Visit Logged
  • Select Region
    • All Regions
    • VA to NC Line
    • North Carolina
    • South Carolina
    • Georgia
    • Eastern Florida
    • Western Florida
    • Florida Keys
    • Okeechobee Waterway
    • Northern Gulf
    • Bahamas
    • New York
    • Ohio
    • Pennsylvania
    • Washington
    • Puerto Rico
    • Minnesota
    • Maryland
    • Tennessee
    • NW Waters
    Order by:
    • Thunderstorms Saturday, Then Colder – SCDNR

       

       

       

       

       

      South Carolina Department of Natural Resources color logo and white text of agency name and State Climatology Office

      Weather Alert  –  January 9, 2026

      Thunderstorms Saturday, Then Colder

      For a change, there is a little weather excitement to outline today. A cold front now over the Mississippi and Ohio Valleys is moving our way, bringing rain and thunderstorms, mainly to the Upstate. The front will usher in colder air starting Sunday into Monday.

      An area of rain and thunderstorms will reach the Upstate this afternoon, primarily affecting the I-85 Corridor and points to the northwest. The rain could become heavy enough to cause isolated flooding in the far northwest, despite the ongoing drought in the area.

      The Day 1 Excessive Rainfall Outlook from the Weather Prediction Center highlights the far northwest of SC with a low-end flooding risk.

      The risk for isolated flooding continues through most of Saturday before the rain and thunderstorms shift southeastward.

      The Day 2 Excessive Rainfall Outlook from the WPC highlights the Upstate with a low-end flooding risk for Saturday and Saturday night.

      Thanks to the unseasonably warm air mass in place ahead of the front, we’ll also have a low-end, level 1 of 5 risk of severe thunderstorms in the Upstate and vicinity.

      SPC's Day 2 Severe Weather Outlook highlights the Upstate and vicinity for a low-end severe thunderstorm risk on Saturday.

      The stronger storms moving through Saturday might cause locally damaging winds, and there is a risk of an isolated tornado or two.

      In addition, it looks like winds will pick up early Saturday and remain gusty through the day, especially over the northern half of the state, with peak gusts around 35 mph. Motorists and pickleballers beware! Look for a wind shift late Saturday behind the front, and it remains breezy through Sunday.

      While the severe storm threat drops to near zero as the front reaches the I-20 Corridor during the evening, that area and points south will see a scattering of showers as the front moves through Saturday night.

      Colder air will move in behind the front Saturday night into Sunday. We will return to the reality of midwinter by Monday as temperatures running around 20° above average through Saturday shift to 4-8° below average on Monday.

      High pressure keeps us tranquil and seasonable for Tuesday, then another cold front moves in on Wednesday. It is at this point that our forecast becomes complicated. We’ll enter a weather pattern that permits a winter storm to occur in South Carolina late next week. It will be the ol’ western North America upper ridge, eastern North America upper trough; the negative NAOpositive PNA combo that geeky snow lovers rave about.

      One model (the GFS, the one whose output you take with the biggest grain of salt) has suddenly jumped on the idea that a storm blows up on our coast Thursday as fresh cold air blasts in, and the model throws down snow over nearly the whole state. Sus, as the young folks say these days. Other models show not much happening other than a solid blast of cold arriving Wednesday night and maybe a few showers.

      However, the cold could still be entrenched when the next storm in line arrives around next Sunday. No promises, snow lovers, but I think our odds are better next weekend than later next week.


      New Year, New (Old?) Weather Alert

      I need to pass along a quick programming note. A couple of years ago, we decided to shift from issuing this regularly on Fridays only during hurricane season to year-round. The side effects of doing this made it more like a blog and less like an alert product, and it also forced us to ‘alert’ for several Fridays in a row when nothing truly alert-worthy was happening. So, we’ve decided to revert to the original schedule, where I only create these alerts each week during hurricane season and then send them on an as-needed basis during the rest of the year. So, today’s issuance will be the last regular Friday report until May 29, the Friday before hurricane season begins.

      That said, there’s a good chance you’ll hear from me next week, since it looks like we’ll have at least one winter storm opportunity in the middle of the month. It may be warm now, but winter’s not over!


      Frank Strait
      Severe Weather Liaison
      S.C. State Climate Office

      facebook
      instagram
      rss feed
      twitter
      youtube

      This email was sent to curtis.hoff@cruisersnet.net using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: South Carolina DNR ·1000 Assembly Street · Columbia, SC 29201

      Be the first to comment!


    Social Media Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com