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Carolina Weather Group
Carolina Weather Group
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The Carolina Weather Group is a weekly talk show broadcasting each week from the Carolinas. The show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us!
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Very tiny new satellites could make it easier to see, predict, and forecast tropical weather.
Compared to traditional satellites, this train of nanosatellites will collect more frequent measurements around the globe, allowing scientists to study storms as they develop and then use the newly-acquired knowledge to improve forecasting capabilities. While smaller, these new satellites can send back more frequent data than traditional polar-orbiting satellites.
Our guest this week on the Carolina Weather Group is Wired Magazine Reporter Meghan Herbst, who covered the satellites for the technology publication.
The satellite launched on June 30, 2021 as the pathfinder – or test – satellite for NASA’s Time-Resolved Observations of Precipitation structure and storm Intensity with a Constellation of Smallsats (TROPICS) mission. The Pathfinder satellite provides an opportunity to test the technology, communication systems, and data processing before the six satellites comprising the TROPICS constellation launch in 2022. “[Pathfinder] is like a dress rehearsal of the mission,” said Bill Blackwell, the principal investigator for the TROPICS mission and a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln Laboratory in Lexington, Massachusetts.
The future TROPICS constellation will orbit Earth in three planes, collecting temperature, water vapor, precipitation, and cloud ice measurements on a frequent, near-global scale to study storms and other meteorological events.
The TROPICS research team includes researchers from NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and several universities and commercial partners.
Additional satellites are expected to launch in 2022.
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In September 2024, Hurricane Helene tore through the Southeastern United States, bringing deadly storm surge, destructive winds, tornadoes, and record-breaking rainfall. Combined with a rare Predecessor Rainfall Event (PRE), the storm caused catastrophic flooding across North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia, leaving behind nearly $80 billion in damage.One year later, the Carolina Weather Group brings you this anniversary special report, filmed on location across the Carolinas, documenting the lasting damage, recovery efforts, and ongoing rebuilding.In this program, we visit:Asheville, NC, where the River Arts District became the epicenter of national flood coverage after the French Broad River engulfed buildings and crippled the city’s infrastructure.Black Mountain and East Asheville, where residents endured devastating flash flooding with little access to outside help.Fletcher, NC, where the French Broad River crested 10 feet higher than the infamous 1916 flood.South Carolina Upstate communities, where hurricane-force winds up to 106 mph brought down trees and power lines.NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) in Asheville, where scientists managed without power or water to preserve vital U.S. climate archives.The National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg office, where forecasters issued life-saving warnings while enduring the storm themselves.This anniversary documentary blends firsthand accounts, scientific analysis, and official data to provide one of the most complete records yet of Hurricane Helene’s impact on the Carolinas and Appalachia.⏱️ Chapters00:00 – Introduction: Hurricane Helene’s Landfall and Damage Overview02:00 – On Location in Asheville: One Year After the Storm04:30 – The River Arts District: Epicenter of Flooding and Destruction07:15 – French Broad River Flooding: Buildings, Cars, and Infrastructure Lost10:00 – Landslides and Debris Flows Across Appalachia12:30 – Evan Fisher Joins: Walking Through Asheville’s Recovery16:00 – Comparing Helene to the 1916 Flood in Western North Carolina19:45 – Black Mountain: Floodwaters Overwhelm Neighborhoods23:00 – Community Meetings and Radio: How Residents Stayed Informed26:00 – Search, Rescue, and Reunification: Stories of Survival30:00 – Inside NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information (Asheville)34:00 – Protecting America’s Weather Archives During the Storm38:00 – Rainfall Data and “1-in-1,000-Year” Event Analysis41:00 – National Weather Service Greenville-Spartanburg: Messaging a Catastrophic Storm44:00 – Closing Reflections: Damage, Recovery, and Rebuilding the Carolinas📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.
With Tropical Storm Warnings, Storm Surge Warnings, and dangerous rip currents along the Carolina coastline, we break down what you need to know as Erin makes its closest pass offshore.🔴 Key coverage includes:Latest track and intensity of Hurricane ErinExpected tropical storm force winds and rainfall for the CarolinasLife-threatening surf, rip currents, and storm surge impactsCoastal flooding concerns, especially along the Outer BanksWhat’s next as Erin accelerates northward up the U.S. East CoastStay tuned for real-time updates and analysis as the Carolina Weather Group tracks this powerful hurricane and its coastal impacts.📍 Impacts include: Outer Banks, Cape Lookout, Pamlico & Albemarle Sounds, and coastal NC/SC.⚠️ Please follow official guidance from the National Hurricane Center and local emergency management for safety instructions.#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.
Tonight, the latest on the recovery in the Carolinas after Helene.
Plus we explore the weather and the science that produced the predecessor rain event that helped create the disaster that Helene was.
Our guests are Brad Panovich, Tim Buckley and Jason Boyer.
For emergencies, dial 911. For local community resource assistance, call 211.
To help with non-urgent storm cleanup, the Hurricane Helene Cleanup Hotline is available at 844-965-1386.
The American Red Cross is also available to assist at 1-800-RED-CROSS (1-800-733-2767).
If you would like to donate to help the people of the Carolinas as a Carolina Weather Group listener, you can donate to the American Red Cross using our special link: http://bit.ly/wxpodstelethon
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🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup
💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.com
The Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.
From snow, to hurricanes, to space launches... Mark Sudduth is a Wilmington-based photographer who is there to capture outstanding images of the world around us.
Back again for his annual year-ending interview, Mark shares video and stories from his year's journeys, including repeat January snow events in the Carolinas, Hurricane Ian and Hurricane Nicole, and the launch of NASA's Artemis-1.
LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather
SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup
VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.com
The Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.
SpaceX has launched Inspiration4 mission – the world’s first all-civilian human spaceflight to orbit – aboard SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon spacecraft from historic Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Many of you are sharing photos and videos of the rocket's vapor trail across the eastern Carolina sky.
Approximately three days after liftoff, Dragon and the Inspiration4 crew will return to Earth and splashdown at one of several possible landing sites off the Florida coast.
This week we're also tracking four areas of interest in the tropics, including the remnants of Nicholas, which will help bring rain chances to the Carolinas this week and weekend.
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The Carolina Weather Group discusses this week's top weather stories including Hurricane Dorian assistance, tropical updates, and the threat of wildfires. Plus a look at the increasing drought risk.
We're seeing about half a dozen mini, tsunami-like waves along the Carolina coast. What are they - and do we need to worry about them? Our guest is Christopher DiVeglio, Maritime Services Program Manager, who explains the phenomenon behind meteotsunamis and their impact on the Carolinas.
Fresh off his video capturing adventures with Hurricane Dorian, Mark Sudduth of HurricaneTrack.com tells us about what he decribes as the "most challenging hurricane" of his career." Plus, he'll tell us about his 2018 documentary featuring Hurricane Florence, Hurricane Michael, and more. Mark always comes with amazing weather video and he did not disappointment!
Our panel will also recap Hurricane Dorian's impacts on the Bahamas, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Plus a look at all your week's weather news!
In this week’s episode of the Carolina Weather Group, we revisit one of the most catastrophic weather events in modern U.S. history: the April 27, 2011 tornado outbreak — a generational severe weather disaster that produced more than 60 tornadoes in Alabama alone and altered the course of severe weather communication forever. We’re hear from ABC 33/40 Chief Meteorologist James Spann, who takes us behind the scenes of that day — the forecasting, the wall-to-wall coverage, the failures in communication infrastructure, and the lessons that still shape severe weather messaging today.But this year’s anniversary carries new significance.⭐ Special Segment: A Newly Discovered EF-2 Tornado — Identified 14 Years LaterAs part of ongoing research into the April 27, 2011 outbreak, meteorologists have just confirmed another previously undocumented EF-2 tornado that occurred during the event. This additional tornado — uncovered nearly two decades later — highlights how massive, chaotic, and difficult to analyze the outbreak truly was.We’ll break down:How this tornado went undetected for 14 yearsWhat new data and methodologies led to its discoveryWhat this means for the official April 27 tornado countWhy reanalysis of historic outbreaks still matters in 2025This new finding adds an entirely new chapter to an event many thought had already been fully documented.🎙️ Episode HighlightsThe overwhelming scale of the outbreak across AL, MS, TN, GA, and the CarolinasWhy radar wasn’t enough — and why video changed everything The failures of communication systems as storms destroyed critical infrastructure What meteorologists learned about overwarning, the siren mentality, and public response How today’s severe weather coverage has evolved because of 4/27/11#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.
The Carolinas just wrapped up one of the warmest late-November stretches on record — but at the same time, social media has exploded with snow hype ahead of Thanksgiving. So what’s real, and what’s just another single-model-run gone viral?In this week’s Carolina Weather Group episode, James Brierton, Sam Walker, and Frank Strait break down:🌡️ Record-breaking warmth across the Carolinas, including 79° in Charlotte and 81° in Columbia🔥 Wildfire concerns from Western North Carolina to the Sandhills, plus updates on recent fires now 100% contained❄️ The Thanksgiving “snow” hype spreading on Facebook — and why it’s not happening🌧️ The real weather pattern ahead, including late-month fronts, model differences, and when the cold may finally settle in🎿 Why ski season is delayed, from warm temps to humidity challenges for snowmaking🌊 Outer Banks patterns, backdoor fronts, coastal chill, and how the ocean keeps things complicated🌪️ Plus: A surprising update — the National Weather Service has officially identified a new EF2 tornado from the historic April 15, 2011 outbreak, thanks to satellite review and a recent social media clueIt’s an hour of “too many tabs,” deep-dive meteorology, Carolina stories, and the latest forecasts heading into one of the busiest travel weeks of the year.#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.
The Northern Lights are back—for the second night in a row—and the Carolina Weather Group is tracking every moment! From a G4 geomagnetic storm to aurora sightings as far south as Charleston and the Florida Panhandle, the team breaks down what’s happening above our heads and why this solar cycle is producing such rare displays for the Carolinas. 🌌Tonight, James Brierton, Sam Walker, and Frank Strait guide you through:🌟 Aurora Watch: Night TwoNOAA’s latest Space Weather Prediction Center updatesA new coronal mass ejection (CME) arrival and the impacts of G1–G4 storm levelsPhotos and reports from viewers across the Carolinas, Virginia, and beyondTips for capturing the aurora with your phone—including long-exposure tricks and night-mode hacksWhat the solar cycle is doing right now and why 2024–2025 is peak aurora season❄️ Surprise Early-Season SnowA powerful upper-level trough and an unusually cold airmass brought the 5th-earliest snowfall on record in Charlotte—and measurable snow in parts of northeastern North Carolina and even the South Carolina Upstate.We break down:Snow totals across NC & SCWhy this setup “broke containment” east of the mountainsHow moisture survived the downslope to create snow showersWhy Myrtle Beach even saw flurries!🛰️ Space Weather & GOES-UWe revisit part of our conversation with NOAA’s Dr. Jim Spann about CMEs, X-ray flux readings from GOES satellites, and the new coronagraph aboard GOES-U—now more relevant than ever during this week’s solar storms.💼 Government Shutdown EndsWe also touch on the end of the federal government shutdown and what it means for National Weather Service employees now returning to full pay.#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.
We’re celebrating one year since our milestone 500th episode — and for the first time ever, both parts of our on-location special from the Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety (IBHS) are airing together as one extended encore presentation!Join the Carolina Weather Group team — James Brierton, Jared Smith, Dan Whitaker, Candace Jordan, and producer Tim Pounds — as we take you behind the scenes at IBHS in Chester County, South Carolina, where science meets the elements.🔥 Part 1: Step inside the IBHS Grand Lab, where engineers recreate the forces of nature. Witness a full-scale wildfire demonstration showing how wind, flame, and building materials interact — and why small design changes can save homes and lives. Learn how IBHS researchers simulate 35-mph wind-driven fires to test how fast flames spread from one structure to another. See how their data helps communities across the Carolinas and beyond prepare for wildfires, hurricanes, and hailstorms.☄️ Part 2: Go deeper into IBHS’s world of innovation and resilience testing — including the lab where hail impacts are recreated indoors to study roof and siding damage. Then, join the CWG team as they share stories from the show’s first 500 episodes:• Reflecting on landmark guests like James Spann, Jim Cantore, Mike Bettes, and Ken Graham• Reliving the massive Weatherthon broadcast that raised thousands for the Red Cross• Remembering standout moments with Brad Panovich, Rob Fowler, and Tim Buckley• Revisiting favorite NASA collaborations, from the Crew-6 launch at Kennedy Space Center to NASA Wallops rocket launches seen from the Carolinas• Celebrating the friendships, fan nicknames (yes — “Weather Daddy” makes an appearance), and heartfelt memories that define the Carolina Weather Group’s first 500 shows📍 Filmed on location at IBHS, Chester County, SC🎥 Originally aired October 2024🌀 Encore presentation November 2025The Carolina Weather Group brings you conversations with meteorologists, emergency managers, scientists, and enthusiasts who share a love for weather, resilience, and storytelling.➡️ Subscribe and turn on notifications so you don’t miss future live shows, weather updates, and behind-the-scenes specials.#CarolinaWeatherGroup #IBHS #SevereWeather #WildfireSafety #HailTesting #HurricaneStrong #WeatherScience #NASA #AnniversaryEpisode#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.
Hurricane Melissa has joined the record books with 185 mph winds, devastating Jamaica, Cuba, and The Bahamas before turning toward Bermuda. On this week’s Carolina Weather Group, we discuss Melissa’s Category 5 strength, new video from inside the storm’s eye, and the Outer Banks’ ongoing home collapses — five more this week in Buxton and Avon.Our guest Peter Forister joins to unveil his new “Most Memorable Hurricanes” map, a fascinating look at which storms stand out most in the Carolinas’ collective memory, county by county. Plus, he gives a final fall foliage color update as the leaves peak across the Southeast.Later in the show, we preview the Mid-Atlantic Severe Weather Conference with organizer Chris White, highlighting emergency management topics, storm chasing stories, and meteorology education.📍 Topics CoveredHurricane Melissa’s record-setting winds & damage pathNew video from inside the eye of MelissaOBX coastal destruction and repeated home collapsesPeter Forister’s “Most Memorable Hurricanes” projectFall foliage update for North Carolina & VirginiaUpcoming Mid-Atlantic Severe Weather Conference preview🎙️ Hosts: James Brierton, Frank Strait, Sam Walker🎧 Guest: Peter Forister, Chris White📅 Recorded October 29, 2025⏱️ YouTube Chapter Timestamps00:00 – Cold Open: Hurricane Melissa headlines & OBX homes collapse00:43 – Welcome & panel introductions (James, Frank, Sam, Peter)01:05 – Peter’s new “Most Memorable Hurricanes” map explained02:20 – How social media crowdsourced storm memories04:04 – Revisiting the original XKCD hurricane map05:00 – Helene, Hugo, and the Carolinas’ most recalled hurricanes06:25 – Sam’s Outer Banks perspective: Irene vs. Isabel07:45 – Community storm memories and regional impacts08:45 – How far back storm memories go: Hazel to Camille10:06 – How to contribute to Peter’s map11:03 – Fall foliage color update across the Carolinas & Virginia13:05 – Blue Ridge Parkway road trip & color peak timing14:00 – Audience comments and storm memory chat17:00 – Sponsor segment: Queensboro apparel18:20 – Mid-Atlantic Severe Weather Conference preview with Chris White20:10 – Storm chasers, emergency managers, and guest lineup22:15 – Ricky Matthews & Virginia Tech storm chase legacy23:00 – Ticket deadline and conference info23:55 – Hurricane Melissa update: 24 hours after landfall24:15 – Satellite imagery and Hurricane Hunter turbulence25:18 – Melissa’s record winds and shutdown-impacted missions27:00 – Could Melissa have reached 190 mph?29:00 – Sentinel-2 satellite captures Melissa’s eye in detail31:00 – How high-res satellite imagery tracks storm motion33:40 – Bermuda’s hurricane warning & storm path ahead36:00 – OBX impacts expected from offshore Melissa swells38:30 – Five more homes collapse in Buxton and Avon40:30 – Highway 12 flooding and overwash footage43:00 – Why Hatteras Island is so vulnerable to erosion45:30 – Sam explains geography and failed nourishment projects46:45 – Six straight weeks of coastal damage updates47:40 – Outro & closing remarks#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolina
...EXTREMELY DANGEROUS CATEGORY 5 MELISSA ABOUT TO MAKE LANDFALL IN JAMAICA... ...CATASTROPHIC WINDS, FLASH FLOODING, AND STORM SURGE OCCURRING ONTHE ISLAND...Breaking coverage as Category 5 Hurricane Melissa makes landfall in Jamaica with catastrophic winds near 185 mph, storm surge up to 13 feet, and rainfall totals exceeding 30 inches.Join James Brierton of the Carolina Weather Group and Dr. Michael Brennan, Director of the National Hurricane Center, for the latest official update as the eye of Melissa crosses the island. Brennan details the immediate threats—life-threatening winds, flash flooding, landslides, and complete structural failure near the eyewall—while urging all residents to shelter in place.Inside this video:Real-time analysis of Melissa’s approach and eyewall structureLive update from Dr. Brennan on rainfall, wind, and storm-surge impacts across Jamaica, Cuba, and the BahamasRare NOAA Hurricane Hunter footage from inside Melissa’s eyewall showing the “stadium effect” and near-200 mph windsDiscussion on outer impacts reaching the Carolina coast, including continued beach erosion and new home collapses in Buxton, NCThis is a historic and catastrophic hurricane, ranking among the strongest ever recorded in the Atlantic Basin.Stay tuned for continued coverage and live analysis on the Carolina Weather Net, and join us Wednesday at 9 PM ET for the next Carolina Weather Group podcast.#HurricaneMelissa #MichaelBrennan #NationalHurricaneCenter #HurricaneHunters #Jamaica #CarolinaWeatherGroup #ExtremeWeather #Category5 #LiveUpdate #NOAA📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.
It’s a wild weather week across the Carolinas! 🌪️ James Brierton and Frank Strait are live for Episode 562 of the Carolina Weather Group with Stormy the Weather Cat making a cameo. We’re talking:Blowing dust at Charlotte Douglas Airport and gusty 30 mph winds turning the sky orangeTropical Storm Melissa spinning in the Caribbean — could it become a major hurricane?Drought conditions, fire danger, and the first freeze watch of the season in the North Carolina mountains ❄️Fall color updates from the Blue Ridge Parkway, Grandfather Mountain, and Lake Lure 🍁Continuing recovery in western NC after Helene, and another Outer Banks home collapse 🌊Viewer Q&A: why you need redundant ways to receive weather alerts (weather radios, apps, etc.)Plus: local shoutouts, your live comments, and an early look at next week’s rain chances.📍 Recorded live October 23, 2025👕 Merch made locally in Wilmington, NC — shop now at Queensboro.com to support the show!#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.
Two of the South’s most dedicated storm chasers, Brett Adair and Chris Jackson, join the Carolina Weather Group fresh off their trip to North Carolina’s Outer Banks, where a powerful nor’easter battered the coastline.They share what it was like witnessing the crashing surf, coastal flooding, and erosion first-hand — and what happened when NC 12 closed, trapping them on Hatteras Island as the storm raged. From dramatic scenes of homes teetering over the Atlantic to the tense moments wondering which structures might fall next, Brett and Chris recount the raw power of nature and the resilience of coastal communities.👉 Hear how this nor’easter compares to hurricanes they’ve chased in the past and what it reveals about the future of North Carolina’s fragile barrier islands.🌀 Guests: Brett Adair, Chris Jackson🌊 Topics: Outer Banks erosion, coastal flooding, NC 12 closure, storm chasing, barrier island vulnerability📍 Location: Hatteras Island, North Carolina#OuterBanks #Hatteras #StormChasing #NorEaster #CarolinaWeatherGroup #CoastalErosion #NC12 #HatterasIsland#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.
A powerful new coastal storm is taking shape off the Carolinas — and it’s bringing major flooding risks, pounding surf, and strong winds to the coast just days after king tides and ongoing erosion. 🌊In this episode of the Carolina Weather Group, meteorologist Frank Strait breaks down the timeline for this developing nor’easter, expected to lash Charleston, Buxton, and the Outer Banks with high water and beach erosion. Reporter Sam Walker joins live from the coast to share the latest on conditions in Buxton, Rodanthe, and Ocracoke, where recent storms have already claimed multiple homes.Then — go inside NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) in Asheville, North Carolina, where the nation’s official climate archives preserve weather records dating back to the 1700s. See rare artifacts and historic weather logs — from the first weather record at the South Pole, to Hurricane Helene, Mount St. Helens, and Ben Franklin’s handwritten observations.Archivist Jason Cooper takes the Carolina Weather Group deep inside a vault holding more than 36,000 boxes and 120,000 microfilm reels of environmental data — everything from 19th-century weather logs and Civil War–era records to Ben Franklin’s weather notes and the first South Pole weather observation ever recorded.See how NOAA preserves, digitizes, and protects these fragile documents from loss, and hear the incredible stories hidden within them — from the Iwo Jima weather records of World War II to the Mount St. Helens ash observations that changed forecasting forever.📍 Filmed inside NOAA’s NCEI Archives in Asheville, North Carolina🎙️ Featuring: Jason Cooper, NOAA Archivist00:00:00 – Carolina Weather Group: Coastal Flood Impacts & NOAA Archive00:00:14 – Opening and introductions from Charlotte & the Outer Banks00:00:42 – Overview: Nor’easter forming off the Carolina coast00:01:05 – Frank Strait: Storm setup and early model guidance00:02:18 – Friday forecast: Winds, rain, and coastal impacts for SC00:03:31 – Charleston king tides and potential major flooding00:05:03 – Beach erosion and weekend improvements for South Carolina00:06:41 – Sam Walker: Outer Banks erosion and home collapses00:08:09 – Dare County emergency management urges early departures00:09:46 – Third coastal storm since August; ongoing beach recovery00:10:23 – Tropical Storm Jerry update and potential offshore effects00:12:06 – Explaining “nor’easter” and why this storm is unnamed00:14:24 – Flashback: Hurricane Matthew anniversary (2016)00:15:21 – Transition: Inside NOAA’s National Weather Archive in Asheville00:17:09 – Jason Cooper: Tour of NOAA’s 36,000-box climate archive00:18:47 – How weather records are created, preserved, and digitized00:20:17 – Historic records from Charleston (1830s) to Ben Franklin00:22:31 – Iwo Jima, Ohio floods, and early Dakota Territory weather logs00:24:17 – First South Pole weather record (1957) and its challenges00:25:24 – Unique events in the archive: Hindenburg, Mt. St. Helens, Woodstock00:27:54 – Personal reflections on Hurricane Helene and Asheville flooding00:31:54 – Jared Rennie: Analyzing Helene’s one-in-1000-year rainfall00:34:46 – Emotional and scientific look at the Helene disaster00:38:00 – Evacuation, recovery, and NOAA’s storm data verification00:52:40 – Closing thoughts: Data, resilience, and the Carolina spirit#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.com
On this week’s Carolina Weather Group (Episode 559 – October 1, 2025), James Brierton, Frank Strait, Sam Walker, and Joseph Naven unpack the federal government shutdown — and what it really means for the National Weather Service, NOAA, and hurricane operations across the Southeast.The team discusses:What services will continue during the shutdown (like life-saving forecasts and warnings)Why NOAA’s social media and hurricane hunter updates are temporarily pausedHow Hurricane Imelda’s unexpected right turn spared most of the CarolinasBreaking news from the Outer Banks, where at least seven homes have collapsed into the Atlantic near BuxtonHow the shutdown complicates cleanup efforts on Cape Hatteras National SeashoreA look back one year after Hurricane Helene, with updates from Asheville’s River Arts District and CSX rail repairs across western North CarolinaPlus: NASCAR’s Charlotte fall weekend forecast, and a look back ten years to the 2015 South Carolina floodsWhether you’re in the Carolinas or beyond, this episode highlights how weather and government operations intersect — and how resilient our communities remain.#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.
South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster is joined by the National Weather Service and state officials to discuss preparations for Tropical Depression Nine, the storm forecast to become Hurricane Imelda in the days ahead. Impacts to the Carolina coast are forecast to include heavy rain, gusty winds and rough surf.#weather #northcarolina #southcarolina #ncwx #scwx #podcast📹 Join this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmhGiYbMDccQcdSjpf87nGg/join🧢 MERCH: https://carolinaweathergroup.qbstores.com/💸 LEAVE A TIP: https://streamelements.com/carolinawxgroup/tip🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/carolinaweather🔔 SUPPORT US ON PATREON: https://patreon.com/carolinaweathergroup💻 VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://carolinaweathergroup.comThe Carolina Weather Group operates a weekly talk show of the same name. Broadcasting each week from the Carolinas, the show is dedicated to covering weather, science, technology, and more with newsmakers from the field of atmospheric science. With co-hosts across both North Carolina and South Carolina, the show may closely feature both NC weather and SC weather, but the topics are universally enjoyable for any weather fan. Join us as we talk about weather, the environment, the atmosphere, space travel, and all the technology that makes it possible.


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