Weather




Southern Pines, North Carolina

National Weather Service: Special Weather Statement

Current Conditions

 
Temp: 37°
Humidity: N/A%
Wind: North 6 mph
Visibility: 10.0 miles
Pressure: 30.17 in. +
Sky: Mostly Cloudy
Wind Chill: 33°

 

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Almanac

Average High: °

Average Low: °

Record high/year: ° ()

Record low/year: ° ()

Sunrise: 6:58 AM

Sunset: 5:08 PM

Detailed History

Sun and Moon

Sunrise: 06:58 AM (EST)

Moon Rise: 01:11 AM (EST)

Sunset: 05:08 PM (EST)

Moon Set: 01:40 PM (EST)

Moon Phase

Today
Nov. 27
Dec. 05
Dec. 12
Dec. 19

 

Local Radar

Local Satellite



Next 12 Hours

 
9  am
12  pm
3  pm
6  pm
9  pm
Chance of Snow Chance of Snow
Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Clear Clear
Clear Clear
Clear Clear
40°
41°
40°
31°
27°

 

Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database


5-Day Forecast

Friday Chance of Snow Hi 43° Lo 20° Chance of Snow
Saturday Partly Cloudy Hi 43° Lo 22° Partly Cloudy
Sunday Partly Cloudy Hi 56° Lo 29° Partly Cloudy
Monday Chance of Rain Hi 58° Lo 40° Chance of Rain
Tuesday Partly Cloudy Hi 54° Lo 29° Partly Cloudy

 

Forecast for Moore

Updated: 6:40 am EST on November 21, 2008

Today

Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain or snow early this morning...then mostly cloudy with a slight chance of rain or snow late this morning. Mostly sunny this afternoon. Breezy with highs in the lower 40s. Northwest winds 10 to 20 mph with gusts up to 30 mph. Chance of precipitation 40 percent.

 

Tonight

Clear. Lows in the lower 20s. Northwest winds 10 to 15 mph...decreasing to around 5 mph after midnight.

 

Saturday

Sunny in the morning...then becoming partly sunny. Highs in the mid 40s. Northwest winds 5 to 10 mph.

 

Saturday Night

Partly cloudy. Cold with lows in the lower 20s. Southwest winds around 5 mph.

 

Sunday

Mostly sunny. Not as cool with highs in the mid 50s. Southwest winds around 5 mph.

 

Sunday Night

Mostly clear. Cold with lows in the upper 20s.

 

Monday

Partly sunny. A chance of rain showers in the afternoon. Highs in the upper 50s. Chance of rain 50 percent.

 

Monday Night

Mostly cloudy with a 50 percent chance of showers. Not as cool with lows around 40.

 

Tuesday

Partly sunny. Highs in the mid 50s.

 

Tuesday Night through Thanksgiving Day

Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 30s. Highs in the mid 50s.

 

 

 Special Weather Statement  Statement as of 5:45 am EST on November 21, 2008


... Enhanced fire danger conditions expected today...

Strong gusty northwest winds will begin over central North Carolina
this morning... and continue through this afternoon. Sustained wind
speeds will frequently be around 15 to 20 mph from mid morning
through the afternoon hours... with occasional gusts to 25 to 30
mph. In addition... relative humidity values are expected to fall to
between 25 and 30 percent this afternoon.

These conditions combined with recent dry and windy weather has led
to a drying of fine fuel moisture levels across the area. With cold
temperatures in the upper 30s and 40s expected during the
afternoon... the warmth required to sustain fire growth will be
absent. However... burning is not recommended due to the strong
winds... low relative humidity levels... and dry Leaf litter...
which could lead to rapid fire spread.


Hartfield







416 PM EST Thu Nov 20 2008

... Enhanced fire danger conditions expected on Friday...

A strong cold front will push through central North Carolina
tonight. Strong gusty northwest winds are expected to begin over
central North Carolina before sunrise Friday. Sustained wind speeds
will be near 20 mph at times from mid morning through the afternoon
hours... with frequent gusts to 30 mph. The relative humidity values
are expected to fall to between 25 and 30 percent Friday afternoon.

These conditions combined with recent dry windy weather has led to a
drying of the fine fuel moisture levels. With cold temperatures in
the upper 30s and 40s expected during the afternoon... warmth to
sustain fire growth will be absent. However... burning is not
recommended due to the strong winds... low relative humidity
levels... and dry Leaf litter... which could lead to rapid fire
spread.

Badgett




 Public Information Statement  Statement as of 8:22 am EST on November 21, 2008


... Public information statement...

NOAA Weather Radio station wxl-42... operated by the National
Weather Service office in Raleigh North Carolina... and serving the
northwest Piedmont of North Carolina and adjacent Virginia
counties on 162.400 mhz... is back on the air.



Personal Weather Stations

Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]

Location: Pinehurst Village, Pinehurst, NC

Updated: 9:00 AM EST

Temperature: 36.0 °F Dew Point: 32 °F Humidity: 84% Wind: Calm Pressure: 30.28 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 36 °F Historical Graphs

Location: Pinehurst, NC

Updated: 9:15 AM EST

Temperature: 37.9 °F Dew Point: 30 °F Humidity: 72% Wind: Calm Pressure: 30.20 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 38 °F Historical Graphs

Location: Forest Lake Dr, Foxfire Village, NC

Updated: 9:10 AM EST

Temperature: 38.8 °F Dew Point: 32 °F Humidity: 75% Wind: North at 4.0 mph Pressure: 30.12 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 36 °F Historical Graphs

Location: McDonnell Horticulture, Cameron, NC

Updated: 9:15 AM EST

Temperature: 36.5 °F Dew Point: 29 °F Humidity: 74% Wind: NW at 5.1 mph Pressure: 29.92 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 32 °F Historical Graphs

Location: Seven Lakes, NC

Updated: 9:10 AM EST

Temperature: 37.8 °F Dew Point: 31 °F Humidity: 75% Wind: Calm Pressure: 30.14 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 38 °F Historical Graphs

Location: Hoke County-N4TKD, Raeford, NC

Updated: 9:14 AM EST

Temperature: 38.6 °F Dew Point: 31 °F Humidity: 75% Wind: NW at 5.0 mph Pressure: 30.24 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 35 °F Historical Graphs

Location: APRSWXNET Fayetteville NC US, Fayetteville, NC

Updated: 8:58 AM EST

Temperature: 37 °F Dew Point: 30 °F Humidity: 77% Wind: North at 2 mph Pressure: 30.23 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 37 °F Historical Graphs

Location: RAWS ROCKINGHAM NC US, Rockingham, NC

Updated: 7:04 AM EST

Temperature: 39 °F Dew Point: 30 °F Humidity: 69% Wind: North at 2 mph Pressure: 30.12 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 39 °F Historical Graphs

Location: Gates Four, Fayetteville, NC

Updated: 9:14 AM EST

Temperature: 40.5 °F Dew Point: 27 °F Humidity: 59% Wind: WNW at 2.0 mph Pressure: 29.97 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 40 °F Historical Graphs

MSN Maps of:

Temperature Dew Point Humidity Wind Pressure Hourly Precipitation -

NWS Forecaster Discussion




413 
fxus62 krah 211339 
afdrah 


Area forecast discussion 
National Weather Service Raleigh NC 
739 am EST Friday Nov 21 2008 


Synopsis... 
a polar cold front will drop to the southeast across the region 
through daybreak. Blustery winds from the northwest behind the front 
will usher on another round of very cold air. The colder than normal 
temperatures will continue through Sunday. 


&& 


Near term /through tonight/... 
as of 630 am Friday... 
update: the band of heaviest precipitation is moving out of the Winter 
Weather Advisory area... and will go ahead and cancel the remainder 
of the advisory. Light snow... mixed with a little rain south of 
Highway 64... will continue to fall across much of the area through 
middle morning... until the shortwave trough shifts east of the area. 
We could see a light dusting on vehicles and grass especially 
northeast of Raleigh over the next few hours. 


As of 155 am Friday... 


Through today: interesting situation unfolding as radar returns have 
been increasing in a broad band across the northwest Piedmont and 
northern and central foothills in the last few hours. Cloud ceilings 
have been high though... generally above 7000 feet... and with the 
surface dew point depression still 15f or better... this precipitation 
aloft has not been reaching the ground... until very recently. Mount 
Airy has just reported light snow as has Forsyth County... and 
ceilings have started to fall in locations such as Danville and 
Martinsville Virginia. Synoptic scale lift is already increasing: the 
middle level vorticity maximum we've been anticipating has dropped into 
eastern Kentucky with rapidly increasing positive vorticity advection into Virginia/northwest NC... the 130 knots 
upper jet core has settled across WV/northern Virginia... q-vector convergence 
is on the rise this morning especially over northern NC... and strong middle 
level height falls of 140 meters are expected overhead through this 
morning. In addition... 700 mb frontogenesis really ramps up 
particularly over northern and eastern NC... concurrent with strong pressure 
advection on the 1.5 pvu surface. Given this strong lift potential 
and radar trends... have raised probability of precipitation up to 50-80% mainly across the 
western and northern County Warning Area through daybreak... with probability of precipitation spreading into eastern 
NC through middle morning. Will set accumulation as an inch or less 
mainly on grassy locations in the advisory area. The only sticking 
point is the surface wet bulb temperatures which are hovering near 
freezing to the middle 30s across the County Warning Area. But as the polar air begins 
to arrive in earnest with frontal passage this morning... this 
should become less of an inhibiting factor... especially if we get 
strong enough lift. Farther south... including Wadesboro/ Fay/ 
Clinton... the large scale lift should be less this morning... and 
with higher surface wet bulbs... will have precipitation as light snow or 
rain. Highs of 40-45 today... with mostly cloudy skies early (partly 
cloudy south) followed by clearing for the afternoon... looks good 
given that low level thicknesses will start the day around 1280 M. 
Scattered clouds beneath the subsidence inversion aloft should 
develop through the afternoon but otherwise expect a good bit of 
sunshine this afternoon. Winds will then supplant snow as the big 
weather story. Strong cold air advection with sustained winds to 
15-25 miles per hour will knock wind chills down in the upper 20s to middle 30s 
for much of the day. Winds should subside this evening with a 
continued drying column leading to clear skies. Lows 19-23... with 
outlying sheltered areas likely even colder and urban areas possibly 
slightly less cold. Record lows will be approached if not broken. 
-Gih 


&& 


Short term /Saturday through Sunday night/... 
as of 325 am Friday... 


For Saturday/Saturday night: the surface high settles overhead and 
the 850 mb anticyclone drifts overhead during this period. But 
farther aloft... what is now a strong low pushing through the 
interior Pacific northwest dives quickly to the east-southeast... dampening 
into an open wave as it approaches NC. But nevertheless this wave 
remains of respectable strength and should still bring in 
appreciable middle and high cloudiness spreading into NC Saturday 
afternoon from the northwest. NAM/GFS forecast soundings are in good 
agreement on this. Have raised sky cover... starting the increase in 
the late morning. Thicknesses start to rebound as the 850 mb warm 
front heads to our NE and highs should be a degree or two warmer... 
42-46... hardly noticeable though given the frigid start to the day. 
Cloud cover should decrease late Saturday night as the clipper 
shortwave trough exits. Forecast lows in the low-middle 20s still look 
good. 


For Sunday/Sunday night: quiet weather for Sunday with surface high 
pressure over the eastern Carolinas and broad (but weak) ridging in 
the middle levels. Thicknesses rise into the 1290-1300 meter range... 
still well below normal however... and we should see highs still 
about 1-2 categories below normal... 52-57. Our next weather system 
of interest... a polar vortex... drops into the upper Midwest Sunday 
night... and middle level flow into the Appalachians starts to become 
cyclonic and strengthens... as the surface highs shifts offshore. We 
should see increasing high clouds through the night but this should 
have little impact on radiational cooling. Expect lows of 28-32. 
-Gih 


&& 


Long term /Monday through Thursday/... 
as of 455 am Friday... 


For Monday through tuesday: a cold middle level vortex is expected to 
drop southeast across the Great Lakes region during this period. The 
latest GFS and European model (ecmwf) are in good agreement on a faster arrival of 
the next cold front as compared to yesterday's guidance... and have 
hastened the cloud cover increase and raised probability of precipitation Monday afternoon 
to high chances in the northwest County Warning Area... tapering to slight chance in the 
southeast. Chance probability of precipitation will be continued through Monday night as the 
cold front sweeps rapidly east. The front should be well off the 
coast by Tuesday morning... and only a slight chance east of I-95 is 
expected early Tuesday morning. Expect clearing from the west by 
midday Tuesday. Highs 55-62 Monday with thicknesses just 10-15 M 
below normal. Highs Tuesday 52-57... a much less modest cooling than 
we've seen with these recent cold front passages... as the incoming 
surface air mass has its source in the Pacific and rockies rather 
than Canada. Morning lows 37-43. 


For Wednesday through Thanksgiving day: still looks quiet and cool 
in central NC. The middle level vortex sits and spins over the interior 
northeast according to the latest GFS and European model (ecmwf)... although the 
European model (ecmwf) is a bit farther north. Our boundary layer flow will continue 
from the northwest with Lee troughing holding on through the County Warning Area. Will 
continue the dry forecast with considerable sunshine and continued 
below normal temperatures. -Gih 


&& 


Aviation /12z Friday through Tuesday/... 
as of 740 am Friday... 


The band of light snow and associated MVFR to IFR conditions will 
continue to pivot eastward through late morning... ending at rdu by 
13-14z and Fay and rwi between 15 and 16z. VFR conditions for the 
remainder of today and tonight... with just some 4 to 6 thousand feet 
scattered cumulus or stratocumulus... mainly this afternoon. The 
main aviation concern for today will become 15-20 knot sustained 
northwesterly winds with frequent gusts between 22 and 28 kts. The 
winds will gradually die off to less than 10 knots and back to a 
more west northwesterly component after sunset. 


Aside from a chance of light rain showers and sub-VFR conditions 
associated with the passage of the next storm system Monday and 
Monday night... VFR conditions are expected through Tuesday. 


&& 


Climate... 
record lows for Saturday (november 22): 
rdu....23 (1987) 
gso....17 (2000) 


&& 


Rah watches/warnings/advisories... 
Winter Weather Advisory until 8 am EST this morning for 
ncz007>009-021>025-038-039. 


&& 


$$ 


Synopsis...Hartfield 
near term...Hartfield 
short term...Hartfield 
long term...Hartfield 
aviation...mws 
climate...Hartfield 










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