Clouds drifted into Chattooga County and Northwest Georgia early Tuesday as a weak wedge boundary slid into the region, keeping the morning gray and the afternoon temperatures a bit muted. Even so, the story for the next several days is pretty simple: quiet weather, mild afternoons, and very little rain.

As the low clouds thin out later today, Northwest Georgia should still manage highs mainly in the low-to-mid 50s, with a little more sunshine west of the I-75 corridor compared to spots farther northeast. Tonight turns calm and still—prime time for radiational cooling—so expect a chilly start Wednesday morning with lows dipping into the upper 20s to lower 30s in many areas.

By Wednesday, southerly winds ahead of the next front switch the pattern into “gentle warm-up mode.” Temperatures jump about 10 degrees compared to Tuesday, pushing upper 50s to near 60 around Northwest Georgia. Those southerly winds may also get a little feisty during the afternoon, with gusts around 20–25 mph.

A cold front pushes through late Wednesday into Thursday, but moisture looks limited—so rain chances remain low. Behind it, drier air settles in and Thursday leans cooler again with highs generally upper 40s to low 50s in north Georgia.

Heading toward the weekend, moisture tries to return. A few isolated showers could sneak in Friday night into Saturday (still limited), with a slightly better chance for spotty showers Saturday night into Sunday morning. Even then, rainfall totals look light overall—generally around a tenth of an inch near the far northern tier and less farther south—so significant rainfall is not anticipated through at least the middle of next week. After that, an Arctic high may influence temperatures early next week, but its exact track is still uncertain—so colder air is something to watch, not yet a guarantee.