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BumRushDaShow

(166,769 posts)
Fri Jan 30, 2026, 09:26 AM 8 hrs ago

Another major winter storm, with possible blizzard conditions, forecast for Southeast

Source: NBC News

Jan. 30, 2026, 12:16 AM EST / Updated Jan. 30, 2026, 5:35 AM EST


Forecasters warned that a major storm was set to wallop the Southeast this weekend, days after another weather system brought paralyzing snow and ice to large parts of the United States.

A new round of Arctic air was moving across the country after a low-pressure system formed in the Southern Plains on Thursday. It was moving east and “expected to produce a major winter storm” for the mid-Atlantic states and the Carolinas and Virginia, the National Weather Service said. Some forecasters have declared the weather system will become a "bomb cyclone," a fast-developing storm that's the winter equivalent of a hurricane, and warn it could bring heavy snow and blizzard conditions.

"The storm, in all its fury in the Carolinas and southern Virginia, would be a formidable event for states in the northern tier from Maine to Michigan and Minnesota, with the combination of significant snow, cold conditions, and blowing and drifting of snow on the ground," AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Alex Sosnowski wrote in a forecast.

In and around Charleston, South Carolina, wind chills are likely to be in the single digits Sunday morning, the weather service forecast office there said. Snow was forecast for an area that includes Charleston, as well as Statesboro and Savannah in Georgia, starting Saturday through Sunday morning, with total amounts of 1 to 4 inches, it said.

Read more: https://www.nbcnews.com/weather/winter-weather/another-winter-storm-possible-blizzard-conditions-forecast-southeast-rcna256628



The SSTs (sea surface temperatures) are warmer down there, which would help fuel this and enhance the possibility of freezing rain along the coast.
4 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Another major winter storm, with possible blizzard conditions, forecast for Southeast (Original Post) BumRushDaShow 8 hrs ago OP
We're having another really cold day on Sat with a below zero low but then the temps really warm. Bengus81 7 hrs ago #1
Thankfully, this thing's a fast mover. ❤️ littlemissmartypants 7 hrs ago #2
Those of us in its path are not thankful. Dixiegrrrl 5 hrs ago #3
Yep. OldBaldy1701E 4 hrs ago #4

Bengus81

(9,944 posts)
1. We're having another really cold day on Sat with a below zero low but then the temps really warm.
Fri Jan 30, 2026, 09:54 AM
7 hrs ago

We'll be hitting mid-50's and dry here in Kansas by mid-week,so that trend should move eastward.

Dixiegrrrl

(182 posts)
3. Those of us in its path are not thankful.
Fri Jan 30, 2026, 11:55 AM
5 hrs ago

Down here in the SouthEast, we won't have above freezing temps till maybe late Sunday. Which means a lot of frozen trees taking out power lines.
Gonna be a dark weekend in record setting cold temps.😤

OldBaldy1701E

(10,551 posts)
4. Yep.
Fri Jan 30, 2026, 01:23 PM
4 hrs ago

Well I remember the sound. That 'crack' always made us all jump, irregardless of the time of day or night. It meant that there was another chance that the power was about to go out. We would have already filled the bathtub with water and gotten buckets of water ready for the pitcher pump that was standing on the top of the well cap. (That was out secret. As long as we had the warning to prepare some buckets, we had water even if the power went out. It was usually far too deep to freeze. Bear in mind, the well had a shed over it, so it had protection from the wind and a heat lamp (Both electric and oil). So, we could withstand the cold to get water.)

We also had a wood heater and my father was a stickler for making sure to have plenty of wood around for a fire. If he was aware of a major storm coming in, he would also make sure to stack some wood in the back room by the back door. We would bring wood in from the big pile in the side barn, and stack in the back room of the house to dry and await use in the heater. I remember the rare evenings where it was 7F outside with a wind chill of 0F, and we would be sitting in the living room (where the heater was), playing board games in tee shirts and boxers/shorts, with the front door opened about an inch. (Dad loved to get that heater going.)

Then, the wait. Wondering when they were going to get to your area and repair the lines to get power back to your neck of the woods. Driving to work very day and not seeing any changes in the lines as you go into town. Thinking that it may take weeks to get power to your little bit of wilderness and then thinking of what you have been doing to compensate for having no power and the prospect of having to do it for the next month or more.

I remember it well. Eastern North Carolina is never truly prepared for really bad winter weather.

But, we do know a thing or two about freaking ice.

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