Sanford, North Carolina

Current Conditions

 
Temp: 52°
Dew Point: 45°
Humidity: 76%
Wind: NNE 8 mph
Visibility: 10.0 miles
Pressure: 30.19 in. -
Sky: Clear

 

Customize Your Weather

Get weather by ZIP code, city, state, airport code or country:

Weather by E-mail: Get forecasts and storm alerts delivered to you.

Sign Up...

Almanac

Average High: 61°

Average Low: 38°

Record high/year: 78° (2007)

Record low/year: 18° (1984)

Sunrise: 6:58 AM

Sunset: 5:06 PM

Detailed History

Sun and Moon

Sunrise: 06:58 AM (EST)

Moon Rise: 11:03 AM (EST)

Sunset: 05:06 PM (EST)

Moon Set: 09:19 PM (EST)

Moon Phase

Today
Nov. 24
Dec. 02
Dec. 08
Dec. 16

 

Local Radar

Local Satellite


Air Pollution

Air Pollution Forecast for Fayetteville

Current Air Quality: Good Pollutant: PM2.5
Sat Air Quality: Good Pollutant: PM2.5
Sun Air Quality: Good Pollutant: PM2.5
Mon Air Quality: Good Pollutant: PM2.5

Next 12 Hours

 
11  am
2  pm
5  pm
8  pm
11  pm
Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Mostly Cloudy Mostly Cloudy
Mostly Cloudy Mostly Cloudy
52°
61°
61°
54°
52°

 

Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database


5-Day Forecast

Saturday Partly Cloudy Hi 63° Lo 45° Partly Cloudy
Sunday Rain Hi 52° Lo 47° Rain
Monday Chance of Rain Hi 56° Lo 43° Chance of Rain
Tuesday Partly Cloudy Hi 65° Lo 45° Partly Cloudy
Wednesday Partly Cloudy Hi 65° Lo 45° Partly Cloudy

 

Forecast for Lee

Updated: 3:44 am EST on November 21, 2009

Today

Partly sunny. Highs in the lower 60s. Northeast winds around 5 mph.

 

Tonight

Mostly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s. Northeast winds around 5 mph.

 

Sunday

Rain. Cooler with highs in the lower 50s. Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 80 percent.

 

Sunday Night

Rain. Near steady temperature in the upper 40s. Northeast winds around 10 mph. Chance of rain 80 percent.

 

Monday

Cloudy. A chance of rain in the morning...then a slight chance of rain or drizzle in the afternoon. Highs in the mid 50s. North winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.

 

Monday Night

Cloudy. Lows in the lower 40s.

 

Tuesday through Thanksgiving Day

Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 60s. Lows in the mid 40s.

 

Thursday Night

Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 30s.

 

Friday

Mostly sunny. Highs in the mid 50s.

 

 

Personal Weather Stations

Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]

Location: McDonnell Horticulture, Cameron, NC

Updated: 10:16 AM EST

Temperature: 52.5 °F Dew Point: 44 °F Humidity: 72% Wind: North at 3.5 mph Pressure: 30.71 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: Raven Rock State Park, Lillington, NC

Updated: 8:26 AM EST

Temperature: 41.8 °F Dew Point: 41 °F Humidity: 96% Wind: Calm Pressure: 30.09 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 42 °F Historical Graphs

Location: Robeson Creek @ Jordan Lake, Pittsboro, NC

Updated: 10:15 AM EST

Temperature: 52.5 °F Dew Point: 44 °F Humidity: 73% Wind: Calm Pressure: 30.05 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: Henrys Ridge, Pittsboro, NC

Updated: 10:16 AM EST

Temperature: 51.3 °F Dew Point: 43 °F Humidity: 74% Wind: East at 2.0 mph Pressure: 30.19 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: Mount Vernon Springs, Siler City, NC

Updated: 10:15 AM EST

Temperature: 52.3 °F Dew Point: 34 °F Humidity: 50% Wind: SSE at 2.9 mph Pressure: 29.62 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: Jordan Lake, Pittsboro, NC

Updated: 10:15 AM EST

Temperature: 50.7 °F Dew Point: 41 °F Humidity: 69% Wind: North at 1.0 mph Pressure: 30.09 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: Overhills Creek, Spring Lake, NC

Updated: 10:15 AM EST

Temperature: 52.8 °F Dew Point: 46 °F Humidity: 76% Wind: ESE at 6.0 mph Pressure: 30.03 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: HADS FLAT CREEK NEAR INVERNESS 4E NC US USGS, Vass, NC

Updated: 9:45 AM EST

Temperature:  °F Dew Point: - Humidity: - Wind: Calm Pressure: - Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: APRSWXNET Holly Springs NC US, Holly Springs, NC

Updated: 9:52 AM EST

Temperature: 53 °F Dew Point: 43 °F Humidity: 69% Wind: NNE at 1 mph Pressure: 30.15 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: APRSWXNET Fuquay Varina NC US, Fuquay Varina, NC

Updated: 10:03 AM EST

Temperature: 52 °F Dew Point: 43 °F Humidity: 71% Wind: Calm Pressure: 30.12 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: Sortova Farm, Pittsboro, NC

Updated: 10:15 AM EST

Temperature: 48.0 °F Dew Point: 43 °F Humidity: 82% Wind: Calm Pressure: 29.97 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 48 °F Historical Graphs

Location: Main St Holly Springs, Holly Springs, NC

Updated: 10:16 AM EST

Temperature: 53.6 °F Dew Point: 40 °F Humidity: 61% Wind: East at 4.0 mph Pressure: 31.01 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: Amherst - Near Post Office, Apex, NC

Updated: 10:14 AM EST

Temperature: 53.2 °F Dew Point: 32 °F Humidity: 45% Wind: Calm Pressure: 30.18 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: Holly Springs, NC

Updated: 10:16 AM EST

Temperature: 55.2 °F Dew Point: 40 °F Humidity: 57% Wind: NNW at 3.5 mph Pressure: 29.83 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: Downtown Southern Pines, Southern Pines, NC

Updated: 10:16 AM EST

Temperature: 50.8 °F Dew Point: 46 °F Humidity: 85% Wind: NW at 1.0 mph Pressure: 30.14 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: - Historical Graphs

Location: RAWS FORT BRAGG NC US, Fort Bragg, NC

Updated: 9:14 AM EST

Temperature: 48 °F Dew Point: 44 °F Humidity: 85% Wind: NE at 6 mph Pressure: - Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 45 °F Historical Graphs

MSN Maps of:

Temperature Dew Point Humidity Wind Pressure Hourly Precipitation -

NWS Forecaster Discussion




505 
fxus62 krah 211510 
afdrah 


Area forecast discussion 
National Weather Service Raleigh NC 
1010 am EST Sat Nov 21 2009 


Synopsis... 
a low pressure system in the northwest Gulf of Mexico will move 
slowly northeast toward the Florida Gulf Coast tonight...before 
weakening and reforming along the Carolina coast Sunday night. This 
will bring increasing cloud cover and a good chance of rain to 
central North Carolina by Sunday night. 


&& 


Near term /through tonight/... 
as of 1000 am Saturday... 


15z surface analysis showed 1025 mb high pressure centered over WV. 1008 
mb low pressure was centered near buoy 42361 in the northwest Gulf 
of Mexico. Aloft...12z radiosonde observation analysis showed an 850 mb front stalled 
over central NC (lwx -1c, wal 4c, gso 5c, mhx 9c). Further aloft...a 
split flow pattern was noted across the Continental U.S.. a 500 mb low was 
centered over southeast Texas. A 90 knots southern stream jet was noted 
along the southern periphery of the upper low over northern Mexico 
and the northern Gomex. A 100 knots northern stream jet was noted over 
the northern middle-Atlantic ahead of a deamplifying northern stream 
trough over the lower Great Lakes. A ridge aloft was present over 
the central and northern Great Plains. 


Today: 
the upper low currently over southeast Texas is prognosticated to move east-northeast 
into la by 00z this evening...while the associated surface low currently over 
the northwest Gomex is prognosticated to be located over or just south of 
the southern la coast. Surface high pressure currently centered over WV 
is expected to remain centered over portions of the mid-Atlantic... 
lower Great Lakes and Ohio Valley in associated/west confluent flow 
aloft...with a surface ridge axis extending south into the Carolinas. 
Expect a steady influx of middle/upper level cloud cover throughout the 
day today as moisture moves downstream of the upper low along the 
Gulf Coast into the southeast states and Carolinas. Moisture 
advection will generally be limited to the upper levels today...and 
cloud bases will remain at or above 15-18 kft...consistent with forecast 
soundings showing any saturation at or above ~500 mb through 00z. Lift today 
across central NC will be confined to very weak low level 
convergence in associated/west the stalled 850 mb front over the area. 
Although there is currently a northern stream jet entrance region 
north/northwest of central NC this morning...this feature is prognosticated to weaken 
and lift northeast through the day. Model isentropic fields do 
indicate increasing isentropic lift across the southeast states 
today as a 925-850 mb warm front moves northward toward the central 
Gulf Coast ahead of the surface/upper low in la. However...isentropic 
lift will be weak and remain confined well south/SW of central NC. 
As a result...expect no chance for precipitation today. High temperatures 
will be complicated primarily by broken skies associated/west upper level 
cloud cover. Thicknesses would argue for highs in the ~63f range 
with full sun... however...given weak low level northeast flow and 
broken upper level cloud cover...a range of 61-63f looks more 
reasonable...coolest north and warmest south. 


Tonight: 
the upper low currently over southeast Texas is prognosticated to deamplify 
tonight as it moves slowly east-northeast into the deep south. The attendant 
surface low is also prognosticated to weaken a few millibars as it moves along 
a baroclinic zone located over the Central/Northeast Gulf Coast. 
Despite the weakening southern stream dynamics...isentropic lift is 
expected to strengthen over the southeast states into the southern 
Carolinas tonight as a 925-850 mb warm front lifts northward into 
Alabama/Georgia ahead of the low pressure system along the Gulf Coast. The 
best low level moisture and isentropic lift is expected to remain 
well S/SW of central NC through 12z sun...with precipitation chances 
largely confined to Alabama/Georgia and perhaps southern/western portions of 
SC. As a result...expect a dry forecast to continue through the 
overnight hours. Middle/upper level cloud cover will be pervasive 
across the area tonight in associated/west the low pressure system upstream 
of the area...and that will be the primary complicating factor 
west/regard to low temperatures. A MOS guidance blend looks pretty 
reasonable...with lows in the Lower/Middle 40s. -Vincent 


&& 


Short term /Sunday through Monday night/... 
as of 315 am... 


A 700 millibar warm front near the South Carolina border sunrise 
Sunday will exit to the north after sunset. Given the expected 
northward progress of the front and moderate to weak isentropic 
lift near 850 millibars... at least the southwest three quarters 
should see measurable rain before sunset Sunday. 


As the upper system lifts northeast through the mountains Sunday 
night... low pressure development off the Carolinas occurs and 
becomes the dominate surface low. Good middle level isentropic lift 
in the middle levels should keep rain chances high into Sunday night. 
Most models damp out the parent low pressure trough as it moves 
northeast and keep the surface low weaker than the Canadian as it 
approaches Cape Hatteras. Rainfall perhaps two tenths inch 
northwest to four tenths southeast Sunday night. 


Winds weaken late Sunday night into Monday and heavier 
precipitation may miss US to the east Monday. Precipitation may 
linger longest in the northeast with the exiting surface low but 
rainfall amounts of one tenth inch or less east... and much less 
to the west. Of course if the low tracks closer to the coast... 
these amounts are underdone. Only a slight rain chance in the 
northeast with the exiting low Monday night. 


Overnight lows 45 to 50 Sunday night... and mostly middle 40s Tuesday 
night. Sunday high temperatures near 50 northwest to upper 50s 
southeast. If a cold air mass damming wedge sets up as expected 
Monday...a low overcast with light rain or drizzle possible. The 
current forecast Ten Degree diurnal rise to Monday afternoon would 
need to be dropped to three to six degrees if clouds are able to 
persist into early Monday evening. 


&& 


Long term /Tuesday through Friday/... 
as of 315 am Friday... 


Any light precipitation lingering into Monday night should be gone by 
Tuesday morning...as southwesterly middle level flow Ushers in drier 
air above the remaining cad airmass. The possibility lingering low 
clouds could complicate the temperature forecast on Tuesday as some 
moisture remains below a subsidence inversion beneath developing 
shortwave ridging aloft. Will stick with MOS values with highs 
64-70. 


The forecast gets quite a bit more complicated beyond Tuesday...with 
the handling of a shortwave expected to enter the Pacific northwest 
on Monday and emerge over the north Central Plains by Wednesday. The 
general trend is for the development of a high amplitude longwave 
trough by the end of the week...and while both the GFS and European model (ecmwf) 
resolve such a solution...they currently get the similar answer 
through somewhat different scenarios. The GFS sends the 
aforementioned shortwave across the upper Midwest and the lifts the 
system into Ontario by Thursday...pushing a dry cold front into 
central NC Wednesday night. This is followed by a second shortwave that 
dives south through the Midwest...but with no more to work 
with....points east of the mountains stay dry even as a surface wave 
is induced offshore Thursday morning. The European model (ecmwf) on the other hand 
is much slower with the first shortwave...allowing more moisture to 
be pulled north over a persistent surface ridge along the eastern 
Seaboard. Cyclogenesis along the coast subsequently occurs closer 
to the coast Thursday morning with less eastward progression of the 
surface front...and thus the European model (ecmwf) produces precipitation over the eastern 
third of NC. Given these continued model inconsistencies...feel the 
best course of action is to show below normal temperatures for the end of 
the week...continuing with higher slight chance probability of precipitation in the east 
until some sort of model convergence begins. 




&& 


Aviation /12z Saturday through Thursday/... 
as of 645 am Saturday... 


With models trending slower on the arrival of a storm system 
currently over the western Gulf Coast...VFR conditions will prevail 
through the valid taf forecast. Scattered to broken cirrus and eventually 
cirrostratus will drift across the region today and into 
tonight...all ahead of a storm system set to impact central NC from 
the southwest during the day Sunday. At the surface...high pressure 
to our north will settle over New England...extending a ridge of dry 
air down the East Coast....and providing a light NE wind. 


As the storm system approaches from the southwest Sunday morning 
ceilings will eventually lower to MVFR or IFR levels Sunday through 
Monday....with periods of rain possible at all taf sites. At least 
MVFR ceilings are expected to persist through late Monday...before a 
coastal low moves away from NC and pulls drier air into the area. 
Conditions are expected to remain VFR for the most through the 
balance of the week...although there is the potential for another 
weather system to effect mainly eastern terminals by Thursday. 


&& 


Rah watches/warnings/advisories... 
none. 


&& 


$$ 


Synopsis...Vincent 
near term...Vincent 
short term...99 
long term...Smith 
aviation...Smith 










National Weather Service Glossary of Abbreviations

Non-Expanded Version (with abbreviations)

Powered by the Weather Underground, Inc.