&

.SHORT TERM /THURSDAY THROUGH FRIDAY NIGHT/...
As of 218 AM EDT Wednesday: The western Carolinas should be
ensconced in a SW flow regime by Thursday, although at the
low-levels the positioning of an axis of high pressure over the
western Atlantic will result in trajectories mostly off the Atlantic
coast, not the Gulf of Mexico as is typical of SW flow patterns.
That might serve to hold our dewpoints in the lower 70s, although
with afternoon temps in the mid 90s in the upper 90s to low 100s
outside the mountains.  Some afternoon showers and thunderstorms
will be possible, with 1000-1500 J/kg sbCAPE expected across
the area...but still think triggering will only occur over the
NC mountains.

On Friday, temps will get even higher, and much of the area will
see afternoon heat index values above 100 degrees.  In keeping
with the past few forecasts...trended toward raw model output for
dewpoints...which keeps most of the forecast area clear of any heat
advisory criteria for Friday afternoon.  Will monitor going forward.
Once again, diurnally-driven showers and thunderstorms will be
likely on Friday, and with the approach of a frontal boundary
from the Ohio Valley and better instability (1500+ J/kg virtually
everywhere) it`s possible we could see some cells pop up outside
the mountains.

&&

.LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/...
As of 227 AM EDT Wednesday: Long-range guidance has doubled down
on the idea of a cold front arriving Saturday, and now points to
a somewhat faster and more aggressive push into the forecast area.
This`ll enhance coverage of showers and thunderstorms on Saturday,
amid what should be a very moist and unstable environment.

There`s less agreement on how the second half of the weekend will
evolve...with some ensemble solutions pushing the deteriorating
front all the way through the area, and others allowing it to
stall and even surge back north as a sfc wave works its way up
from the Deep South.  Seems likely that some kind of unsettled
weather will be possible through the end of the forecast period,
as even the drier solutions have a return to S/SE flow driven by
the Bermuda high by the start of the new workweek...meaning hot,
humid weather and diurnal showers and thunderstorms.

&&

.AVIATION /12Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/...
At KCLT and elsewhere: At daybreak, a few patches of low clouds
were present over the region, one covering much of northeast GA,
and another more ragged and drifting north from nrn SC to the
western Piedmont of NC. Fortunately, the lowest of the clouds were
missing all the terminals. KAND probably stands the best chance
of getting a brief MVFR this morning. Think the low clouds
outside of northeast GA will start to mix out with some heating
during the mid-morning. Thereafter, prevailing VFR at all sites,
with only sct low clouds. Wind will be light SE to S and SW
through the daytime. Any remaining low clouds should dissipate
with sunset. Wind will probably go light/variable again.

Outlook: A return of more typical mid-summer humidity and diurnal
convection returns Thursday into the weekend leading to possible
restrictions each afternoon/early evening. Fog and/or low stratus
may develop each morning, especially for areas that received rain
the previous day.

&&

.GSP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
GA...None.
NC...None.
SC...None.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...MPR
NEAR TERM...PM/Wimberley
SHORT TERM...MPR
LONG TERM...MPR
AVIATION...PM