Holy wow, the 0Z GFS says I see my 1st flakes in at least 2 years early morning of 2/10, which would be right on the 44th anniversary of the historic 3.6" SAV snow of the early morning of 2/10/1973! The two clown maps I've seen actually have accumulation on the immediate coast of SC down almost to SAV. What starts out as cold rain changes to snow late THU night due to ~1/3" of qpf falling after 850 temp.'s fall below 0C. This precip. falls as a result of an Arctic front that comes down (helped by a solid -AO) and then stalls out over central FL. Then as 500 mb energy comes in from the NW and turns the 500 mb flow from W to a moist WSW, a 1015 mb sfc low forms just east of Cape Canaveral and only very slowly moves ENE ~300-350 miles SE of the SC coast.
This is a dream run for me because I know the chances are almost 100% that it won't look anything like this on the very next run. The one thing in the back of my mind, however, is that the 2nd week in Feb. for whatever reason is a major peak for these freak far south setups that give measurable snow to the SAV-CHS corridor as well as other Deep South/coastal locations. Of 14 0.5"+ SN/IP at SAV since the 1870's (~1 every 10 years), a whopping 7 of them were during the short 2/8-15 interval!! That's about 1 every 20 years there just during that week long stretch!