FORECAST: Impacts from Hurricane Ian move into the Charlotte area Friday

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Our area will experience cloudy skies, gusty winds, and pockets of heavy rain.

WCNC Staff, Brad Panovich, Chris Mulcahy, Brittany Van Voorhees (WCNC), KJ Jacobs, Larry Sprinkle

12:41 PM EST March 6, 2019

5:13 PM EDT September 29, 2022

CHARLOTTE, N.C. —

Hurricane Ian

As of 5 p.m. Friday, Ian is a Category 1 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 75 mph. The storm is located about 240 miles south of Charleston. The National Hurricane Center is expecting Ian to gain additional strength before making landfall along the South Carolina coast Friday.

RELATED: Weather IQ: The ‘dirty’ side of a hurricane

As the storm moves inland, the Charlotte area is under a Tropical Storm Warning until further notice with primary impacts Friday night through Saturday morning. Sustained winds will be sustained between 20 – 30 mph with gusts up to 60 mph. Rainfall totals will peak between 3 – 6 inches, with isolated higher amounts.

Friday

Regardless of when Ian arrives, tomorrow will be a raw day across the Carolinas. Expect cool temperatures, cloudy skies, gusty winds, and off and on rainfall. Highs will only peak in the mid-upper 50s across the region with widespread shower activity, although it won’t be heavy rain all day.

Again, conditions will be worse Friday night through Saturday morning. Highest wind gusts will near 60 mph with up to 6 inches of rain. This is a day to stay weather aware with possible flooding, downed trees and power outages. Stay tuned for updates!

Saturday and Sunday

A few showers will linger Saturday morning with gradual clearing throughout the morning. This is largely due to drier air on the back side of Ian keeping things less soggy this weekend. Winds will lighten, too, but expect the mostly cloudy sky to stick around.

Speaking of cloud cover, this will keep lows and highs stable this weekend – lows in the mid-50s and highs in the mid-60s. More peeks of sunshine should develop Sunday afternoon as the system fully exits the Carolinas.

Drought Monitor

As of September 29th, Charlotte is on day 17 with no measurable rainfall. Dry conditions have been consistent across both North and South Carolina, so it’s no surprise that drought conditions have worsened over the last week.

61% of North Carolina and 36% of South Carolina are under abnormally dry conditions (shaded in yellow). This is an increase of 28% and 24% respectively. Abnormally dry conditions are a precursor to moderate drought (shaded in light brown).

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