Early Monday Morning Update (26 Jan 26)

The big winter storm system is moving off the coast, leaving a wake of increasingly cold ar behind it. The last band of ran should be moving through coastal GA/SC in the next few hours …

Weather radar image showing low-level reflectivity over the coastal regions of Georgia and South Carolina, including Savannah and surrounding areas, with details on precipitation levels.

Fortunately it seems to be all rain all rain …

Map showing MRMS precipitation types in coastal Georgia and South Carolina, including areas of snow, cold stratiform rain, warm stratiform rain, convective rain, and mixed precipitation.

There are watches and warnings across the whole east coast this morning either for the lingering effects of the storm or the cold filling in tonight …

A map of the continental United States displaying current National Weather Service watches and warnings, with various colors indicating different weather advisories such as flood, tornado, and hurricane warnings.

Air traffic is still a bit snarled, but should slowly clear up today. Check with your airline – nobody else knows (and they might not either!). If by road, there is a lot of ice out there from Texas and across the southeast to northeast. NWS has a list of state DOT road status pages and phone numbers:

Screenshot of the National Weather Service webpage displaying United States Road Conditions, including a list of states, phone numbers, and websites for road condition updates.
click to go to NWS web site.

Will do another post later today, looking ahead to next weekend and as usual saying it’s sort of pointless to get excited about it until 72 hours out (Wednesday).

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