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Ossipee, North Carolina Weather Forecast Discussion

169
FXUS62 KRAH 260406
AFDRAH

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Raleigh NC 1205 AM EDT Fri Sep 26 2025

.SYNOPSIS... A surface cold front will slowly push south into the region late tonight and Friday. The front will become nearly stationary over the southern and eastern portions of NC over the weekend. This occurs while low pressure in the mid and upper levels becomes nearly stationary over the southern Appalachians and TN Valley this weekend.

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.NEAR TERM /THIS AFTERNOON THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 105 PM Thursday...

Hot and humid east, mainly cloudy with additional showers and storms in the west this afternoon spreading east tonight.

There was a differential heating boundary over the Piedmont this afternoon. The boundary depicted the cloudy skies and cooler temperatures in the west from the sunny and hot conditions in the east. Cumulus have been developing recently and there have been some isolated showers. It appears there will be a chance of showers/storms across the eastern and northern Piedmont and Sandhills associated with this feature in the next few hours. Strong heating with an uptick in instability will likely aid the developing convection. Additional showers and scattered thunderstorms are expected in the west into central NC Piedmont later this afternoon into the night. A few storms may become strong with gusty winds to 40-50 mph the main hazard. Isolated heavy rainfall will also be likely. Lows tonight will generally be in the upper 60s to lower 70s in the warm sector.

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.SHORT TERM /FRIDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT/... As of 105 PM Thursday...

Continued chance of showers and thunderstorms.

Temperatures cooling with the increased clouds and showers.

It appears that an outflow boundary will slide into the southern sections of our region early Friday. This occurs as the low pressure in the mid levels to our west over the TN Valley starts to close off. It appears the main synoptic front will be over the Appalachians Friday morning, then slowly push into the Foothills and Piedmont late Friday and Friday night. This will mean a good chance of showers and thunderstorms over most of the region Friday and Friday night. Some locally heavy rainfall is possible but hard to pin point the main areas of concern given the various boundaries expected. Overall, expect mostly cloudy skies and cooler highs in the upper 70s NW to mid 80s SE. Lows in the mid 60s to near 70.

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.LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... As of 150 PM Thursday...

* Unsettled weather this weekend due to stalled coastal boundary

* Tropical influences possible across NC early next week, but still a lot of uncertainty

A stalled surface front across the Coastal Plain, combined with a quasi-stationary upper low over TN, will serve to focus increased shower/storm chances across the area on Saturday/Sunday. Several weak waves rotating around the upper low should move into NC this weekend into an environment characterized by 1.5 to 2.0" PW`s. While the highest PW`s will be focused across the Coastal Plain, anomalously high values will be in place as far west as the western Piedmont and precip chances will be elevated nearly everywhere. Ensemble precip probs show excellent agreement across NC and PoPs on Saturday will range from 70 to 90 percent area-wide. Given widespread cloud cover, instability should be limited and widespread severe weather isn`t anticipated. The lack of instability should also keep rain rates somewhat reasonable. This, combined with the fact that it`s been quite dry as of late, should help minimize (but not completely eliminate) the threat for flash flooding on Saturday. Rainfall totals should range from about 0.5 inches to 1.25 inches on Saturday, with locally higher amounts where showers/storms persist.

The stalled surface boundary will remain to our east on Sunday while the quasi-stationary upper low remains to our west. Another round of weak waves circulating around the upper low will provide a continued opportunity for showers across NC, and once again there is good ensemble agreement showing anywhere from 50-80 percent chances for showers area-wide (highest chances in the east). Extensive cloud cover should keep instability to a minimum (less than 500 J/KG MLCAPE) which should minimize the threat for severe weather. Around this time, additional moisture (2.25" PW`s) may be drawn into the area from just off the FL coast where it would seem tropical development is becoming increasingly likely. Depending on what happens in terms of tropical development, Sunday`s precip chances could shape up to be a predecessor rain event leading up to additional rainfall early next week.

With respect to tropical development...considerable uncertainty remains in exactly what happens with AL94, which still hasn`t formed yet but has an 90 percent chance of doing so of by the weekend. There has been a noteworthy westward shift in the overnight ensemble mean guidance, which brings the storm much closer to the Carolinas (if not through the Carolinas) by early next week. There is quite a bit of spread in the individual solutions and while the ensemble means have shifted westward, there are still a number of individual members that curve it out to sea and away from the coast. Obviously how Monday and Tuesday`s weather unfolds is completely dependent on the track AL94 takes. Should it curve to the east, we may still see some lingering precip chances across the area given the presence of the aforementioned stalled coastal surface boundary. A westward track, naturally, would yield substantially higher precip chances and precip amounts. For the time being I`ll stick close to the NBM forecast of increased precip chances continuing into Monday, with a gradual decrease in PoPs Tuesday through Thursday. NBM precip chances have increased on Monday (perhaps a reflection of the westward ensemble shift) and now range from 50-70 percent. It`s still a bit too early to pin down any specific rainfall amounts, as the amounts will be completely dependent on the storm track.

In terms of temperatures, extensive cloud cover will likely keep temps in the 70s and 80s this weekend through the middle of next week. There is a signal for cooler temps by late in the week.

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.AVIATION /06Z FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/... As of 1205 AM Friday...

Unsettled weather will continue over central NC terminals through tonight, as we stay in a deep moist flow out of the southwest, prompting development of early-morning low clouds and patchy fog, esp in the N and W, lasting through mid morning, followed by high coverage of late-day and evening showers and storms.

INT/GSO: A deep stream of moisture from the FL panhandle through W NC will mean periods of light showers and perhaps an isolated storm through daybreak, producing brief MVFR conditions. There is a good chance for IFR/LIFR cigs to develop 07z-09z, with MVFR vsbys in fog, lasting through sunrise followed by a slow improvement through MVFR cigs to VFR by ~16z. Then, scattered to numerous showers and storms are expected to pop up and pass near or over these sites starting around 19z, lasting through the evening hours with a chance for sub- VFR cigs/vsbys and gusty/shifting winds, although adverse aviation conditions won`t last this entire time. Any showers and storms will slowly weaken and decrease after midnight. Surface winds will stay light and variable, except from the SW 5-10 kts during the afternoon.

RDU/RWI: While isolated showers are possible early this morning, VFR conditions will largely hold until around 08z-10z, when areas of IFR stratus and isolated MVFR fog patches are expected to form. VFR conditions should return by 13z-15z, then we`ll see scattered to numerous showers and storms affect these terminals starting around 20z-21z and lasting through the evening, before slowly weakening and decreasing overnight. Surface winds will be light mainly from the SW, generally under 10 kts.

FAY: Any showers should stay NW of here this morning, and the risk for any low clouds or fog is also very low, leaving largely VFR conditions through mid afternoon. Scattered showers and storms are expected to develop and may affect FAY after 21z, lasting well into the night, although with a decreasing trend toward the end of the TAF valid period. Surface winds will be 10 kts or less from the SW.

Looking beyond 06z Fri, another round of sub-VFR stratus or fog is expected mainly at INT/GSO/RDU 08z-14z Sat. As a slow moving front settles into the area and stalls, and an upper level trough eases into the Carolinas from the west through the weekend, unsettled weather will hold through at least Sun night, with a greater-than- usual chance for morning fog/stratus and scattered to numerous showers and storms. A potential tropical low may approach the Carolina coast and begin to affect central NC starting as early as Mon, however uncertainty is high. Please consult the National Hurricane Center at hurricanes.gov for the latest information.-GIH

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.RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None.

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SYNOPSIS...RAH NEAR TERM...RAH SHORT TERM...RAH LONG TERM...Leins AVIATION...Hartfield

NWS RAH Office Area Forecast Discussion

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