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Severe Weather Threat January 8-10, 2026

Wow, the Euro dewpoints are definitely not what you want to see. The strongest kinematics come into play significantly with so much moisture that far north. While I think severe weather chances are good for Mississippi, Tennessee and Kentucky need to be on high alert. That's where the bullseye is.

Don't forget Alabama. January tornadoes are not a rarity here.
 
I'm still not sold just yet on this being a significant event but the ceiling is absolutely there. Models are beginning to point to a more semi discrete mode though and that may help. Moisture return this far north in January spells trouble. Models are probably underdoing thermos like jharris discussed. We
We will see. This is going to be a tough one to figure out
 
Pretty strong signals on all the ML models, including fairly robust tornado probabilities across parts of the Deep South. But beware of this - the latest runs of the GFS have the parent low pulling off to the north, with possible, weak secondary low development on Friday. Could really throw a wrench in predictability if this continues to hold as the dominant trend. I could see an outcome like this being beneficial or detrimental to the tornado threat, depending on exactly how it plays out. Looks like it would also probably restrict the greatest threat further south. Only a few runs, but could change things significantly.
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I feel like the significant side of this event is still very conditional. We probably won't see what this setup really is like until the day of. But this issue of displaced kinematics/instability will continue. That's unless we see the usual winter thermodynamic uptrend. It's a very conditional scenario but this trough does have that potential. Do not call this Dixie slop just yet like many have on X
 
I really hate Wx Twitter. I’m all fine with hyperbole, I call things dog sh1t all the time, but at least “show your work/expand on your opinion” matter of factly like Trey does.

Also, I don’t know who needs to hear this, but the SPC outlook is a 15% for severe weather, not just tornados. As in hail, wind etc.

Maybe I’m showing my age here, but what the hell is Garbo? Is that short for garbage lmao?
 
I really hate Wx Twitter. I’m all fine with hyperbole, I call things dog sh1t all the time, but at least “show your work/expand on your opinion” matter of factly like Trey does.

Also, I don’t know who needs to hear this, but the SPC outlook is a 15% for severe weather, not just tornados. As in hail, wind etc.

Maybe I’m showing my age here, but what the hell is Garbo? Is that short for garbage lmao?
Yeah true exactly. There most likely will at least be severe weather.
 
I feel like the significant side of this event is still very conditional. We probably won't see what this setup really is like until the day of. But this issue of displaced kinematics/instability will continue. That's unless we see the usual winter thermodynamic uptrend. It's a very conditional scenario but this trough does have that potential. Do not call this Dixie slop just yet like many have on X
I really hate Wx Twitter. I’m all fine with hyperbole, I call things dog sh1t all the time, but at least “show your work/expand on your opinion” matter of factly like Trey does.

Also, I don’t know who needs to hear this, but the SPC outlook is a 15% for severe weather, not just tornados. As in hail, wind etc.

Maybe I’m showing my age here, but what the hell is Garbo? Is that short for garbage lmao?
Calling a setup garbage is the only thing 90% of the posters I've seen on there are good at. A lot of folks are forgetting that just as models are trending towards a sloppier trough, they can, and likely will, go in a different direction once again before the day of. Also, lower MSV and Gulf Coast outbreaks don't always need clean troughs.
 
From FFC's AFD. They're keeping an eye on this weekend, but still way too early to lock in on anything until models get more settled on large-scale evolution of the system. Hopefully that'll be sooner rather than later.
.LONG TERM...
(Wednesday morning through next Sunday)
Issued at 149 PM EST Mon Jan 5 2026

Model agreement on the front end of the forecast will quickly fall
apart as we head into the long term portion of the forecast.
Wednesday will see the quick hitting upper level system that swung
by the area depart and be replaced by upper level ridging with
subtropical connections. The temperatures on Wednesday and Thursday
will be quite warm for early January (even by Georgia standards).
Highs each day will be in the upper 60s to mid 70s across north and
central Georgia. This will be anywhere from 15-25 degrees above
normal for this time of year. We might make a run at a handful of
record highs, especially at Atlanta where our record highs sit in
the lower 70s most days this week. Overnight lows will stay warm
thanks to relatively moist airmass that hangs around, but not quite
approaching record warm low temperatures with lows in the upper 40s
and lower 50s.

Things get interesting from here, especially with regard to the
model solution space. Big range of output within the GFS and Euro
model suites, with each model core having a bias towards a slightly
different timing and overall solution. The primary player will a
wave that digs into the west coast on Thursday over Nevada and into
the 4 corners region. How this phases with a system diving in from
the Arctic will have big implications for our weather Friday night
into Saturday, including severe potential.

The Euro/Euro ensemble digs pretty sharply with the short wave into
the west coast, developing a potential closed low that ejects out
into the Great Plains on Friday. This system phases nicely with an
upper level short wave being forced into the upper Great Plains by
sharp ridging that moves in behind these two waves over the west
coast. Strong surface cyclogenesis takes place across the center of
the county along an already established baroclinic zone from a
previous surface low that deepens and pushes northeast as the
waves come into better alignment Saturday into Sunday. This pushes
a front across the area Saturday afternoon that has access to day
time heating, plenty of moisture, and some decent upper level
support. CAPE values aren`t anything special (generally less than
500 J/kg), but may be offset a bit by dynamics and frontal
forcing. Shear is decent, with 50 kts of 0-6km and SRH values
above 100 m2/s2. Overall, not anything to sound alarms bells about
this far out, but definitely would be a day worth watching should
this solution play out.


On the flip side is the GFS/GEFS, which does not dig the initial
wave as sharply into the west coast on Thursday. This less amplified
system ejects a bit earlier compared to the Euro and does not phase
as nicely with the latter wave coming into the northern Great Plains
from the Arctic, at least initially. The timing of everything gets
pushed up a bit, and the end result is to push the front through
during the middle of the night Friday into Saturday, rather than on
the day Saturday. This puts a bit more of a limit on instability,
with the area being dependent upon WAA for any additional surface
based heating. Still, dynamics are okay and frontal forcing will be
present, so while this may represent a lower severe threat, hard to
call it "zero" severe threat this far out.

So, the tl;dr for above is that while there is some uncertainty in
the forecast that will have overall impacts on the thunderstorm
forecast, what we can say is that it will probably rain either
Friday night into Saturday or on Saturday (maybe both, given some
solutions that lag a secondary low behind). This may end up being a
decent rain over the northern parts of the area - current forecast
amounts very pretty sharply from NW to SE which represents the
surface low darting quickly to the NE. Mean QMD amounts within the
NBM ensemble are ~1" across the north tapering to 0.25"-0.5" as you
move SW into central Georgia. 90th percentile shows upwards of 2"
decreasing to around an 1" to the SW - this likely represents areas
that see more intense or more than one round of convection. The 10th
percentile is worth mentioning, with less than 0.25" of rain
everywhere - this represents a weaker overall system that struggles
to tap into moisture. This output seems less likely given the model
solution space, but does show that solutions that struggle to
develop anything do exist.

Lusk
 
Jackson AFD this afternoon


Unsettled
weather returns Thursday into Friday. I know, it has been
a while and this is the first chance for severe weather in quite
some time for our area. A slight risk has been highlighted by SPC to
capture this potential for Friday into Friday night. This does have
some things going for it, with a priming lead wave which will bring
some rain Thursday, allowing for decent moisture recovery for Friday
(60s dewpoints) and moderate to strong deep layer shear with the
main spoke of energy. That said, guidance is variable on the timing
of arrival of the longer wave trough main forcing mechanism, which
lags behind the main spoke of energy. This tends to undercut storm
activity, thus lowering confidence for severe threat. Considering
the limitations, areas of highest confidence for severe storm
development appear to be the Delta, areas west of I-55 and north of
I-20 and this lines up well with available ML and AI probability
guidance. All that said, the primary hazard looks to be damaging
winds, but I wouldn`t rule out a few tornadoes. Expect forecast
adjustments in future updates as guidance comes into clearer focus
 
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