Mostly cloudy. A chance of rain in the evening. Breezy with lows in the mid 40s. Northeast winds 15 to 20 mph with gusts up to 30 mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday
Mostly cloudy. Highs in the upper 50s. North winds 10 to 15 mph.
... Flash Flood Watch remains in effect until 6 PM EST this evening...
The Flash Flood Watch continues for
* portions of northeast Georgia... western North Carolina and upstate South Carolina... including the following areas... in northeast Georgia... Elbert... Franklin... Hart and Stephens. In western North Carolina... Avery... Buncombe... eastern Polk... Henderson... Madison... Mitchell... Polk mountains... Transylvania and Yancey. In upstate South Carolina... Abbeville... Anderson... greater Greenville... greater Oconee... greater Pickens... Greenville mountains... Greenwood... Laurens... Oconee mountains... Pickens mountains... Spartanburg and Union SC.
* Until 6 PM EST this evening
* a large band of moderate to heavy rain will likely remain across the east facing slopes of the mountains and the adjacent foothills through this afternoon. Additional rainfall amounts of 1 to 2 inches are possible today... resulting in storm total accumulations of 3 to 5 inches. Areas along and east of the Interstate 85 corridor will see scattered to numerous showers this afternoon. Additional rainfall amounts may range from a half inch near the Savannah River to a inch or more across the mountains.
* Flooding is already in progress across portions western Carolinas. The additional rainfall will exacerbate existing flooding... and may lead to new flooding problems. Although the main effects will be along smaller streams and urbanized areas... minor flooding is expected to develop later today across upper portions of the French Broad River in North Carolina. In mountainous or hilly terrain... rainfall amounts of 5 inches or more over a large area lead to a significant increase in landslide threat on an isolated to scattered basis.
Precautionary/preparedness actions...
A Flash Flood Watch means that conditions may develop that lead to flash flooding. Flash flooding is a very dangerous situation.
You should monitor later forecasts and be prepared to take action should flash flood warnings be issued.
Wind Advisory
Statement as of 11:29 AM EST on November 11, 2009
... Wind Advisory remains in effect until 7 am EST Thursday...
A Wind Advisory remains in effect until 7 am EST Thursday.
Sustained winds of 15 to 25 mph... with gusts as high as 40 mph... will continue today and tonight across the Piedmont and much of the foothills of the western Carolinas and northeast Georgia. These gusty winds... combined with saturated soil from the ongoing rainfall... will likely cause a number of trees to become uprooted across the advisory area.
Precautionary/preparedness actions...
This Wind Advisory has been issued because gusty winds are expected to cause quite a few trees to fall due to saturated soil. This may result in scattered power outages.
Record Report
Statement as of 2:04 am EST on November 11, 2009
... Record daily maximum rainfall set at Greenville-Spartanburg SC...
A record rainfall of 2.42 inches was set at the Greenville-Spartanburg Airport on Tuesday. This breaks the old record of 1.16 inches set on November 10 in 1987.