Awendaw, SC Marine Weather and Tide Forecast
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Marine Weather and Tide Forecast for Awendaw, SC


December 2, 2023 4:30 PM EST (21:30 UTC)
Sunrise 7:03AM   Sunset 5:14PM   Moonrise  10:05PM   Moonset 11:39AM 

NOTE: Some of the data on this page has not been verified and should be used with that in mind. It may and occasionally will, be wrong. The tide reports are by xtide and are NOT FOR NAVIGATION. Privacy and Cookie policy

Marine Forecasts
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AMZ330 Charleston Harbor- 311 Pm Est Sat Dec 2 2023
Tonight..S winds 5 to 10 kt, becoming sw late. Showers likely with a slight chance of tstms this evening, then a chance of showers after midnight. Patchy fog this evening, then areas of fog after midnight.
Sun..SW winds 10 kt. Areas of fog in the morning. A chance of showers with a slight chance of tstms.
Sun night..W winds 5 kt. A slight chance of showers in the evening.
Mon..W winds 5 to 10 kt, increasing to 10 to 15 kt in the afternoon.
Mon night..W winds 10 to 15 kt, becoming nw 5 to 10 kt after midnight.
Tue..NW winds 5 to 10 kt, becoming W in the afternoon.
Tue night..W winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts to 20 kt.
Wed..NW winds 15 kt.
Wed night..N winds 10 to 15 kt.
Thu..N winds 5 to 10 kt.
Thu night..W winds 5 kt.
winds and waves higher in and near tstms.
unless otherwise noted, waves 1 foot or less.
charleston harbor water temperature 59 degrees.

AMZ300 311 Pm Est Sat Dec 2 2023
Synopsis for the coastal waters of south coastal south carolina and north coastal georgia.. A warm front will lift up through the region tonight, followed by a cold front passing through later Sunday afternoon and Sunday night. This will maintain unsettled weather across the region through Sunday. High pressure will then prevail through much of next week.


7 Day Forecast for Marine Location Near Awendaw, SC
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Area Discussion for - Charleston, SC
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FXUS62 KCHS 022034 AFDCHS

Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Charleston SC 334 PM EST Sat Dec 2 2023

SYNOPSIS
A warm front will lift up through the region tonight, followed by a cold front passing through later Sunday afternoon and Sunday night. This will maintain unsettled weather across the region through Sunday. High pressure will then prevail through much of next week.

NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM SUNDAY MORNING/
Rest of Today: Little change is expected in the pattern aloft; SW flow will continue to prevail. At the surface the region will remain well within the warm sector of a low pressure system positioned to the west. Rain has overspread the panhandle of FL and areas to the south of the forecast area, with only some light showers impacting the far southern zones. Models have continued to back off on POPs this afternoon as the ongoing showers and convection to the south are essentially robing the local area of moisture. Light showers should continue to work northeastward into this evening, overspreading the forecast area. Rainfall totals are not forecast to be impressive, generally less than 0.5 inches.

Tonight: Precipitation chances will slowly wane through the overnight hours as a cold front approaches from the west, with only 20-30% POPs by daybreak. The main concern for the overnight period is the possibility of fog/low stratus. The better chances for dense fog are right along the coastline where marine fog could occasionally push onshore. Overnight lows are only forecast to dip into the low to mid 60s.

SHORT TERM /6 AM SUNDAY MORNING THROUGH TUESDAY/
Larger scale troughiness will be in place across central NOAM to start the short term, bounded by ridging along either coast, and a couple of stout short-waves pinwheeling around the trough across the Midwest and Ohio River Valley. At the surface, low pressure in the Gulf today will be ejecting quickly northeastward through the mid Atlantic and into New England on Sunday, ahead of the larger scale trough. Strong southwesterly flow ahead of the low will drive an unseasonal warm and moist airmass into the region late tonight through Sunday, with PWAT values nearing 2 inches which, if verified, would be a daily max for Dec 3 per SPC sounding climatology.

Surface cold front will follow, pressing through the region later Sunday and Sunday night with cooler and drier air spreading back into the region to start the work week.

Precip chances remain the primary forecast challenge through Sunday night.

Sunday/Sunday night: As mentioned, a very pronounced and moist warm sector will be in place on Sunday pushing temperatures into the mid to upper 70s along with a touch of mugginess. Main question revolves around precip chances. Once the warm sector arrives, isentropic ascent will weaken considerably on Sunday. But given the very strong upper axis to our northwest, there will be some upper jet forcing support across the region along with modest low level convergence and a degree of instability (a few to several hundred J/Kg of MUCAPE) ahead of the approaching boundary. Plan is to maintain chancy pops throughout the day along with a mention of thunder.
Precip chances diminish and move off the coast Sunday evening.

Rest of the short term: Another strong short-wave will be swinging across the Ohio Valley to off the mid Atlantic coast on Monday, although strongest forcing and better moisture remains well to our north. Thus, keeping the forecast dry. Meanwhile, progressively cooler temperatures are anticipated through the first half of the week. Highs in the middle 60s to around 70 on Monday and down into the lower 60s on Tuesday. Lows in the upper 30s to middle 40s both nights.

LONG TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY/
Last in the series of short-wave impulses is expected to dive down through the mid Atlantic and southeast CONUS midweek followed by short-wave ridging building through the region for the balance of the long term forecast. Once again, bulk of moisture and forcing remains well to our north on Wednesday and we will keep the forecast dry at this juncture. But with the trough, a couple day stretch of cool temperatures is anticipated with highs mainly in the 50s (well below normal) and chilly overnight temperatures through Thursday morning. Warmer air presses back into the region Friday and into next weekend.

AVIATION /20Z SATURDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/
KCHS/KJZI: Conditions to start the 18Z TAF period will be VFR, however moments of MVFR cig/vis are expected at KJZI and are reflected in a TEMPO group. Light rainfall is expected to move in from the southwest later this afternoon, impacting both terminals. In addition to the rainfall, low cigs are expected to move in overnight with fog/low stratus.

KSAV: MVFR conditions will start off the 18Z TAF period as well as some light rain showers likely ongoing, or will be ongoing soon. Rain showers will continue to work their way into the area through the afternoon. Additionally, low cigs are expected to move in later tonight with fog/low stratus.

Extended Aviation Outlook: Flight restrictions in low clouds and showers will likely persist through Sunday afternoon into Sunday evening, before conditions trend back to VFR later Sunday night and into Monday. Then, overall VFR conditions will prevail through the first half of next week.

MARINE
Tonight: Late tonight winds should turn more southwesterly and begin to increase more into the 10-15 knot range. Seas are forecast to average 2-4 feet.

Fog: Patchy fog seems to be holding on across multiple locations, with local webcams showing patchy fog in the Charleston Harbor and as far south as Tybee Island. Mention of patchy fog has been extended in the forecast for several more hours. It remains unclear if this fog will persist into the overnight, and thus contributing to the fog/low stratus expected overnight. Either way, fog/low stratus is forecast late tonight and into tomorrow morning across the local marine waters as well as the Charleston Harbor. Any sea fog that develops tonight has the potential to linger around until Sunday.

Sunday through Thursday: Southwest winds will persist through Sunday ahead of a cold front and there may be a few gusts into the lower 20 knot range on Sunday across the Charleston nearshore areas, although conditions should remain below Small Craft Advisory criteria. Winds will turn westerly following fropa Sunday night and increase later Monday into Monday night. Another brief period of gusts near 25 knots will be possible mainly across the Charleston county waters and outer Georgia waters during that time...but it looks marginal at this point. A better chance for Small Craft Advisories will occur Tuesday night through Wednesday night behind another cold front.
Conditions will improve for Thursday as high pressure shifts overhead.

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


Weather Reporting Stations
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Stations Dist Age Wind Air TempWater Temp WavesinHgDewPt
41029 - Capers Nearshore (CAP 2) 10 mi83 min SSE 3.9G7.8 63°F 30.0063°F
CHTS1 17 mi43 min SE 5.1G6 59°F30.03
FBIS1 - Folly Island, SC 21 mi91 min ESE 5.1G6 63°F 30.0263°F
NIWS1 - North Inlet-Winyah Bay Reserve, SC 38 mi46 min SE 1 64°F 30.0164°F
41004 - EDISTO - 41 NM Southeast of Charleston, SC 43 mi31 min WSW 9.7G12 73°F 76°F30.0371°F
ACXS1 - ACE Basin Reserve, SC 49 mi46 min 0 68°F 30.0665°F

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Wind History for Charleston, SC
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Airport Reports
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AirportDistAgeWind ktVisSkyWeatherTempDewPtRHinHg
KLRO MT PLEASANT RGNLFAISON FIELD,SC 6 sm15 mincalm6 smOvercast Mist 68°F68°F100%30.01
KCHS CHARLESTON AFB/INTL,SC 19 sm34 mincalm10 smOvercast72°F63°F73%30.00
KJZI CHARLESTON EXECUTIVE,SC 24 sm15 mincalm9 smOvercast68°F68°F100%30.00

Wind History from LRO
(wind in knots)


Tide / Current for Moores Landing, ICWW, Sewee Bay, South Carolina
   
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Moores Landing
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Sat -- 04:58 AM EST     0.67 feet Low Tide
Sat -- 07:04 AM EST     Sunrise
Sat -- 11:27 AM EST     5.25 feet High Tide
Sat -- 11:38 AM EST     Moonset
Sat -- 05:11 PM EST     Sunset
Sat -- 05:42 PM EST     1.05 feet Low Tide
Sat -- 10:04 PM EST     Moonrise
Sat -- 11:53 PM EST     4.23 feet High Tide
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Sorry tide depth graphs only, please select another station.

Moores Landing, ICWW, Sewee Bay, South Carolina, Tide feet
12
am
4.2
1
am
3.5
2
am
2.6
3
am
1.7
4
am
1
5
am
0.7
6
am
1
7
am
1.9
8
am
3
9
am
4
10
am
4.8
11
am
5.2
12
pm
5.2
1
pm
4.7
2
pm
3.8
3
pm
2.7
4
pm
1.8
5
pm
1.2
6
pm
1.1
7
pm
1.5
8
pm
2.2
9
pm
3
10
pm
3.7
11
pm
4.1



Tide / Current for Charleston Harbor Entrance, South Carolina Current
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Charleston Harbor Entrance
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Sat -- 02:27 AM EST     -1.61 knots Max Ebb
Sat -- 05:26 AM EST     0.00 knots Slack
Sat -- 07:04 AM EST     Sunrise
Sat -- 07:58 AM EST     1.40 knots Max Flood
Sat -- 11:39 AM EST     Moonset
Sat -- 11:41 AM EST     -0.00 knots Slack
Sat -- 03:04 PM EST     -1.83 knots Max Ebb
Sat -- 05:13 PM EST     Sunset
Sat -- 06:22 PM EST     0.00 knots Slack
Sat -- 08:27 PM EST     1.06 knots Max Flood
Sat -- 10:05 PM EST     Moonrise
Sat -- 11:54 PM EST     -0.00 knots Slack
Tide / Current data from XTide NOT FOR NAVIGATION
Sorry tide depth graphs only, please select another station.

Charleston Harbor Entrance, South Carolina Current, knots
12
am
-0.6
1
am
-1.2
2
am
-1.6
3
am
-1.5
4
am
-1.1
5
am
-0.3
6
am
0.4
7
am
1.1
8
am
1.4
9
am
1.2
10
am
0.9
11
am
0.5
12
pm
-0.2
1
pm
-1
2
pm
-1.6
3
pm
-1.8
4
pm
-1.6
5
pm
-1
6
pm
-0.3
7
pm
0.5
8
pm
1
9
pm
1
10
pm
0.7
11
pm
0.4




Weather Map
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Charleston, SC,



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