Atlanta, GA
Metro Atlanta warming centers open: Where to find shelter in freezing temps
Wednesday midday weather forecast
Few showers Wednesday. Wetter Saturday and Tuesday.
As temperatures climb down into the low thirties overnight, warming centers are popping up all across Georgia ready to provide shelter to anyone in need.
The FOX 5 Storm Team is keeping an eye on the thermostat. Find out the latest in the weather around you here.
DeKalb County
- North DeKalb Senior Center; 3393 Malone Drive, ChambleeOpens 8 p.m. Jan. 3-5
- Opens 8 p.m. Jan. 3-5
- New Life Church and New Life Community Alliance; 3592 Flat Shoals Road, DecaturOpens 7 p.m. Jan. 4-5
- Opens 7 p.m. Jan. 4-5
- Fire Station 3; 100 N. Clarendon Avenue, Avondale EstatesOpens 8 p.m. Jan. 3-5
- Opens 8 p.m. Jan. 3-5
- Fire Station 4; 4540 Flakes Mill Road, EllenwoodOpens 8 p.m. Jan. 3-5
- Opens 8 p.m. Jan. 3-5
- Fire Station 6; 2342 Flat Shoals Road, AtlantaOpens 8 p.m. Jan. 3-5
- Opens 8 p.m. Jan. 3-5
- Frontline Response International; 2585 Gresham Road, AtlantaOpens 8 p.m. Jan. 3-5
- Opens 8 p.m. Jan. 3-5
Fulton County
- Central Park Recreation Center; 400 Merritts Avenue NE, Atlanta
Opens 8 p.m. Jan. 3-5
Transportation will be provided from the Gateway Center at Pryor Street SW, Atlanta with return transportation
- Opens 8 p.m. Jan. 3-5
- Transportation will be provided from the Gateway Center at Pryor Street SW, Atlanta with return transportation
Gilmer County
- Civic Center; 1561 S Main Street, EllijayOpens 5 p.m. Jan. 3-4
- Opens 5 p.m. Jan. 3-4
Gwinnett County
- Buford Senior Center; 2755 Sawnee Avenue, BufordOpens 6 p.m. Jan. 3-4
- Opens 6 p.m. Jan. 3-4
- Shorty Howell Park Activity Building; 2750 Pleasant Hill Road, DuluthOpens 6 p.m. Jan. 3-4
- Opens 6 p.m. Jan. 3-4
- Lawrencville Senior Center; 225 Benson Street, LawrencevilleOpens 6 p.m. Jan. 3-4
- Opens 6 p.m. Jan. 3-4
- Best Friend Park Gym; 6224 Jimmy Carter Boulevard, NorcrossOpens 6 p.m. Jan. 3-4
- Opens 6 p.m. Jan. 3-4
- Centerville Senior Center; 3025 Bethany Church Road, SnellvilleOpens 6 p.m. Jan. 3-4
- Opens 6 p.m. Jan. 3-4
If you have information on additional warming centers, please send email details to newstipsatlanta@fox.com.
Atlanta, GA
Santa “Paws” offers professional portraits for pups
Georgia Emergency Search and Rescue held a fundraiser at Coolray Field in Lawrenceville where dogs and their pet parents could get a professional photo with Santa, courtesy of Magnolia Grace Photography. FOX LOCAL’s Kaitlyn Pratt brings Judayah Murray a live look from the event.
Atlanta, GA
Atlanta Braves pitcher Dylan Lee reunites with Valley nurse who predicted he would be an athlete
VISALIA, Calif. (KFSN) — A South Valley nurse made a prediction about the baby in her care and fast-forward years later, it came true.
Registered nurse Kim Hofer shared a heart-warming reunion with Atlanta Braves pitcher Dylan Lee on Friday.
Lee visited Kaweah Health, where he was born 30 years ago, to visit the nurse who saw into his future.
Hofer took ‘footprints’ of the newborns and judging by the size of Lee’s baby feet, she predicted he would become an athlete.
Lee happened to find the footprint keepsake and sought out the nurse who helped him take his first step into his future.
“I guess when she put my feet on the paper, it barely fit. To her, used to doing it to other kids and then doing my feet, she said, ‘Oh man, this kid is gonna be an athlete,’ and I was like, ‘Well, her fruition came true,’” Lee said.
Lee went to Dinuba High School, played at College of the Sequoias and Fresno State.
The former world champion encourages parents to allow their children to stay active and play several sports.
On Saturday, he’ll make an appearance at Tulare’s Fishing Derby at Del Lago Park.
Copyright © 2025 KFSN-TV. All Rights Reserved.
Atlanta, GA
Atlanta author Felicia Feaster can help you design a Gothic garden
Photograph by Tomas Epinosa
Writer and author Felicia Feaster is a former HGTV website editor, where she started 11 years ago as the editor-in-chief of a new gardening website called HGTV Gardens. That experience, combined with her own avid gardening, led her to where she is today: the author of The Gothic Garden: The Mystery, Beauty, and Lore of Dark Gardening, which debuted in November. Here, Feaster, a longtime Atlanta magazine contributor, explains what the concept is and how she wrote the book.
How did you come up with the idea for the book?
The concept of a Gothic garden, which kept popping up on TikTok and Instagram, immediately sparked my interest. I started writing pieces about what types of plants people could use in their Goth garden. Serendipitously, the publisher, Simon & Schuster, saw those articles and tracked me down to ask me to write a book—in three months.
Photograph by Tomas Epinosa

The 19th century, or the Victorian Age, was a time of incredible interest in plants, especially exotic and strange ones, including poisonous plants. It was also a time of exploration into new places, like Asia and South America. When Queen Victoria lost her husband and went into mourning for the rest of her life, she influenced a lot of rituals and etiquette around death. Plus, there was a lot of new technology, and with that, anxiety about science usurping nature; that was a theme in Gothic literature at the time, like Frankenstein. This all laid the foundation—the garden is the place where life and death battles are happening.
How does the book work?
The heart of the book is 50 plants, flowers, vegetables, and herbs I’ve chosen that have the most interesting stories in terms of plant history and are the most beautiful. It’s a mix of super strange and accessible plants. In Victorian times, plants had a lot of meaning; it was a form of communication in such a repressed culture. I also talk about ancient uses of plants, such as rosemary, which was used in embalming in ancient Egypt.
There are design elements to use in your Goth garden to give it a spooky ambiance, such as wrought iron gates. The plants are accompanied by illustrations by Irina Vinnik, which are so gorgeous that Simon & Schuster will release an additional publication in summer 2026 called Dark Blooms, a compilation of postcards and my writing about the meaning of the plants.
Photograph by Tomas Epinosa
Do you have a Goth garden?
Yes, it leans into deep, purple colored plants. I also have a dead tree; it’s almost like a tree sculpture. This summer, I cut down a castor bean plant, which was 10 feet tall. It’s the most toxic plant and has ricin that’s 6,000 times more poisonous than cyanide. It has crazy, spiky red seed pods. It’s a spooky-looking plant. I love telling people passing by the story of it—it’s a good, easy shock.
Celebrate Feaster on December 7th at the Plaza Theatre, where she’ll have a book signing before a screening of Edward Scissorhands, complete with a Gothic-inspired cocktail by Videodrome.
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