28°F
Updated:
1/11/2026
10:00:30am
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
241 FXUS63 KOAX 111118 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 518 AM CST Sun Jan 11 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Mix of clouds and sun today with highs in the 40s to near 50F west of the Missouri River, and mid 30s to near 40F east. - Warm temperatures expected Monday and Tuesday (50s to near 60F) with partly to mostly cloudy skies. Gusty northwest winds expected Tuesday. - Cooler temperatures Wednesday (highs in the mid 30s to low 40s). Next best chance for precipitation expected sometime late Thursday into Friday (20 to 40% chance). && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 309 AM CST Sun Jan 11 2026 .SHORT TERM.../TODAY THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT/ 07z GOES-19 nighttime microphysics shows mostly clear skies across OAX this morning. Clouds are observed just to the west of the area where a weak H5 wave is located. 08z RAP objective analysis shows the wave over the western Dakotas, riding the eastern periphery of a 582dam ridge where northwesterly flow is observed. Latest sfc analysis shows sfc high pressure dominating much of Nebraska into far western Iowa early this morning. The clear skies have resulted in temperatures cooling to the mid teens to low 20s. The sfc high will move away from the forecast area this morning while the mid level wave approaches from the west. Only expecting a few mid to high level based clouds though from the feature with dry conditions prevailing today. An H8 baroclinic zone pushes though the day as well, and the ensuing warm air advection should help push highs to near 50F across far northwestern portions of our forecast area, while slightly cooler highs are expected for the rest of eastern Nebraska (low to mid 40s) and western Iowa (mid to upper 30s). Winds will become a bit breezy too from the southwest at 20 to 25 mph as we`ll be on the northwest side of the sfc high by then. Late tonight into Monday morning, another series of waves eject from the top of the H5 ridge near Montana southeast into the Dakotas and Nebraska. While some midlevel moisture transport from the Pacific is noted, forcing remains nebulous. A few CAM members develop light reflectivity echoes across far northeast Nebraska into western Iowa Monday, but forecast BUFKIT soundings show substantial dry air from H7 to the sfc so just expecting some mid to high level based cloudiness from the disturbance. Highs Monday warm to the 50s for most locations west of the Missouri River were warm air advection once again ensues. A few of our far northwest areas could reach just shy of 60F, while slightly cooler temperatures in the upper 40s are expected east of the Missouri River. Lows Monday night cool to the 30s for most locations, while far northeast Nebraska stays warmer in the 40s. .LONG TERM.../TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/ One last warm day is expected Tuesday with high temperatures of 60F across our western areas, and widespread mid to upper 50s for the rest of the area. An H5 wave will eject from Saskatchewan and Manitoba southeast into Minnesota and Wisconsin throughout the day. Sfc cyclogenesis ensues with the 992 mb sfc low deepening over the Great Lakes. A tight pressure gradient and strong H8 jet sets up over much of the Northern Plains resulting in gusty northwest winds of 25 to 35 mph, primarily across northeast Nebraska with gusts of 20 to 25 mph expected for the rest of the area. A ribbon of vorticity associated with the H5 low will swing through the area as does a frontal boundary. A few of the ECMWF and GEFS ensembles develop a light band of QPF over the area late in the afternoon and evening tied to these features. NBM extended is currently dry with under 10% unmentionable PoPs at this time. By Wednesday, the front will have made its way through helping cool temperatures to the mid 30s across northeast Nebraska into southwest Iowa, while highs in the low 40s are expected for the remainder of the area. Dry conditions are currently forecast, but guidance does show a lobe of vorticity and resultant wave ejecting southeast from northern Manitoba into the Plains. Similar to Tuesday, a few ensembles and deterministic guidance develop light QPF early in the day, but this should be somewhat suppressed by an approaching sfc high. Breezy winds may linger too. Thursday and Friday will see an stronger wave eject from Alberta and Saskatchewan toward the Dakotas. Differences still exist with model guidance regarding exact track, but a sfc low does form and track southeast. Guidance suggests precip developing with the feature, clipping far northeast Nebraska Thursday (15% chance) with lingering precip on Friday (20 to 40% chance of snow) on the backside of the low for most of northeast Nebraska into west central Iowa. Obviously we are still several days out so expect PoP placement to change within the upcoming days. Highs Thursday rebound to the 40s to near 50F but cool to the mid 30s to low 40s Friday. Winds will be gusty too from the northwest both days. Much cooler air at H8 arrives for Saturday with highs in the mid 20s to low 30s for most locations. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z MONDAY/... Issued at 518 AM CST Sun Jan 11 2026 VFR conditions are expected to prevail for the duration of the TAF cycle at all three terminals. Winds will turn to the southwest today becoming breezy in the afternoon with gusts up to 20 kts. Winds weaken and turn more westerly after 05z. A period of low level wind shear will affect KOMA after 02z through at least 05z. Recent model guidance tries to develop a few to scattered cloud deck around 1,500 ft, but confidence in that scenario occurring remains rather low (~10% chance). && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Castillo AVIATION...Castillo
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
658 FXUS63 KGID 111200 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 600 AM CST Sun Jan 11 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Today and Monday will be very mild for mid-January. Tuesday will still be warm, but will trend a little breezier. - There are only low-end chances for precipitation Tuesday night into Wednesday (mainly rain) and on Friday (mainly snow). - There is 60% chance to see gusts of at least 45 MPH on Friday. && .UPDATE... Issued at 408 AM CST Sun Jan 11 2026 Some near-term models hint at the potential for some fog this morning, but scattered high clouds will likely keep this very localized (or prevent it entirely). Temperatures again reach the 40s and 50s today with relatively light southwest winds. Monday and Tuesday will trend even warmer, and most locations should reach the 60s by Tuesday. Unfortunately the warmth on Tuesday will be accompanied by increasing northwesterly wind. Tuesday is still on-track to break record warm low temperature. The record is 35 degrees, and the latest forecast is 37 degrees. A shortwave moving southward through the central Plains may bring some light precipitation to parts of the area Tuesday night into Wednesday. That said, the latest model consensus still keeps PoPs below 15% for Tuesday night. Given relative warmth, precipitation would be primarily rain, possibly mixed with a little snow. Another trough arrives Thursday night into Friday, bringing in some colder air, wind, and another low chance for precipitation (mainly snow). The EPS has backed off a touch on wind gusts for Friday, but the latest NBM still highlights a 60% chance for at least portions of the area to see gusts over 45 MPH on Friday. After a couple cooler days to end this week, ensembles favor above-normal temperatures to return for the following week (January 18-24). It is unlikely to be as warm as the beginning of January, but will still keep us on-track for one of the mildest Januarys on-record. Snow chances also look pretty meager until maybe the end of the following week (Jan 23-24) as well. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 341 PM CST Sat Jan 10 2026 Currently... What has been a dry day for the forecast area up until now will be ending for northern portions, as a swath of light snow continues to creep in from the north. Looking aloft, upper air and satellite data show an area of low pressure spinning over the northern MN/WI border, with a trough axis extending SSW through IA/MO and into OK. A strong upper level jet streak nosing south on the backside of the main low is helping drive this activity, and with the lack of moisture to work with, it`s been on the light side. At the surface, an accompanying cold front has been swinging through the region, ushering in gusty NW winds. Most gusts have been in the 25-35 MPH range, but here has been an occasional gust closer to 40-45 MPH. Between the increasing cloud cover and cooler air advecting in this afternoon, temps across the NNErn half of the area have leveled off/dropped this afternoon (highs will end up being in the upper 30s- low 40s)...further SW still seeing plenty of sun (at least for a bit longer), has reached into the low 50s. This evening into Sunday... The potential for light snow (mainly flurries) will continue to sink south the rest of this afternoon and early evening...mainly impacting out south central NE counties. Not expecting any notable accumulation or impacts from this activity...which is expected to end mid-late evening (possibly earlier). The rest of the overnight hours tonight remains dry. The current gusty winds will taper off tonight, dropping below 10 MPH, turning more westerly with time as a ridge of high pressure slides east through the area. Cloud cover should also diminish, especially after midnight...overnight lows are forecast to drop into the mid teens to low 20s. Lower amplitude northwesterly flow sets up across the region for Sunday...with the forecast remaining dry, and partly cloudy to mostly sunny skies. Winds are lighter than today (closer to 10-15 MPH)...out of the WSW as high pressure settles into eastern portions of the Srn Plains and a trough of low pressure extends from the central High Plains up through the Dakotas. The cooler airmass shifts further east with time...and together with the WSW winds and more sun, a bump is expected in temps...with forecast highs still in the mid 40s east to mid 50s west. New work week... Overall, compared to 24 hours ago, there really hasn`t been a significant changes to the forecast through the new work week. Models remain in pretty good agreement looking big-picture, broad...showing the upper level pattern remaining generally northwesterly, with varying degrees of amplitude with time. The start of the week continues what starts on Sunday, lower amplitude flow aloft, with broad troughing over the East Coast and high pressure just off the CA coast. Starting roughly Tuesday night and continuing through the end of the week, models continue to show the potential for a couple of stronger upper level waves to dig SSE out of central Canada and into central/eastern portions of the CONUS, driving a much more amplified pattern across the CONUS as high pressure builds north along the West Coast. At this point, models continue to show neither of these systems (roughly Tue night-Wed AM and again Friday-ish) being notable precipitation makers for the forecast area...in fact, the forecast for Monday-Saturday remains largely dry. Better chances for precipitation currently look to be focused just off to our east...but it`s only Saturday, still plenty of time to iron out details depending on model trends. As far as temperatures go...the start of the week sees the return of above normal temperatures, with Monday in the mid 50s-near 60 and Tuesday in the low 60s. Normal highs for this time of year are mid 30s to right around 40. At this point not anticipating any record highs, but current forecast flirts with Warm Low Temp records for the 13th (Tuesday)...forecast for both GRI/HSI is a low of 36, record for both is 35 (set in 2002 for GRI, 1987 for HSI) From Wednesday on...these upper level waves will usher in colder air, and especially for Friday, stronger winds. Wednesday highs fall back into the 40s, and after a brief warm up Thursday, the next push of colder air drops Fri-Sat more into the 30s. The timing of the main pushes of NW winds looks to be Wednesday and again Friday...with ECMWF ensemble data still showing probabilities of 50 kts/58 MPH around 10-30 percent for a decent portion of our south central NE counties. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z MONDAY/... Issued at 549 AM CST Sun Jan 11 2026 For KGRI/KEAR Airports: Increasing high clouds should prevent any fog from developing this morning. SCT-BKN high clouds continue through the morning before clearing out in the afternoon and evening. SW winds gust 15-20kts late this morning into the afternoon. Winds turn to the WNW tonight. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. KS...None. && $$ UPDATE...Mangels DISCUSSION...ADP AVIATION...Mangels
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