70°F
Updated:
6/24/2026
9:33:11pm
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
919 FXUS63 KOAX 242319 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 619 PM CDT Wed Jun 24 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - A few showers and storms are expected this evening/tonight, particularly for areas along and south of Hwy 92. - Isolated showers and storms will be possible Friday night/Saturday morning, limited to northeastern Nebraska. - Expect very hot and humid conditions Sunday through Tuesday as highs reach into the 90s to low 100s each day and heat index values approach 105. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 152 PM CDT Wed Jun 24 2026 The forecast period starts out with a weak upper ridge over southern Wyoming/northern Colorado. A weak shortwave crosses into the region this evening/tonight. A few showers and thunderstorms will be possible, particularly for areas along and south of Hwy 92 as the system rolls through. MLCAPE values of 500-1000 J/kg and DCAPE values of 800-1200 J/kg are expected for areas along and south of a line from the Omaha Metro to York. Wouldn`t entirely rule out a strong storm or two developing with mainly a wind threat, particularly for areas south of Lincoln this evening/tonight. Thursday brings a shift in the pattern as a couple of weak shortwave troughs moves across the Wyoming/Colorado border, shifting us into more of a zonal flow pattern through Friday. Expect a slight cool down as temperatures rise mainly into the 70s, with a few isolated 80s possible along portions of the Missouri River. As the shortwaves move through Nebraska, there will be a chance (20-50%) of showers and thunderstorms. These chances are expected to taper off west to east by Thursday morning. We maintain zonal flow Friday with a deepening upper low over the Aleutian Islands and the PACNW. Expect this to be the last cool-ish day for awhile, with highs ranging form the mid-70s to mid-80s. Heading into the weekend, the upper low will push ashore over the West Coast, although there is still some uncertainty in where it will eventually come ashore. A broad upper trough will extend from the West Coast to the Rockies, amplifying a ridge over the Midwest and putting the Great Plains under southwest flow. Saturday highs will reach into the mid to upper 80s. Sunday and beyond, forecasted high temperatures are expected to be in the 90s to low 100s. Heat index values for many areas will range from 96-105. Southwest flow remains over us through the extended forecast. A few disturbances are expected to move into the plains, which could ultimately give us a chance for a few showers/storms. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 559 PM CDT Wed Jun 24 2026 VFR conditions are anticipated through the TAF period. Light northwest winds will slowly shift towards the northeast overnight into Thursday morning. Showers and thunderstorms are in the forecast late tonight into Thursday afternoon. At this time, forecast model guidance keeps the bulk of activity south of LNK, mainly across northeast Kansas, through most of the period. To the north of this, widely scattered showers with a few thunderstorms are possible late tonight and into Thursday. With thunderstorm coverage being limited and with model timing inconsistencies, confidence is low on aviation impacts at area terminals. While chances are low overall (10-30%), if a shower or thunderstorm impacts a terminal any impacts are expected to be short-lived. Brief visibility reductions and gusty, shifting winds would be the main concern outside of lightning. Forecast trends will continue to be monitored for weather inclusion in the TAF forecast should confidence increase in any aviation impacts. && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...ANW AVIATION...Chehak
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
357 FXUS63 KGID 250033 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 733 PM CDT Wed Jun 24 2026 ...Aviation and Key Messages Update... .KEY MESSAGES... - Scattered off and on thunderstorms will impact the area tonight, as well as throughout the day and night on Thursday. - While MOST storms will be relatively weak, a few strong to severe storms are possible especially this evening...and primarily within the southwest quadrant of our forecast area where instability is highest (mainly counties along/south of I-80 and west of Hwy 281) - Cloud cover and scattered showers and thunderstorms will keep Thursday well below (nearly 20 degrees) normal for the end of June. - An overall-drier AND warmer regime arrives especially Saturday-Monday, with high temps up into the upper 80s-mid 90s range. Although certainly nothing unusual for late-June (and also short of Heat Advisory criteria), this will really feel like a big change given the decent stretch of recent/upcoming coolness. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 342 PM CDT Wed Jun 24 2026 The Central Plains sits under weakly tilted northwesterly flow, that will become more zonal over time. This will cause the remainder of the work week to be active with scattered showers and thunderstorms persisting off and on throughout. Activity will begin to ramp up this evening, peaking during the day Thursday and tapering off overnight Thursday into Friday morning. The instability is better off to the west, which will keep the strongest storms away from the area. As of this AFD issuance, there is a persistent thunderstorm moving southeast across the sandhills of Nebraska. High- resolution internal Ensemble WoFS shows this thunderstorm tracking south and east towards Grand Island and further southeast. This thunderstorm is really riding the instability gradient southeast and generally has about 500-1000 J/Kg to work with, meanwhile shear is plentiful. Shower and thunderstorm coverage will increase into the overnight hours, which is supported by a variety of model solutions and it will persist in an off and on nature. Due to the coverage of showers and thunderstorms tomorrow, expect temperatures to be cool - highs in the 60s to low 70s...which is about 20 degrees below normal for the end of June. Thunderstorm activity is expected to exit the area during the day Friday. Moving into the weekend, a trough begins to dig in to the Pacific Northwest and the upper level pattern for the Central Plains switches to southwesterly as ridging builds into the Ohio valley by early next week. This pattern change will cause winds to become southerly and breezy at times, and for moisture transport to increase. Temperatures will warm back into the summer like temperatures with highs in the 90s expected for the weekend and early next week. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 732 PM CDT Wed Jun 24 2026 For KGRI/KEAR Airports: - General overview: The majority of the period (quite possibly the vast majority of it) will likely feature VFR ceiling/visibility, and rain/thunderstorm-free conditions. However, a round of storms is likely especially this evening-overnight. Outside of any thunderstorm-outflow, surface winds will also be relatively tame, with sustained speeds the vast majority of the period under 12KT, although some more consistent gusts to 15+KT are probable especially Thursday afternoon. - More details: Occasional ceiling/visibility to at least MVFR levels cannot be ruled out, and particularly the 03-08Z time frame this evening- overnight features a relatively high chance for intermittent thunderstorms...some of which could produce gusty winds at least 20-30KT and/or mainly small hail, along with brief heavy rain. Given increasing confidence in thunderstorm occurrence, TEMPO groups have been introduced to cover the most favored hours. While at least MVFR conditions could occur during active thunderstorms tonight, one of the bigger questions is what happens AFTER the main round of convection departs early Thursday morning...namely: will ceiling hold up no lower than low-end VFR...or could MVFR become more prevalent or at least continue intermittently through the remainder of the period? Given how some higher-res models largely "whiffed" on the potential prevalence of sub-VFR ceiling during these last 24 hours, will lean more on "older school" numerical guidance (GFS LAMP/LAV) and officially call for no worse than low-end VFR ceiling in prevailing groups, but keeping scattered sub-VFR groups to at least "hint" at that potential. Lastly, and getting back to rain shower/thunderstorm chances, at least intermittent showers/weak thunderstorms could occur beyond the aforementioned TEMPO groups, and have kept PROB30 groups in place through 12Z. Beyond 12Z and into Thursday daytime, considered going with additional PROB30 but with some of latest higher-res models keeping most of daytime convection at least slightly south/west/east of KGRI/KEAR, opted to refrain for now. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. KS...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Billings Wright AVIATION...Pfannkuch
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