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Copeland Elementary School North Carolina Weather Forecast Discussion

840
FXUS61 KRNK 151813
AFDRNK

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Blacksburg VA 213 PM EDT Wed Oct 15 2025

.SYNOPSIS... Expect dry weather into the first part of the weekend. Cooler air behind a mid-week front may provide some mountain frost Friday morning. Next opportunity for rain will accompany a stronger front on Sunday.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY/... As of 200 PM EDT Wednesday...

Key Message:

1) Temperatures drop back a few degrees closer to normal, but still expecting nice fall weather.

A dry front has moved through today, reinforcing cooler and drier air and bringing some northerly wind gusts to the area. Dense high pressure centered over the Great Lakes will build in slowly. This will support mostly clear skies overnight, with parts of the Greenbrier Valley seeing fog/low stratus again tomorrow morning, especially near riverbeds. This morning`s fog/stratus has been slow to clear, but with the frontal passage, mixing finally broke up this low level moisture.

Overnight, there is a 90 to 100% chance for temperatures at or greater than 40F for the mountains, with the cooler mountain valleys dipping below this with weak CAA pushing in tonight. The Piedmont will be in the mid to upper 40s. Cooler temperatures compared to what we have seen lately will continue into Thursday, with the mountains generally below 65F, and the Piedmont seeing a 70 to 100% likelihood of seeing 70F or warmer.

Confidence in the near term is high.

&&

.SHORT TERM /THURSDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/... As of 145 PM EDT Wednesday...

Key Points:

1. Dry through much of the period. 2. Frost and freezing conditions expected across portions of the mountains Thursday night into early Friday morning. 3. Temperatures trending milder into the start of the weekend.

A look at the 15 Oct 00Z NCEP Ensemble Mean 500mb Geopotential Heights shows for Thursday night a closed low and associated trough extending from the Dakotas to the Four Corners region. A ridge is expected to stretch from the Lower Mississippi Valley north into the western Great Lakes. Low pressure will be in the western Atlantic, off the coast of the Canadian Maritimes. For Friday/Friday night, the rough-ridge-trough pattern shifts east a bit, placing the ridge axis over western Quebec south to the SE US and the western CONUS trough over the Central and Northern Plains states. For Saturday/Saturday night, the shift eastward in the wave pattern continues. By the evening hours the ridge axis is expected to be over or just east of our region. The trough is expected to be over the Mississippi Valley. Another shortwave trough is expected to move onshore the coastal region of the Pacific Northwest with a shortwave ridge over ID.

At the surface, on Thursday a broad area of high pressure will extend south from Quebec to the SE US. Low pressure will be located in the western Atlantic off the coast of the Canadian Maritimes. For Friday/Friday night, the ridge axis shifts to over our region. Low pressure develops across far western Ontario with a cold front extending south into the Central Plains. For Saturday/Saturday night, the axis of the ridge shifts to along the US east coast. The Canadian low heads north to near James Bay with its associated cold front extending south to just east of the Mississippi River Valley by the evening hours.

A look at the 15 Oct 00Z NAEFS Ensemble Situational Awareness data shows 850mb temperatures on Friday around +10C over the area. For Saturday, values increase to around +14C. These values correspond to the 90 to 97.5 percentile of the 30-year CFSR climatology over western sections of the region.

The above weather patterns offers the following forecast. High pressure across our region will provide for dry weather through at least Saturday. On Thursday night, we are expecting the coldest night of the three as the ridge axis is directly overhead with light winds. Frost for several locations across the mountains looks promising with freezing conditions for much of the eastern sections of eastern Greenbrier County. Will likely issue a Freeze Watch for this area for late Thursday night into early Friday morning. On Saturday into Saturday night with the center of the high shifting east and the approach of the front to our west, low level flow will become more southerly. This will help temperatures moderate, with clouds on the increase Saturday night. By late Saturday night, we may start seeing some isolated showers across far western sections of the region.

Temperatures during this portion of the forecast will trend milder, with values notably above normal by Saturday.

Confidence in the expected is moderate to high.

&&

.LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... As of 145 PM EDT Wednesday...

Key Points:

1. Showers expected, primarily west and north, for Sunday and Sunday night. 2. Drier but gusty conditions for Monday. 3. Small chance of showers west for Tuesday. 4. Temperatures above normal with some fluctuation.

A look a the 15 Oct 00Z NCEP Ensemble Mean 500mb Geopotential Heights shows for Sunday/Sunday night the ridge axis of the US east coast shifts to over the Canadian Maritime region. A shortwave trough trends negatively tilted and extends from central Ontario into the Tennessee Valley. A ridge moves east to over the lee of the Rockies, a shortwave trough moves over the Pacific Northwest. For Monday/Monday night, the trough over the Tennessee valley makes slow progress northeast to over New England. A flattened ridge moves into the mid-Mississippi and Lower Ohio Valleys. A trough deepens and broadens from MT to Baja California. For Tuesday/Tuesday night, a trough continues to make slow progress northeast, exiting the New England area for the St. Lawrence Seaway region. A flattening ridge continues to lose its definition, with a zonal flow the result over our region. A shortwave trough is expected to head west to east north of this zonal flow into the western Great Lakes region. A trough holds fast just upstream of the Four Corners region. For Wednesday, zonal flow continues across our region. A ill formed trough starts to eject eastward from the Four Corners region, and a shortwave trough moves across Ontario/Quebec.

At the surface, for Sunday/Sunday night, the cold front shifts east an is expected to over our region by the evening hours. A high pressure ridge builds over the Mississippi Valley while another low forms over southern Alberta. For Monday/Monday night, the center of an area of high pressure moves southeast and will be centered near the Carolinas. Low pressure will be rounding the north side of this high, over New England by the evening hours. A cold front will be positioned across the Central Plains with a possible closed low along it near CO/KS. For Tuesday/Tuesday night, the New England low shifts east into the western Atlantic. A ridge of high pressure continues across the SE US with its centered now off shore the coast of the Carolinas. For Wednesday, a broad region of high pressure continues across the SE US. Low pressure deepens near James Bay.

A look at the 15 Oct 00Z NAEFS Ensemble Situational Awareness data shows 850mb temperatures for Sunday trending lower to around +8C to +10C, nw-se across the region by the early evening hours. For Monday, continue around +8C to +10C, but with orientation more on the order of ne-sw. For Tuesday, values inch upward to +11C to +12C. For Wednesday, values dip again to around +8C to +10C, n-s.

The above weather patterns offers the following forecast. A cold front crosses the region on Sunday into Sunday night with associated showers. The greatest probabilities will be over western and northern portions of the region. These showers will be short lived as high pressure quickly returns to the region by Monday afternoon. We could see our first of the season gusty wind condition post-cold front across the region on Monday.

Much of the region is expected to be on the dry side Tuesday into Wednesday. However, we may see some shower activity in the west associated with low pressure crossing Canada. Confidence is low to the degree of probability thanks to an array of solutions among the ensemble members. After an initial small dip in temperatures Monday, values are expected to increase again on Tuesday. Depending upon the magnitude of the cold front, Tuesday, temperatures may dip a bit again for Wednesday.

Confidence in the above weather scenario moderate regarding the shower potential on Sunday, but low regarding showers on Tuesday. The expected temperature trend is moderate confidence.

&&

.AVIATION /18Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 220 PM EDT Wednesday...

VFR expected throughout this TAF period. Brief exceptions exist in the mountain valleys for fog again overnight tonight. Drier air behind a front should clear skies up a little sooner Thursday morning as opposed to this morning, which took until 16Z to lift in BLF and LWB.

Northerly and northwesterly winds are gusting to 15kts or so. These decrease tonight after sunset, then become gusty again Friday.

Confidence in the above forecast is high.

EXTENDED AVIATION OUTLOOK...

VFR conditions remain through the rest of this period. Cannot rule out fog at LWB in the typical 09-14z time frame, but with drier airmass fog will be confined to near river valleys. The next chance of rain will come Sunday into Monday with periods of MVFR conditions possible.

&&

.RNK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... VA...Freeze Watch from late Thursday night through Friday morning for VAZ020-024. NC...None. WV...Freeze Watch from late Thursday night through Friday morning for WVZ507-508.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...SH NEAR TERM...SH SHORT TERM...CG/DS LONG TERM...CG/DS AVIATION...SH

NWS RNK Office Area Forecast Discussion

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