Rocky Mount, North Carolina 7 Day Weather Forecast
Wx Forecast - Wx Discussion - Wx Aviation
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NWS Forecast for Rocky Mount NC
National Weather Service Forecast for:
Rocky Mount NC
Issued by: National Weather Service Raleigh, NC |
Updated: 3:55 am EDT Apr 3, 2025 |
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Overnight
 Slight Chance Rain
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Thursday
 Slight Chance Rain then Partly Sunny
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Thursday Night
 Mostly Cloudy
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Friday
 Decreasing Clouds
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Friday Night
 Partly Cloudy
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Saturday
 Partly Sunny
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Saturday Night
 Partly Cloudy
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Sunday
 Partly Sunny then Chance Showers
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Sunday Night
 Showers
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Lo 65 °F |
Hi 86 °F |
Lo 66 °F |
Hi 88 °F |
Lo 65 °F |
Hi 87 °F |
Lo 67 °F |
Hi 88 °F |
Lo 62 °F |
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Hazardous Weather Outlook
Overnight
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A slight chance of rain or drizzle. Cloudy, with a low around 65. South wind around 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%. |
Thursday
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A slight chance of rain or drizzle before 9am. Cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly sunny, with a high near 86. Southwest wind 10 to 16 mph, with gusts as high as 26 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%. |
Thursday Night
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Mostly cloudy, with a low around 66. South wind 8 to 11 mph. |
Friday
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Cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly sunny, with a high near 88. Southwest wind 9 to 14 mph, with gusts as high as 22 mph. |
Friday Night
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Partly cloudy, with a low around 65. South wind around 6 mph. |
Saturday
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Partly sunny, with a high near 87. |
Saturday Night
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Partly cloudy, with a low around 67. |
Sunday
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A chance of showers after 2pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 88. Chance of precipitation is 30%. |
Sunday Night
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Showers, mainly after 8pm. Low around 62. Chance of precipitation is 80%. |
Monday
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Showers. High near 69. Chance of precipitation is 80%. |
Monday Night
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Showers likely. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 46. Chance of precipitation is 60%. |
Tuesday
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Sunny, with a high near 61. |
Tuesday Night
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Clear, with a low around 33. |
Wednesday
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Sunny, with a high near 61. |
Forecast from NOAA-NWS
for Rocky Mount NC.
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Weather Forecast Discussion
026
FXUS62 KRAH 030900
AFDRAH
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Raleigh NC
500 AM EDT Thu Apr 3 2025
.SYNOPSIS...
A warm front will retreat very slowly westward through the western
Carolinas and central VA this morning, then dissipate by this
afternoon. Unseasonably strong and warm, sub-tropical high pressure
will otherwise extend westward across the South Atlantic states
through Sunday.
&&
.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
As of 425 AM Thursday...
A sub-tropical high over the swrn N. Atlantic will continue to
strengthen and remain the dominant feature and influence for cntl
NC. Surrounding anticyclonic flow will extend throughout the South
Atlantic states.
At the surface, an in-situ damming/wedge front extended this morning
in the lee of the srn Appalachians from n-cntl GA, newd and across
the Upstate of SC, the Foothills and nw Piedmont of NC, and cntl VA.
This boundary retreated through KINT around 05Z but has made little
additional progress since; and it remains over w-cntl Forsyth Co.
per home weather stations from Clemmons to Stanleyville and points
wwd. It will continue a very slow nwwd retreat throughout the
morning, then dissipate, with following unseasonably strong and
warm, sub-tropical high pressure that will extend from near and
south of Bermuda wwd and throughout much of the Southeast, including
all of cntl NC. A separate differential heating boundary/zone will
also likely develop and retreat across cntl NC today, with a
southeast to northwest erosion of the now widespread, mostly MVFR
stratus, and with associated cloudy or mostly so conditions that
will linger longest and into early to mid-afternoon over the nw
Piedmont.
Temperatures throughout cntl NC will warm mostly into the 80s and
well above average (~ +15F), except upr 70s possible where the
aforementioned low clouds take longest to erode. After patchy light
rain and drizzle through mid-morning, a few showers and storms will
be possible in the vicinity of the differential heating zone as it
retreats across the srn and nwrn NC Piedmont. The airmass there will
moderately destabilize with diurnal heating of the unseasonably
moist airmass characterized by mid/upr 60s F surface dewpoints,
beneath a plume of modestly steep lapse rates (~6.5 C/km)
accompanying a remnant, contaminated EML plume around the periphery
of the sub-tropical ridge. Unseasonably muggy conditions, with lows
in the mid-upr 60s, will follow tonight, with likely late
redevelopment of low overcast by Fri morning.
&&
.SHORT TERM /FRIDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT/...
As of 445 AM Thursday...
Hot, sub-tropical ridging at the surface and aloft will continue to
extend across the South Atlantic states. A backdoor cold front may
dip to near the VA/NC Fri evening, then retreat nwd across s-cntl VA
Fri night.
Shallower/thinner than recent days stratus Fri morning will favor a
quicker cloud erosion and following longer and stronger diurnal
heating. As such, temperatures will warm mostly into the upr 80s
throughout cntl NC, to around 90 F in the typically hotter locations
from FAY and AFP to RDU. That stronger heating and associated deeper
mixing will likely cause surface dewpoints to mix out into the lwr
60s, via vertical advection of drier air aloft, so heat index values
will be comparable to ambient air temperatures.
The FV3 is alone in depicting any convection over cntl NC on Fri,
and even that just an isolated cell over the srn Piedmont. Given
continued influence from the sub-tropical ridge as it strengthens
perhaps another decameter, and a lack of a low-level forcing
mechanism, the forecast will remain dry Fri. A slight chance of an
evening storm will exist near the Roanoke River, however, when the
aforementioned backdoor front makes its closest approach to cntl NC.
Low temperatures, with late night stratus possible, are expected to
be mostly in the mid 60s.
&&
.LONG TERM /SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
As of 420 AM Thursday...
The weather pattern across central NC on Saturday will continue to
be controlled by a subtropical high aloft that remains anchored east
of FL and ridges up the Eastern Seaboard for one more day. Meanwhile
a 1025-1030 mb surface high centered east of GA/SC and SW of Bermuda
will slowly drift east. A cold front initially extended from eastern
TX to the mid-MS Valley and Lower Great Lakes early Saturday will
reach the TN Valley and northern Mid-Atlantic by early Sunday, as a
wave of low pressure associated with a mid-level shortwave over the
Southern Plains rides along the front. This will help to push Friday
evening`s backdoor front well to our north, and with high pressure
to our SE resulting in capping/subsidence aloft, Saturday looks dry
and partly to mostly sunny. High temperatures will again be quite
warm, mainly in the upper-80s to lower-90s, which is 15-20 degrees
above normal and near the daily record highs for April 5 at GSO, RDU
and FAY. Skies will turn mostly cloudy on Saturday night, and with
southerly flow ahead of the approaching cold front, lows will be
very warm and near record high minimums, only dropping to the mid-to-
upper-60s.
The Bermuda high will finally begin to break down and shift away
from us on Sunday, in response to the mid-level southern stream wave
pushing east and a broad northern stream trough digging into the
Great Lakes. This will help push the cold front east through our
region, as a wave of low pressure tracks along it. The frontal
passage looks slow due to the SW flow aloft, and while the GFS is a
bit faster than the ECMWF, both models are in pretty good agreement
that it will gradually move east across central NC Sunday night into
Monday, maybe even stalling out for a time. So continue likely to
categorical POPs from Sunday afternoon into Monday. Precipitation
may not completely clear our far SE until late Monday night if the
ECMWF and many of its ensembles are correct. Some storms can`t be
ruled out on Sunday and Monday, but at this time instability looks
marginal, with CAPE on the ECMWF and GFS generally less than 500
J/kg, and their ensembles depicting very low probabilities of
exceeding that. So despite strong winds aloft, the severe threat
looks fairly limited at this time. Even outside of convection, GFS
point soundings on BUFKIT indicate gusts of 25-35 mph will be
possible during the day on Sunday. The bigger threat at this time
looks to be heavy rain, and WPC has our region in a marginal (level
1 of 4) risk of excessive rainfall on Sunday/Sunday night, which
lingers in our far SE on Monday. WPC total QPF for the event is in
the 1-2 inch range, but the deterministic ECMWF and GFS both have
stripes of 2-3 inches across a portion of central NC, and the 90th
percentile QPF of their ensembles is in a similar range, indicating
potential for isolated totals that high especially where any storms
train. At the same time, this would provide some welcome drought
relief as much of central NC is currently in D0 or D1 conditions.
Sunday looks a bit cooler from cloud cover and precipitation
chances, but still very warm with highs in the mid-80s to 90, which
could still approach some records. Sunday night`s lows will again be
quite mild (upper-50s to mid-60s) before we turn much cooler and
close to normal on Monday (highs mid-60s to lower-70s, lows in the
40s).
We finally dry out on Tuesday and skies turn sunny, as Canadian high
pressure builds in from the NW and westerly flow aloft around the
mid/upper low over the Great Lakes and New England pushes the cold
front well to our east. A reinforcing cold front on Tuesday will
bring a shot of even cooler, drier air with highs both Tuesday and
Wednesday only in the upper-50s to mid-60s and dew points in the
teens and 20s. As the surface high settles near the Appalachians on
Tuesday night, went on the cooler side of guidance for temperatures
as decent radiational cooling conditions and 1000-850 mb thicknesses
only in the 1280-1295 m range will support widespread lows in the
lower-to-mid-30s. Upper-20s will even be possible in outlying areas.
This will result in some frost and freeze concerns.
&&
.AVIATION /06Z THURSDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
As of 205 AM Thursday...
Widespread MVFR ceilings throughout cntl NC at 06Z may lower to IFR
for a short time later this morning and be accompanied by periods of
light rain and drizzle especially over the Piedmont in the few hours
centered around 12Z. Ceilings should then gradually lift and/or
scatter to VFR at FAY, RWI, RDU by early this afternoon, while IFR-
MVFR ceilings will be slower to lift and disperse, likely not until
mid to late afternoon, at GSO/INT. Sswly surface winds will
strengthen and become frequently gusty to 20-25 kts by ~12-13, then
remain so until diminishing around sunset. The exception may be at
FAY, where an inland-moving sea breeze may maintain a little sly to
ssely gustiness there until ~02-03Z this evening.
Outlook: IFR-MVFR ceilings will likely redevelop Fri morning and
again Sat morning, amid continued unseasonably moist/humid low-level
flow. A strong cold front will be accompanied by a band of
convection and flight restrictions, as it moves slowly east across
cntl NC Sun night and Mon, possibly as early as late Sun afternoon
at INT/GSO.
&&
.CLIMATE...
Record High Temperatures:
April 3:
KRDU: 91/1967
KFAY: 90/1934
April 4:
KGSO: 86/1934
KRDU: 88/1934
KFAY: 93/1910
April 5:
KGSO: 87/1942
KRDU: 90/1942
KFAY: 91/1942
April 6:
KGSO: 89/2010
KRDU: 93/1967
KFAY: 91/2010
Record High Minimum Temperatures:
April 3:
KGSO: 64/1946
KRDU: 62/2000
KFAY: 65/1977
April 4:
KGSO: 62/1999
KRDU: 63/2017
KFAY: 63/2017
April 5:
KGSO: 60/2023
KRDU: 64/1910
KFAY: 64/2008
April 6:
KGSO: 65/2023
KRDU: 69/2023
KFAY: 69/2023
&&
.RAH WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
None.
&&
$$
SYNOPSIS...MWS
NEAR TERM...MWS
SHORT TERM...MWS
LONG TERM...Danco
AVIATION...MWS
CLIMATE...NWS
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