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Robeson County North Carolina Weather Forecast Discussion

753
FXUS62 KILM 121057
AFDILM

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Wilmington NC 657 AM EDT Sun Oct 12 2025

.SYNOPSIS... Dangerous marine conditions, breezy winds, and rain will continue today and tonight as strong low pressure remains near Cape Fear. The low will move offshore Monday with drier weather expected. The chilliest air since last April should arrive Thursday and Friday as Canadian high pressure builds across the eastern United States.

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.UPDATE... No significant changes with the 7 AM EDT update. Routine aviation discussion included below for the 12Z TAF issuance.

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.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... A deepening surface low continues to drift northward toward the Carolina coast this morning. Water vapor satellite shows dry air engulfing the southern flank of the storm aloft. This dry air is eroding the depth of the cloud layer and resulting in decreasing coverage of rain showers over NC and near the NC/SC state line. Radar depicts light drizzle across southeastern NC as of 06Z. However, near the coast of SC, satellite is hinting at some elevated instability helping to sustain heavier bands of rain over the nearshore waters. These bands are attempting to move onshore near the Georgetown coast. Light to moderate rain should continue over SC for a large portion of the day.

As the low settles near the SC coast today, the bulk of moisture and rainfall will pool west of the center, impacting coastal northeast SC as mentioned above. Concerns are growing that isolated flooding near the Georgetown/Williamsburg could be a concern by this afternoon.

HREF probs suggest that LPMM 24-hour QPF totals of up to 10 inches are possible through 00Z Monday. There is also a wide swath through much of Williamsburg, Georgetown, and Horry county that suggests up to 5 inches of rain may be possible. This is especially true if elevated instability enhances rain rates as HREF probs suggest.

While there is some evidence of elevated instability existing aloft, model soundings suggest that instability will be limited. Given the poor handling of this system thus far, its safe to say that confidence remains low.

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.SHORT TERM /MONDAY THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/... Low pressure will be centered off the NC coast Monday morning and will move farther out to sea during the day. Residual low level moisture circling the low may be deep enough for some coastal showers lingering through Monday morning. Isentropic analysis on the 300K surface near the middle of the shallow moist layer shows modest downglide so no additional significant rainfall amounts are anticipated. I`ll hang onto 20-30 percent rain chances from Myrtle Beach and Whiteville east to the Cape Fear coast Monday morning.

Despite northerly winds Monday, drying will be slow to occur as low level parcels still will originate from the ocean off the Mid Atlantic coast in the cyclonic flow circling the offshore low. A considerable stratocumulus cloud deck could remain in place throughout the day, especially along the coast. Monday`s highs should range from 71-75, warmest across the Pee Dee region. Skies should clear Monday night with lows falling into the 50s.

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.LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... 1034 mb Canadian high pressure will move across North Dakota on Tuesday and into the western Great Lakes Wednesday. This should maintain dry northerly winds across the Carolinas. Under mainly clear skies highs should range from the mid to upper 70s with lows in the 50s.

A strong shortwave will dive southeastward across New England on Wednesday, zipping out into the Atlantic north of Bermuda Wednesday night. This will push a dry cold front across the area Wednesday night with the chillest airmass of the season building across the Carolinas Thursday into Friday. Even with sunshine, highs both days will range from the upper 60s (!) in the Cape Fear region to the lower 70s across the Pee Dee region with dewpoints falling into the upper 30s to 40s. The real magic happens Thursday night/Friday morning as good radiational cooling will occur in the dry Canadian airmass and lows should fall into the 40s all the way down to the beaches! Our current forecast of 46 in Wilmington would be the coldest since the morning of April 17. Here`s how other cities stack up for the morning of Friday October 17:

Location Forecast Low Last Time This Chilly Wilmington.........46..............April 17 Lumberton..........44..............April 18 N. Myrtle Beach....49..............April 28 Florence...........45..............April 17

The surface ridge axis should push offshore Friday with moderating temperatures and dewpoints expected over the weekend as winds turn southerly.

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.AVIATION /12Z SUNDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/... Ceilings continue to hover around 1k feet AGL. IFR is expected where rainfall is occurring and MVFR continues to exist elsewhere. Most of the area should see a general trend toward IFR this morning as a pool of moisture shifts back to the north. Some MVFR is expected for the afternoon as dry air aloft begins to work its way southward.

Winds will continue to gust near 30 knots at the coast and 20 knots inland this morning. With slightly deeper mixing during the day, expect gusts up to 30 knots across the entire area (possibly a brief gust to 35 knots at the coast).

Extended Outlook... Low clouds continue tonight as northeast winds return and the surface low remains located near the coast. Conditions should begin to improve on Monday, albeit a little breezy. VFR expected on Tuesday and through the remainder of the week.

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.MARINE... Through Tonight... Strong gales continue as a surface low drifts northward today. Models indicate that the gradient will begin to weaken later this afternoon and the remnant gales should be replaced by a Small Craft with winds 25-30 knots. This is likely to be an extended periods of SCA conditions due primarily to seas.

Monday through Thursday...Low pressure should be located off the NC coast Monday morning and will accelerate out to the northeast during the day. Breezy northwest winds 20-25 knots during the morning should diminish to 15- 20 knots during the afternoon. Seas still running as high as 6-7 feet out beyond 10 miles from shore mean we`ll almost certainly need a Small Craft Advisory Monday, perhaps even lingering into Monday evening for the Cape Fear waters.

Our attention will then turn to Canadian high pressure moving from North Dakota on Tuesday to the Great Lakes on Thursday. The slow approach of this high should lead to an extended period of northerly winds here in the Carolinas. Most models show a nighttime increase in winds Wednesday night up to around 20 knots as cooler air surges southward. Moderate north-northeasterly winds should continue on Thursday.

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.TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING... Other - Rip Currents: 10 second easterly swell will continue through Monday, creating a high risk for rip currents at east facing beaches. Strong northerly winds will also create a strong north to south longshore current for Pender and New Hanover beaches on Sunday. Winds will remain breezy on Monday, but winds will be more offshore, weakening the longshore current. High surf advisory for the New Hanover and Pender Coasts, has been extended through early Sunday evening due to the much slower movement of the surface low, keeping the surf elevated at 6 feet or higher.

Minor coastal flooding continues is expected to continue with the higher high tide during the afternoon through Monday for the Lower Cape Fear River and Wrightsville Beach. Springmaid Pier and SC beaches are expected to receive minor flooding with the afternoon high tide on Sunday with normal water levels returning on Monday.

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.ILM WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NC...High Surf Advisory until 8 PM EDT this evening for NCZ106-108. High Risk for Rip Currents through this evening for NCZ106-108. Coastal Flood Advisory until 3 PM EDT this afternoon for NCZ106-108-110. Coastal Flood Advisory from 1 PM to 5 PM EDT this afternoon for NCZ107. SC...High Risk for Rip Currents through this evening for SCZ054-056. Coastal Flood Advisory from 11 AM this morning to 2 PM EDT this afternoon for SCZ054-056. MARINE...Gale Warning until 11 AM EDT this morning for AMZ250-252-254- 256.

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SYNOPSIS...TRA UPDATE...21 NEAR TERM...21 SHORT TERM...TRA LONG TERM...TRA AVIATION...21 MARINE...TRA/21 TIDES/COASTAL FLOODING...ILM

NWS ILM Office Area Forecast Discussion

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