This is an old revision of the document!
Weather
Current Weather
Drought Conditions
South Carolina
https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/CurrentMap/StateDroughtMonitor.aspx?SC
Richland County
https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/CurrentMap/StateDroughtMonitor.aspx?fips_45079
Climate Info and Frost Dates
Zone/Region Info
| County | SC Region | USDA Zone | Temperature Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Richland | Coastal | 8a | (10 to 15 °F/-12.2 to -9.4 °C) |
| https://planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/ | |||
| https://hgic.clemson.edu/factsheet/planning-a-garden/ | |||
Average Frost Dates
| Altitude | Last Spring Frost | First Fall Frost | Growing Season |
|---|---|---|---|
| 223' | Mar 24 | Nov 9 | 229 days |
| https://www.almanac.com/gardening/frostdates/SC/Columbia | |||
| Average Last Frost | Average First Frost |
|---|---|
| Apr. 1 - Apr. 10 | Nov. 11 - Nov. 20 |
| https://www.plantmaps.com/interactive-south-carolina-last-frost-date-map.php | |
Autumn frost freeze dates
https://www.weather.gov/cae/Autumnfrostfreeze.html
| Minimum temperature of 36 degrees | |
|---|---|
| Columbia | |
| Average Date | October 25 |
| Earliest Date | 10/3/1974 |
| Latest Date | 11/14/2003 |
| Minimum temperature of 32 degrees | |
|---|---|
| Columbia | |
| Average Date | November 3 |
| Earliest Date | 10/4/1974 |
| Latest Date | 12/10/1978 |
| Minimum temperature of 28 degrees | |
|---|---|
| Columbia | |
| Average Date | November 16 |
| Earliest Date | 10/22/1952 & 1974 |
| Latest Date | 12/19/2011 |
——
Frost Date Charts
How to read these charts for the spring
As the growing season approaches, the days get longer, the weather begins to warm up, and the nights start being less cold. You're still getting frost, but the chance of nightly frosts gets less and less with each passing day.
Eventually, the frost stops, and this is when your tender plants are fully safe.
So, how do you plan for this?
The probabilities on this page help you assess your risk of frost on any given day.
What's a safe temperature for tender plants?
When the nightly temperature falls, frost can form, even above 32°, because the air is colder high above the ground and the frost can form up there and then fall down onto your garden and do some damage, even if it's 36° on the ground.
So many factors come into play, including wind, concrete, houses, trees and other structures, etc etc etc.
Because of all this, you might want to consider 36° as “the danger zone”.
In your average springtime, you have a 90% chance that there will be no 36° nights by April 15.
In other words, you can pretty much count on being safe from frost by that day.
But we want to get those tomatoes in the ground as soon as possible, right?
We see that there's still an 80% chance of 36° on March 20, so we don't dare plant that early.
We wait a few days and by March 30 we are at the 50/50 point. At this point, we are close and we can start watching the weather forecast.
If the upcoming week's forecast doesn't show below 40°, then it's probably okay to risk planting out your plants.
If conditions change and a surprise frost does threaten, there's always things you can do to protect plants from frost.
Spring
| Last 16° |
|---|
| Feb 9 |
| Jan 30 |
| Jan 21 |
| Jan 12 |
| Dec 27 |
| – |
| – |
| – |
| – |
| Last 20° |
|---|
| Feb 23 |
| Feb 13 |
| Feb 7 |
| Jan 31 |
| Jan 25 |
| Jan 18 |
| Jan 9 |
| – |
| – |
| Last 24° |
|---|
| Mar 7 |
| Feb 26 |
| Feb 19 |
| Feb 14 |
| Feb 9 |
| Feb 3 |
| Jan 29 |
| Jan 22 |
| Jan 11 |
| Mar 12 |
| Mar 7 |
| Mar 3 |
| Feb 28 |
| Feb 25 |
| Feb 22 |
| Feb 19 |
| Feb 15 |
| Feb 10 |
| Last 32° |
|---|
| Apr 7 |
| Mar 31 |
| Mar 26 |
| Mar 22 |
| Mar 18 |
| Mar 14 |
| Mar 10 |
| Mar 5 |
| Feb 26 |
| Last 36° |
|---|
| Apr 15 |
| Apr 10 |
| Apr 6 |
| Apr 2 |
| Mar 30 |
| Mar 27 |
| Mar 24 |
| Mar 20 |
| Mar 15 |
How to read these charts for the fall As your growing season comes to an end, the nightly temperatures for Columbia, South Carolina start to go down, and therefore every day that goes by increases the chance that you'll get frost. Your risk of frost really begins around October 26, and by November 23 you're almost certain to have received at least one frost event. The charts on this page show the probabilities of receiving a certain temperature on a certain day. Some examples that might help: You have a small 20% chance of getting 32° by November 1. There is a 50% chance of being hit by a 32° frost starting around November 12 You have a 80% chance of seeing 32° by November 23 Said another way, you have a 1 in 5 chance at making it to that day without a 32° night. In the Fall Temperature 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% First 16° Jan 1 Jan 12 Jan 21 Jan 30 Feb 15 – – – – First 20° Dec 12 Dec 22 Dec 29 Jan 5 Jan 11 Jan 18 Jan 28 – – First 24° Nov 28 Dec 7 Dec 13 Dec 18 Dec 23 Dec 28 Jan 3 Jan 9 Jan 20 First 28° Nov 8 Nov 17 Nov 23 Nov 29 Dec 4 Dec 9 Dec 14 Dec 20 Dec 29 First 32° Oct 26 Nov 1 Nov 5 Nov 9 Nov 12 Nov 15 Nov 19 Nov 23 Nov 29 First 36° Oct 14 Oct 20 Oct 25 Oct 29 Nov 1 Nov 5 Nov 9 Nov 13 Nov 20
