35°F
Updated:
2/13/2026
08:50:47am
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
398 FXUS63 KOAX 131052 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 452 AM CST Fri Feb 13 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - A warming trend continues into early next week, with mid 50s to mid 60s through the weekend, and mid 60s to near 70 by Tuesday. - Rain returns late Friday night into Saturday, mainly near and south of I-80. There is a low (20-40%) chance of precipitation for east-central Nebraska and southwest Iowa with a medium (50-70%) chance for southeast Nebraska - An active weather pattern arrives by the middle of next week. Periodic rain chances with cooler temperatures can be expected. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 1056 PM CST Thu Feb 12 2026 Temperatures continue their gradual warming trend on Friday with upper 50s to low 60s expected during the afternoon. This will be despite increasing mid to high level cloud cover ahead of our next weather system. This weather system is a trough and associated low pressure system that moves across the southern Great Plains and Lower Mississippi River Valley late Friday into Saturday. With our region being far removed from this system and limited low-level moisture, precipitation chances are mainly confined to areas along and south of Interstate 80. There will be a low (20-40%) chance of rain for east-central Nebraska and southwest Iowa. Rain chances increase (50-70%) across southeast Nebraska with closer proximity to the weather system. Precipitation amounts are anticipated to be meager with perhaps a tenth of an inch or two for portions of southeast Nebraska. Temperatures will be a touch cooler where it does end up raining on Saturday with nearly identical temperatures to Friday elsewhere. Temperatures continue to warm into early next week as upper-level ridging helps to push temperatures through the 60s to near 70 by Tuesday ahead of our next weather system. At this time, forecast guidance is depicting a two-part system. The first shortwave is forecast to quickly lift out of the southwestern US towards the northern Plains late Tuesday into early Wednesday. With this system lifting north of the area, the best chance of any rain is focused over northeast Nebraska with limited rain chances elsewhere. A brief lull may arrive Wednesday afternoon before the main trough approaches the region late Wednesday into Thursday. Cooler temperatures and rain chances are expected during this time with the low track forecast to be just south of the area currently. Overall precipitation chances remain relatively low and uncertain at this time due to differences in the strength and speed of this second system. Stay tuned to the latest forecasts as rain chances will likely change. Much colder air is anticipated behind this system late in the week and a brief period of snow is in the realm of possibilities heading into Friday. It is too soon for exact details on this, but given warm ground temperatures ahead of this system, impacts should be minimal. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z SATURDAY/... Issued at 452 AM CST Fri Feb 13 2026 VFR conditions through the TAF period. Winds will be light generally out of the west or northwest this morning, shifting more southerly this afternoon. We`ll see winds continue shifting more to the southeast toward the end of the TAF period. && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Chehak AVIATION...McCoy
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
674 FXUS63 KGID 131150 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 550 AM CST Fri Feb 13 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Outside of perhaps a few sprinkles this morning (mainly SW of the Tri-Cities), dry conditions expected again today with warm highs in the lower 60s! - Overall best precipitation chances (which look to be rain), still on track to spread across mainly the southern half-third of the forecast area tonight into Saturday. Current forecast total amounts of around 0.25-0.5 lie across areas along/south of the NE/KS state line. - There`s still some uncertainty on the northern extent of the main rain band - some short-term hi-res guidance (06Z HRRR) is much drier than global models (00Z ECMWF). - Expect another round of warm and dry conditions Sun- Tue, with highs forecast to reach the upper 60s-near 70 by Tuesday. Tue night-Thu bring the potential for a couple level disturbances to the region...but precipitation chances are low (20-30 percent) at this time. && .UPDATE... Issued at 455 AM CST Fri Feb 13 2026 Main thing to watch in the very short term (next 12-18 hours) will be potential for some sprinkles or very light rain showers in the W/SW portions of the forecast area. Satellite indicates a healthy batch of mid level clouds associated with some mid level warm air advection/isentropic lift - and there are some returns on radar, as well. However, there is a significant layer of dry air to deal with in the lowest 5K ft - as evident by 00Z LBF observed sounding and latest RAP forecast soundings for HDE and LXN. Thus, only expecting this to amount to a few sprinkles. This activity should wane towards midday and allow for another unseasonably warm afternoon with highs in the 60s area wide! Even better is that winds look to remain unusually light for such warm temps in February at only 5-10 MPH. So it`ll be quite pleasant mid February weather that comes w/o fire wx concerns. Best chances for organized precipitation is still on-track to arrive late tonight and continue into Saturday, mainly for areas S of I-80. Highest chances remain focused along and S of the NE/KS state line...but even this close to the event, some models are still in disagreement over how far N the main shield of rain (RAIN! on the NW side of a system in middle of February!...but I digress) will extend. 06Z HRRR is considerably drier compared to global output such as EPS and GFS. Ensemble data appears to lean towards the drier HRRR idea, as the 00Z EPS probabilities for >0.50" are only ~30% in our far S tier of counties. There`s also a very sharp northern gradient noted in the probabilities, suggesting that the aforementioned dry air from today will be a limiting factor. So...will call for a trace to quarter inch for counties on either side of the state line...to around 0.25-0.50" for Rooks, Osborne and Mitchell Counties in KS. Again, despite it being middle of February, have high confidence this event will be all rain as there`s simply no cold air to work with, and the system is too open/weak to "make" it`s own cold air. System departs Saturday evening and sets the stage for another round of unseasonably warm temperatures and dry conditions for Sunday and into the first half of the next work week. Ensembles suggest a run into the 70s will be possible either Tuesday or Wednesday ahead of the next cold front. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 251 PM CST Thu Feb 12 2026 Currently through tonight... Upper air and satellite data show continued generally zonal flow across the area this afternoon...sitting on the northern side of broad ridging spread across much of the southern CONUS. Elsewhere, troughing remains over the central and northern portions of the East Coast, while low pressure spins over the central CA/NV border area. Satellite imagery also showing that outside a few patches of upper level clouds sliding through, skies are mostly sunny. At the surface, a frontal boundary has been gradually sinking south through the area...but outside of a switch to more NWrly winds, it`s not having much of an impact. Seeing a handful of automated sites behind the boundary occasionally gusting closer to 20 MPH, but otherwise speeds are mainly around 10-15 MPH. Temperatures have been working out as expected, highs by the time the day is done look to be in the upper 50s-near 60 for most spots. Not a whole lot to talk about for this evening into tonight, with quiet conditions continuing and little change aloft. A few models still hinting at the potential for at least some sprinkles to get close to the western edges of the forecast area, but without more support, confidence remains low and kept the mention out. The northerly winds spreading across the area behind the sfc front diminish this evening as higher pressure builds in...bringing more light/variable winds through the overnight hours. A few more clouds will be working their way in with time...and overnight lows are forecast to range from the lower 20s in the far north to right around 30 in the south. Friday and Saturday... Main story for the end of the week remains with the next system to impact the region, bringing increased precipitation chances. There hasn`t been any significant changes in models over the past 24hr hours...with the biggest question still being how far north the precipitation can reach. Tonight into Friday, models are showing the upper level system currently over the CA/NV border making its way east into the Four Corners region, and are in good agreement keeping the daytime hours Friday dry. Cloud cover will be on the increase from SW-NE through the day...and winds will be turning back to the south as sfc high pressure slides east and a trough of low pressure develops over the High Plains. Speeds look to top out around 10-15 MPH. Even with the increasing cloud cover, expecting another day of well above normal highs, with temps right around 60 expected. Precipitation chances will be spreading east and north across the region Friday evening/overnight and into the day on Saturday. Models continue to show the main upper level/500mb low tracking east long the OK/TX border...but still have variations of how far north precipitation gets, tied closer to the mid- upper level trough axis. Models remain in good agreement showing the thermal profile supporting an all-rain event. The NAM continues to be on the more northern-most side of the reach, bringing measurable amounts closer to I-80...and it does have some support. The highest chances (60+ percent) remain confined to counties along/south of the NE/KS border...but forecast does have increased chances closer to 40 percent up into the Tri- Cities/I-80 corridor. Looking at ensemble data, the ECMWF is more supportive/higher probabilities of 0.1 in or more, with the last couple of runs showing 50 percent or more having shifted north into the southern row of our NE counties....the GFS isn`t as high. The probabilities of 0.5 in or more top out mainly in the 10-30 percent chance across our KS counties. Current highest forecast total amounts are in the 0.1-0.3 inch range for our southern NE row of counties, with 0.25-0.5 across our KS counties. Timing of the best chances currently look to be roughly in the 09- 18Z Saturday time frame...coming to an end from west to east by early evening. Confidence in highs for Saturday remains on the low side due to those rain chances...low 50s possible across KS, with highs closer to 60 not of the question up around Ord, where rain chances are not nearly as good. Sunday into the new work week... Overall, not really any significant changes made to the forecast for the latter half of the weekend into the middle of the new work week. In the upper levels, broad ridging builds onto the Plains in the wake of this latest system, with zonal flow continuing into Tuesday...the lack of any disturbances keeping things dry. Tuesday night through Thursday, models showing larger scale upper level troughing digging south across the western CONUS...with the potential of a couple shortwave disturbances ejected out ahead of it crossing the region, bringing some low end precipitation chances (mostly 20 percent). Not a lot of confidence in any timing/track details this far out. Models still showing warming temperatures ahead of the mid- week troughing/disturbances...lot of low-mid 60s for Sun-Mon, more upper 60s-near 70 forecast for Tuesday. 50s start working their way back in for Wed-Thu. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z SATURDAY/... Issued at 545 AM CST Fri Feb 13 2026 For KGRI/KEAR Airports: VFR conditions are likely through TAF period. Should see some SCT to BKN mid to high clouds move in from the W this morning, and persist off and on into the afternoon. May see a more solid mid level cloud deck overnight, along with perhaps some light rain showers. Have added a PROB30 group for the last 3 hours of this TAF period, but better chances look to remain off to the S. Winds will be light and variable this morning before turning southerly at around 6-8kts by midday into the afternoon. Confidence: High. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. KS...None. && $$ UPDATE...Thies DISCUSSION...ADP AVIATION...Thies
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