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Crescent, Georgia Weather Forecast Discussion

049
FXUS62 KCHS 162329
AFDCHS

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Charleston SC 729 PM EDT Tue Sep 16 2025

.SYNOPSIS... High pressure will extend across the region. Low pressure will meander near the North Carolina Outer Banks through the middle of the week. A cold front could approach from the north early in the weekend.

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.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM WEDNESDAY MORNING/... Early this evening: The forecast area continues to sit on the southwest periphery of a surface low positioned near the Delmarva. Visible satellite imagery shows almost no cloud cover across the forecast area, except for a few patches of thin cirrus passing through. On radar, KCAE shows a cluster of isolated showers and thunderstorms moving to the southeast just on the GA side of the Savannah River in the lower part of the SC Upstate. SPC Mesoanalysis shows no instability across the forecast area, and the cluster is sitting in a region of 250-500 J/kg of MLCAPE. With the loss of heating this activity should dissipate before even approaching the forecast area. Otherwise, it should be yet another very quiet night with temperatures well below normal. Lows are forecast to dip into the upper 50s inland, with mid to upper 60s along the coast. Much like like night, we could even see a few of the typical cooler spots approach the mid 50s.

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.SHORT TERM /6 AM WEDNESDAY MORNING THROUGH FRIDAY/... Aloft, low pressure centered across the Mid-Atlantic States on Wednesday will slowly weaken and become an open wave of weak troughing extending north/south along the eastern periphery of the Appalachians into late week with some subtle hints of weak ridging occurring by the weekend. At the sfc, weak high pressure will remain the primary weather feature across the local area, resulting in dry weather conditions through Friday, although there remains a low possibility of an isolated shower on Thursday given h5 shortwave energy exiting off the Carolina Coast. The more noticeable change to the weather will be attributed to warming temps, as 1000-850 mb thicknesses increase each day while the center of the mid-upper lvl trough shifts north/weakens and becomes replaced with subtle ridging. In general, high temps should range between the mid-upper 80s across Southeast South Carolina to around 90 away from the coast across Southeast Georgia on Wednesday, followed by upper 80 to lower 90 high temps away from the beaches Thursday and Friday. Low temps will remain slightly more mild than previous days, generally in the mid-upper 60s inland to lower 70s near the coast each night.

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.LONG TERM /FRIDAY NIGHT THROUGH TUESDAY/... Aloft, weak mid-lvl ridging will gradually give way to an incoming trough early next week. At the sfc, high pressure will wedge southward across the Mid-Atlantic into the Southeast States, likely resulting in noticeably cooler conditions by late weekend within a northeasterly sfc flow. Lower-end rain chances remain in the latest forecast on Sunday and Monday (20-40%), with the bulk of activity anticipated closer to the coast where moisture convergence is higher as troughing occurs across the nearby Atlantic and the northeasterly wind drives activity onshore. In general, high temps should peak in the low-mid 80s near the coast to upper 80s/lower 90s well inland Saturday, then generally low-mid 80s (warmest across inland Southeast Georgia) Sunday and Monday. Overnight lows remain in the mid-upper 60s inland to lower 70s near the coast.

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.AVIATION /00Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... VFR conditions are expected to prevail at KCHS, KJZI, and KSAV through 00z Thursday.

Extended Aviation Forecast: VFR conditions are expected at CHS/JZI/SAV terminals through Saturday. Gusty northeasterly winds (15-20 kt) are possible with a wedge of high pressure Saturday and Sunday. Brief flight restrictions are also possible with showers on Sunday.

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.MARINE... Tonight: Low pressure will shift from the Outer Banks of NC into the Mid-Atlantic region. Meanwhile, High pressure prevail across our region. This will lead to tranquil conditions across our coastal waters. Sustained winds should remain 10 kt or less, while seas will be 2-3 ft within 20 nm and 3-4 ft for the GA waters beyond 20 nm.

Wednesday through Sunday: Weak high pressure will prevail across local waters through Friday, resulting in no marine concerns during the second half of the week. In general, southerly winds will be no higher than 10-15 kt with seas ranging between 1-3 ft, largest across outer Georgia waters. High pressure will begin to wedge south across the region over the weekend, placing a stronger pressure gradient across local waters between a wedge front to the north and troughing east of Florida. Conditions could support Small Craft Advisories across a portion of local waters later Saturday through Sunday, with northeasterly winds gusting up to 20-25 kt and seas building up to 5-7 ft.

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.EQUIPMENT... The KCLX radar will be down for maintenance from September 16-18th for component upgrades. Users are encouraged to use adjacent WSR-88D radar sites. These radars include:

KCAE: Columbia, SC KLTX: Wilmington, NC KJAX: Jacksonville, FL KVAX: Moody Air Force Base, GA KJGX: Robbins Air Force Base, GA:

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.CHS WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... GA...None. SC...None. MARINE...None.

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NEAR TERM...BSH SHORT TERM...DPB LONG TERM...DPB AVIATION...BSH/DPB MARINE...DPB

NWS CHS Office Area Forecast Discussion

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