ATLANTA — A cold front moved in late Saturday night bringing the risk of strong wind, flash flooding and heavy rain to parts of north Georgia.
A strong line of storms produced severe weather in Alabama Saturday night and a line of storms moved through parts of west Georgia and metro Atlanta.
Severe Weather Team 2 Meteorologist Eboni Deon tracked the storms as several severe thunderstorm warnings were issued.
A tornado warning that was issued for Coweta County expired at 4:45 a.m. Deon said National Weather Service will survey the area for any damage.
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Tornado Warning has expired. Now a Severe Tstorm Warning for Spalding, Fayette, and Coweta counties until 5:15 AM. Storms moving east at 35 mph. pic.twitter.com/0Q3lT8UdyS
— Eboni Deon, WSB (@EboniDeonWSB) February 24, 2019
The good news is the wet pattern should end after the possible storms roll through early Sunday and the sunshine returns.
But there is a wind advisory in effect for Sunday through 7 p.m. with gusts around 35 mph possible, which could cause some downed trees.
Next chance for rain is Wednesday. It will be the start to an unsettled weather pattern as scattered rain and a few storms will be possible Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Windy Sunday! Wind Advisory for much of north Georgia. Winds W & NW 15-25 mph, gusts to 35 mph. Be careful as gusty winds could cause trees to fall in areas with saturated ground. pic.twitter.com/EkJThTDPjO
— Eboni Deon, WSB (@EboniDeonWSB) February 24, 2019
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