143  
FXUS62 KFFC 090548  
AFDFFC  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PEACHTREE CITY GA  
1248 AM EST FRI JAN 9 2026  
   
..NEW 06Z AVIATION DISCUSSION  
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
UPDATED AT 1243 AM EST FRI JAN 9 2026  
 
- ABOVE AVERAGE TEMPERATURES BY AS MUCH AS 15 TO 25 DEGREES  
CONTINUE UNTIL SATURDAY. A FEW RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES MAY  
FALL THROUGH SATURDAY.  
 
- REPEATED ROUNDS OF RAINFALL WILL BE POSSIBLE OVER NORTH GEORGIA FRIDAY  
AFTERNOON INTO SATURDAY MORNING. RAINFALL AMOUNTS OF 2-3" WITH  
ISOLATED HIGHER AMOUNTS WILL BE POSSIBLE IN FAR NORTH GEORGIA.  
SOME FLASH FLOODING AND RIVER FLOODING COULD OCCUR.  
 
- THUNDERSTORMS WILL MOVE THROUGH THE STATE LATE FRIDAY AND  
SATURDAY AHEAD OF A COLD FRONT. A FEW ISOLATED SEVERE STORMS  
WILL BE POSSIBLE ON SATURDAY.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM  
 
(THIS EVENING THROUGH FRIDAY)  
ISSUED AT 311 PM EST THU JAN 8 2026  
 
WARM AND HUMID CONDITIONS PERSIST ACROSS NORTH AND CENTRAL GEORGIA  
UNDER UPPER LEVEL RIDGING AND STEADY WAA. HIGH TEMPERATURES THIS  
AFTERNOON WILL RISE INTO THE UPPER 60S TO MID 70S ACROSS THE AREA.  
CONSIDERING HIGH DEWPOINTS, LOW TEMPERATURES OVERNIGHT INTO  
FRIDAY MORNING WILL LARGELY BE IN THE MID 50S TO NEAR 60, WHICH  
WILL BE FROM 20 DEGREES ABOVE DAILY NORMALS (SOUTH-CENTRAL  
GEORGIA) TO AS MUCH AS 32 DEGREES ABOVE DAILY NORMALS (FAR  
NORTHWEST GEORGIA). QUITE UN-JANUARY-LIKE. FOG WILL BE POSSIBLE  
ONCE AGAIN OVERNIGHT INTO FRIDAY MORNING AS WELL, MOST LIKELY IN  
THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FORECAST AREA. THIS FOG COULD BECOME DENSE  
AT TIMES AND LEAD TO VISIBILITY RESTRICTIONS OF A QUARTER OF A  
MILE OR LESS. HI-RES GUIDANCE CURRENTLY INDICATES THAT DENSE FOG  
WILL BE MOST LIKELY TO DEVELOP IN AN AREA ROUGHLY SOUTH AND EAST  
OF A LINE FROM CORDELE TO WARRENTON.  
 
A MID LEVEL SHORTWAVE TROUGH AND ASSOCIATED SURFACE LOW WILL MOVE  
NORTHEASTWARD TOWARDS THE GREAT LAKES REGION OVERNIGHT INTO FRIDAY  
MORNING, WHICH WILL DISPLACE THE RIDGE OVER THE EASTERN CONUS AWAY  
TO THE EAST. A COLD FRONT EXTENDING FROM THIS LOW WILL EXTEND INTO  
THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI RIVER VALLEY AS THE MORNING BEGINS, AND WILL  
SLOWLY TRAVERSE EASTWARD TOWARDS THE GEORGIA OVER THE COURSE OF THE  
DAY. SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW WILL BE IN PLACE AT THE LOW LEVELS AND ALOFT  
BEHIND THE RETREATING RIDGE AND AHEAD OF THE COLD FRONT, WHICH WILL  
PROMOTE CONTINUALLY INCREASING MOISTURE AND PWATS RISING TO BETWEEN  
1.25-1.5". SHOWERS WILL BEGIN IN FAR NORTHWEST GEORGIA BY MID-  
MORNING, SLOWLY SPREADING SOUTH AND EAST DURING THE DAY. RAIN  
CHANCES ON FRIDAY WILL LARGELY BE CONFINED TO ALONG AND NORTH OF  
THE I-85 CORRIDOR. THE RAIN WILL LIMIT TEMPERATURES TO THE MID TO  
UPPER 60S IN THE FAR NORTHERN TIER. ELSEWHERE ACROSS THE FORECAST  
AREA, HIGHS WILL BE EVEN WARMER THAN TODAY, RISING INTO THE LOW TO  
MID 70S IN NORTH GEORGIA TO UPPER 70S TO NEAR 80 IN CENTRAL  
GEORGIA. THESE HIGHS COULD APPROACH OR EXCEED DAILY RECORDS AT  
ATL, MCN, AND AHN, AND WILL RANGE FROM 20-25 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL.  
 
HEAVIER, MORE WIDESPREAD RAIN IS EXPECTED AFTER SUNSET ON FRIDAY AND  
THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT HOURS. AT THIS TIME, THE AXIS OF THE HEAVIEST  
RAIN IS EXPECTED TO BE ACROSS FAR NORTH AND NORTHWEST GEORGIA, WHICH  
COULD SEE TOTALS BETWEEN 1-2 INCHES (AND LOCALLY HIGHER AMOUNTS IN  
THE MOUNTAINS) DURING THE OVERNIGHT PERIOD ALONE. LOCALIZED FLASH  
FLOODING WILL BE POSSIBLE WHERE THE HEAVIEST RAIN OCCURS AND IN LOW-  
LYING AREAS AND AREAS WITH POOR DRAINAGE. THE WPC HAS FURTHERMORE  
DIAGNOSED A SLIGHT RISK (LEVEL 2 OF 4) FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL. SOME  
MODEL UNCERTAINTY EXISTS WITH RESPECT TO EXACTLY WHERE THE HEAVIEST  
RAIN WILL OCCUR, WITH SOME SOLUTIONS INDICATING AS FAR SOUTH AS THE  
I-20 CORRIDOR. POPS AND RAINFALL AMOUNTS WILL BE PROGRESSIVELY LOWER  
AS ONE GOES FURTHER SOUTH FROM THE ATLANTA METRO AREA.  
 
ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS WILL ALSO BE POSSIBLE WITHIN THE WIDESPREAD  
RAIN. AS THE FRONTAL BOUNDARY DRAWS CLOSER TO THE STATE LINE, LOW  
LEVEL SHEAR AND 0-6 KM BULK SHEAR WILL INCREASE TO ABOUT 25-30 KTS  
AND 55-65 KTS, RESPECTIVELY BY THE PRE-DAWN HOURS ON SATURDAY. WHILE  
LAPSE RATES AND SURFACE-BASED INSTABILITY WILL BE QUITE LIMITED,  
STORMS COULD BE ABLE TO TAP INTO SBCAPE VALUES OF 150-250 J/KG IN  
FAR NORTHWEST GEORGIA IN THE FEW HOURS BEFORE SUNRISE ON SATURDAY  
MORNING. IF THIS OCCURS, THE COMBINATION OF EVEN THIS MARGINAL  
SBCAPE COMBINED WITH THE SHEAR VALUES WILL ALLOW FOR STORMS TO  
BECOME STRONG TO SEVERE, CAPABLE OF PRODUCING STRONG WIND GUSTS AND  
EVEN A BRIEF TORNADO. AS SUCH, THE SPC HAS OUTLOOKED FAR NORTHWEST  
GEORGIA IN A MARGINAL RISK (LEVEL 1 OF 5) FOR SEVERE WEATHER THROUGH  
7 AM ON SATURDAY MORNING. THE THREAT FOR STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS AND  
HEAVY RAIN WILL CONTINUE INTO THE LONG TERM PERIOD...  
 
 
   
LONG TERM  
 
(SATURDAY MORNING THROUGH NEXT WEDNESDAY)  
ISSUED AT 311 PM EST THU JAN 8 2026  
 
THE LONG TERM PICKS UP ON SATURDAY MORNING AS THE FRONT BEGINS TO  
MOVE INTO AND ACROSS THE CWA. THE ACTUAL FRONT WILL STILL BE BACK  
ACROSS MS SAT MORNING BUT ONGOING MODERATE TO HEAVY RAIN IS LIKELY FOR  
THE NW PORTIONS OF THE CWA. HEAVY RAIN IS EXPECTED TO CONTINUE  
THROUGH MOST OF THE DAY ON SATURDAY UNTIL THE FRONT CAN FINALLY  
CATCH UP IN THE AFTERNOON. LAPSE RATES CONTINUE TO BE UNIMPRESSIVE  
DURING THE AFTERNOON AND SURFACE BASED CAPE IS EXPECTED TO REMAIN  
UNDER 500 J/KG AS THE BEST INSTABILITY REMAINS OVER THE CENTRAL  
GULF. THE CURRENT MODELS ARE SHOWING THAT SHEAR WILL BE THE BIGGEST  
CONCERN WITH THIS SYSTEM. THE GFS IS SHOWING THE POTENTIAL FOR 70KTS  
OF 0-6KM SHEAR AS THE FRONT PUSHES THROUGH AND EVEN A TAD BIT HIGHER  
BEHIND THE FRONT. THIS WOULD DEFINITELY BRING AN INCREASED THREAT  
FOR DAMAGING WINDS AND AN ISOLATED TORNADO AS THE FRONT MOVES  
THROUGH SAT. TO SUM IT ALL UP, THUNDERSTORMS ARE LIKELY ON SATURDAY  
WITH ISOLATED SEVERE STORMS POSSIBLE IN THIS ENVIRONMENT.  
 
AFTER THE FRONT CLEARS THE AREA SUNDAY, SOME AREAS MAINLY ACROSS  
NORTH GA WILL HAVE SEEN 2-3" OF PRECIP WITH ISOLATED HIGHER AMOUNTS.  
THE REST OF THE STATE (ATL TO AHN AND SOUTHWARD) WILL SEE 1" TO 2"  
TOTALS. MOST OF THE AREA REMAINS IN SOME FORM OF DROUGHT, SO  
WIDESPREAD FLOODING CONCERNS ARE LOW BUT SOME URBAN AREAS COULD SEE  
ISOLATED FLASH FLOODING. PLEASE CONTINUE TO MONITOR THE FORECAST AS  
IT UNFOLDS OVER THE NEXT FEW DAYS.  
 
A DRIER AIRMASS DOES MOVE IN ACROSS THE REGION SUN AS A HIGH  
PRESSURE RIDGE BUILDS IN FROM THE SOUTHERN PLAINS. THIS RIDGE LOOKS  
TO KEEP THINGS DRY THROUGH DAY 7. DRY CONDITIONS WILL GIVE WAY TO  
COLD OVERNIGHT LOWS WITH VALUES AROUND FREEZING FOR MUCH OF THE WORK  
WEEK. LOWS MON MORNING THROUGH WED MORNING WILL BE IN THE MIDDLE 20S  
TO MIDDLE 30S. HIGHS MON THROUGH WED WILL BE IN THE 40S AND 50S.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
(06Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 1243 AM EST FRI JAN 9 2026  
 
PATCHY DENSE FOG IS LIKELY TO IMPACT MOST SITES AGAIN OVERNIGHT.  
CIGS EXPECTED TO LOWER TO IFR ATL SITES AND LIFR AT THE  
SOUTHERN/EASTERN SITES. THOUGH WILL NEED TO KEEP AN EYE TO SEE HOW  
FAR NORTH LIFR SPREADS. SSE WINDS WILL SHIFT TO SSW BETWEEN 15-17Z  
FRIDAY BEFORE SHIFTING BACK OVER TO THE SSE/SE SIDE AFTER 00Z.  
SHRA MAY BEGIN AS EARLY AS 15Z AT THE NORTH SITES AND FILLING IN  
THROUGH THE DAY. THE CUTOFF AXIS WILL BE SHARP AND NOT  
ANTICIPATING SHRA TO REACH MCN UNTIL LATE AFTN.  
 
//ATL CONFIDENCE...06Z UPDATE...  
 
MEDIUM ON ALL ELEMENTS.  
 
07  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
ATHENS 61 72 43 51 / 70 90 40 0  
ATLANTA 63 71 42 48 / 80 100 30 0  
BLAIRSVILLE 55 64 32 42 / 90 100 30 0  
CARTERSVILLE 60 69 38 48 / 90 100 20 0  
COLUMBUS 63 75 45 55 / 50 90 50 0  
GAINESVILLE 61 68 42 48 / 90 100 30 0  
MACON 60 77 46 56 / 20 70 60 0  
ROME 63 72 41 50 / 90 100 10 0  
PEACHTREE CITY 62 71 40 50 / 70 90 40 0  
VIDALIA 61 81 54 62 / 0 20 60 10  
 
 
   
FFC WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
NONE.  
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...KING  
LONG TERM....01  
AVIATION...07  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab GA Page
Main Text Page