41°F
Updated:
3/8/2026
03:46:45am
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
856 FXUS63 KOAX 080535 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 1135 PM CST Sat Mar 7 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Very high fire danger Sunday with near-record high temperatures forecast. - Precipitation chances increase to 50-80% Tuesday night with minor snow accumulations possible from northeast Nebraska into northwest Iowa. - Warm, windy and dry conditions may lead to dangerous wildfire conditions Thursday. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 1123 PM CST Sat Mar 7 2026 Sunday and Monday: A vigorous shortwave trough over Manitoba late this evening will continue east with another mid-level disturbance traversing the Canadian Prairie Provinces Sunday into Sunday night. In the low levels, warm advection associated with prevailing southwest winds will persist overnight into Sunday, supporting highs in the upper 60s to mid 70s. The record high temperature of 73 (2020) at Norfolk will be within reach. The warm weather coupled with minimum relative humidity of 20-25% and wind gusts of 20-30 mph will result in very high fire danger in areas that received little to no rainfall over the last couple of days. On Sunday night, a surface cold front trailing the secondary disturbance mentioned above will settle south through the northern Plains and upper Mississippi Valley. The boundary is expected to stall across our area Monday with high temperatures dictated by frontal location. Temperatures north of the front remain uncertain; however, there`s a good chance of readings in the 70s south of it. Tuesday and Wednesday: The latest models are in reasonably good agreement in the progression of a polar-branch shortwave trough from the northern Intermountain Region Tuesday morning into the northern and central Plains by Wednesday evening. At the same time, a subtropical-branch cutoff low initially over northwest Mexico is expected to evolve into an open wave while moving into the southern Plains Tuesday afternoon/evening. Thereafter, that system is projected to become loosely phased with the polar-branch trough across the Ozarks into lower Mississippi Valley Tuesday night into Wednesday. At the surface, low pressure attendant to the polar-branch trough is forecast to move through or just to the south of our area Tuesday with a trailing cold front ushering a colder air mass into the region Tuesday night. We could end up seeing a fairly significant temperature gradient develop across the area Tuesday with highs ranging from the 40s and 50s in our northern counties to 60s and 70s in the south. Precipitation chances begin to increase in southeast NE and southwest IA Tuesday afternoon with the peak probabilities of 50-80% forecast Tuesday night. The high precipitation chances Tuesday night are contingent on the synergistic phasing of the separate systems (mentioned above) to yield a broader region of forcing for ascent. Some of the more recent model data suggest the better forcing with the subtropical-branch disturbance remaining to the south of our area. We`ll have to wait and see. By Tuesday night into Wednesday morning, sufficient air mass cooling is expected to occur to support at least a rain-snow mix at many locations. The best potential for minor snow accumulation is across northeast NE into northwest IA, where the various ensemble systems indicate a 40-70% chance of at least a dusting. It will be blustery and cooler Wednesday with highs in the 40s. Thursday and Friday: An amplifying shortwave trough is forecast to move from central Canada into the Great Lakes Thursday into Thursday night, in tandem with a surface low. Gusty southwest winds to the south of the low track will advect a warmer air mass into the region Thursday with highs bouncing back into the 60s to low 70s. The warm, windy, and dry conditions will result in a potentially dangerous fire-weather day. A front trailing the surface low is expected to move through the area Thursday night with cooler conditions forecast on Friday. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z MONDAY/... Issued at 1131 PM CST Sat Mar 7 2026 An all-VFR TAF period is on tap, with southwesterly winds expected to continue while wavering slightly to the west during the late morning into the afternoon hours. As of now, strong winds at FL015 of 45 kts have developed, causing low-level wind shear. As winds become more westerly tomorrow, gusts will also develop, reaching 20-25 kts at their peak (strongest at KOFK). Winds will diminish starting at 00z tomorrow evening, and the only remaining concern will become the redevelopment of low- level wind shear at KOMA, as nearly westerly winds at FL020 reach 35 kts. && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Mead AVIATION...Petersen
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
546 FXUS63 KGID 080822 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 322 AM CDT Sun Mar 8 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Near-Critical fire weather conditions possible across the area today, with briefly critical conditions possible along/north of I-80 and west of Highway 281. - Highs in the 70s today and Monday. - Precipitation chances return to the area Tuesday evening/night, with the highest chances (50-75%) and precipitation (0.10-0.25") across southeastern portions of the area. - Fire weather concerns return to the area on Wednesday and Thursday due to winds gusting 25-35mph and low afternoon relative humidity. && .UPDATE... Issued at 321 AM CDT Sun Mar 8 2026 Skies are clear this morning across the area. Westerly winds remain elevated, gusting 15-25mph, keeping temperatures in the mid 30s to low 40s. Aloft, a trough sits over the Midwest, with a cutoff low underneath a ridge over the West Coast. Highs today climb into the low to mid 70s aided by westerly downslope (warming) winds. The warm temperatures will also bring near critical to briefly critical fire weather conditions to the area this afternoon. Westerly winds gusting 20-30mph are expected, strongest along and north of Interstate 80. Afternoon relative humidity (RH) values fall below 25 percent across the area, with RH values falling below 20% southwest of a line from Beloit to Kearney. Combined, this will result in widespread near- critical fire weather conditions across the area. A window of critical fire weather conditions could develop for areas west of Highway 281 and along/north of Interstate 80. Given that the window of critical conditions looks to be fairly brief (1-2 hours), opted against issuing a Red Flag Warning for the time being. If confidence in stronger winds or lower RH increases (greater mixing), one may end up be needed later today. Highs soar into the mid to upper 70s on Monday ahead of an approaching shortwave trough. The warmth will result in low afternoon RH values, falling to 15-25%. Winds look to be slightly lighter, keeping fire weather concerns lower than on Sunday. Still, a window of near-critical fire weather conditions could develop across portions of Dawson/Buffalo/Sherman/Valley counties where winds are expected to be the strongest (gusting 20-25mph). A cold front associated with the passing shortwave trough dives into the area on Tuesday, bringing cooler temperatures to the area (highs 50s/60s). As the cutoff low over the southwest merges with the jetstream, it will bring a chance for rain to far southeastern portions of the area Tuesday evening. A reinforcing cold front also brings a chance for light precipitation to northwest portions of the area Tuesday evening/night. Otherwise the second half of the forecast period remains on track with the main concern being near- critical to critical fire weather conditions on Wednesday and Thursday due to breezy/gusty winds. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 201 PM CST Sat Mar 7 2026 This Afternoon through Monday... Water vapor imagery from satellite this afternoon reveals a positively tilted and a elongated/stretched trough across much of the Central U.S. this afternoon. The northeastern and more progressive end to to the wave is expected to pinch off from the southwest base, forming a cut-off low across the Southwest U.S. This process will allow for some stabilization aloft from zonal oriented flow taking over for the start of new week. This pattern shift should bat off any precipitation chances until at least Tuesday. At the surface, higher pressure with subsidence aloft will keep skies clear and winds light/steady (gusts
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