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Glendale Springs, North Carolina Weather Forecast Discussion

272
FXUS61 KRNK 291741
AFDRNK

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Blacksburg VA 141 PM EDT Mon Sep 29 2025

.SYNOPSIS...

Moisture being pulled north into the area from Tropical Storm Imelda will lead to light to moderate rain chances in the area through Tuesday evening before surface high pressure pushing south out of Canada works its way into the Northeast. This should work enough dry air into the region to lead to dry and clearing conditions on Wednesday. This dry pattern looks to continue through at least early next week.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... As of 130 PM EDT Monday...

Key Messages:

1. Light rain showers arrive this afternoon and evening.

2. Cooler and cloudy with northeast flow.

Upper level vorticity from Tropical Storm Imelda is expected to merge with the remnants from the upper level cut-off trough that became strung out over the Mid-Atlantic states over the weekend. This merging of upper level vorticity over Virginia will lead to the continued light to moderate rain showers that are currently starting to push into the area from NC. These rain showers are expected to push northwest into the Blue Ridge and NRV overnight, and will be slightly enhanced by isentropic ascent thanks to the surface high pressure wedge that has settled into the Northeast. This wedge will keep northeast flow over the region, which will effectively lead to much cooler temperatures across the region, with highs in the mid to upper 60s west of the Blue Ridge, and low 70s east of the Blue Ridge. Along with cooler temperatures, light rainfall and drizzle look to continue through at least the early afternoon hours on Tuesday before a secondary much stronger high pressure pushes into the Northeast out of Canada. This surface high pressure will lead to more dry air advecting into the region leading to rainfall ending areawide by Tuesday evening.

&&

.SHORT TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/... As of 1245 PM EDT Monday...

Key Messages:

1) Showers come to an end Tuesday night.

2) High pressure builds in and wedges over our area.

3) Temperatures fall to below normal on Thursday.

Tuesday night will see an end to any lingering rain showers across the area, as Tropical Storm Imelda begins to turn east and head away from the CONUS. This will be the end of the impacts from Imelda, as drier air moves in from the northwest. A large high pressure system over Southeastern Canada will wedge in place east of the Appalachians and keep dry and cool conditions across the area through the end of the period. An upper ridge also strengthens across the Eastern CONUS,further inhibiting convection, leading to no rainfall expected through late this week. Due to the tight pressure gradient between the high to the north and the tropical system to the south, northerly winds will remain elevated, around 5- 10 mph with gusts of 15-20 mph possible on Wednesday in the Piedmont. For Thursday, the wedge shifts winds to the east, with gusts in the mountains of 15-20 mph at times, lowering to around 10- 15 mph in the Piedmont.

Temperatures remain near to slightly above normal midweek, with highs in the 70s area-wide. On Thursday, the high pressure wedge cools things down, with highs mostly in the 60s to around 70 in the Piedmont. Lows will be in the 50s Wednesday morning, with 40s for the highest elevations. Lows the rest of the period fall into the 40s for the entire area. Friday morning will be the coldest, as the highest elevations will likely fall into the upper 30s, with wind chills in the low to mid 30s there.

&&

.LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH MONDAY/... As of 1245 PM EDT Monday...

Key Messages:

1) Quiet weather continues through at least Sunday night.

2) Slight chance of rain returns Monday.

3) Cool temperatures Friday return to slightly above normal this weekend.

The strong, large high pressure system that was in Canada will now be centered over the Northeastern US and continuing to wedge down across the forecast area east of the Appalachian Mountains on Friday. The high will keep convection suppressed and the upper ridge also remains steady, which will keep drier air aloft and no chance of rainfall through the weekend. By Sunday night into Monday, a low pressure system will be over the Deep South, with mid-level moisture being driven back north into the area, particularly east of the Blue Ridge. At the same time, the wedge erodes out of the area, and the large surface high shifts east and into the Atlantic, further aiding in the southerly flow. This will bring a slight chance of showers/storms back into the area, especially for the southern Blue Ridge down into NC. Confidence in this remains low, therefore PoPs are kept minimal, around 10%.

Temperatures remain near to below normal on Friday, with highs mainly in the 60s. For the weekend, highs slowly rise as the wedge erodes, into the low to mid 70s, with the Piedmont reaching the upper 70s by next Monday. Lows will be in the 40s late week, with 40s/50s through next weekend.

&&

.AVIATION /18Z MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... As of 130 PM EDT Monday...

VFR conditions look to continue through the remainder of today. During the overnight hours IFR to LIFR CIGs and reduced VSBYs are expected to develop at all terminals across the area. These restrictions look to linger through the remainder of the TAF period, with some sites just starting to recover to MVFR restrictions by the 16-18 UTC timeframe on Tuesday. Winds will remain generally from the northeast, between 5 to 10 knots today, with gusts already being observed up to 15-17 knots this afternoon. While winds look to diminish overnight, they look to pick up again during the mid morning hours Tuesday for all terminals. Gusts up to 15-17 knots will look likely again by the afternoon hours Tuesday.

EXTENDED AVIATION OUTLOOK...

Rain showers may continue through late Tuesday evening as easterly flow brings moisture back into the area from the Atlantic Coast, with the potential for gusty winds to continue beyond Tuesday and into Wednesday. Expecting VFR conditions to return after rain ends Tuesday night. These VFR conditions look to continue through early next week outside of early morning fog.

&&

.RNK WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... VA...None. NC...None. WV...None.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...EB NEAR TERM...EB SHORT TERM...JCB LONG TERM...JCB AVIATION...BMG/EB

NWS RNK Office Area Forecast Discussion

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