28°F
Updated:
12/11/2025
03:34:34am
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
440 FXUS63 KOAX 110930 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 330 AM CST Thu Dec 11 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Light, mixed-precipitation is possible (20-30%) near the SD border into west-central IA through Thursday morning. Minor ice accumulation could lead to travel impacts there. - Another round of light snow is likely (60-80%) in northeast Nebraska and west- central Iowa late Friday night and Saturday. There is a 40-60% chance of minor travel impacts in those areas. - Temperatures turn much colder Friday through Sunday morning before warming again by early next week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 330 AM CST Thu Dec 11 2025 Widespread radar returns continue across the area this morning, but ASOS/AWOS sites have reported almost no precip and a perusal of highway cameras has suggested less than 10% of the detected snowflakes are making their way to the ground. This makes sense as forecast soundings have indicated that the lowest 5kft will be saturating from the top down overnight. This precipitation is in response to warm air building in from the west. Temperatures at 2-5 kft will warm enough by daybreak to melt any falling snow before it finds its way to the surface. Surface temps, however, would be sub-freezing, especially if subjected to evaporative cooling. PoPs are highest along the northern tier of counties. Precip probabilities of 20-40% aren`t high enough to issue a winter weather advisory, but confidence in the freezing rain p-type is notably higher than normal. Should that precip materialize, an advisory may be, well, well-advised. The best lift pushes northeast of the area by lunch today and light precip would end quickly early this afternoon. High temps in the northeastern corner of the CWA will peak only a degree or two above freezing. The southwest corner of the forecast area will push almost 30 degrees warmer. A cold front pushes through this evening, and will leave temperatures a little more uniform for the weekend. .Friday and the Weekend... Arctic air pours into the area as another Alberta clipper sweeps through the Great Lakes. Friday`s highs will only peak in the 20s (north) and 30s (south). Another weaker clipper drives through the northwesterly H5 flow on Saturday, producing a stripe of frontogenesis and resultant potential snow across the High Plains. Confidence continues to grow that this band will impact northeastern Nebraska and west-central Iowa. Solutions have been trending farther south over the past three days. Current PoPs are peaking at 80% in our northern counties. NMB probabilities of 2" or more of snow are 50% or greater from Norfolk and Blair, NE and Avoca, IA and all points north. That chance is only 25% at Omaha as the forecast stands. The probabilistic Winter Storm Severity Index suggests a 60% chance of minor travel impacts in northeast Nebraska and northwest Iowa on Saturday. Winds won`t be all that bad, but temps will slip lower. Highs will mostly peak in the teens and Saturday night`s lows are progged to end up on the wrong side of zero. Wind chills could be as cold as -25 along the SD state line. Thankfully, this will represent the nadir of the forecast as upper level ridging begins to nose in from the west for early next week. .Next Week... Unfortunately, the ridge will be deamplifying as it approaches from the west as an upper low cross the prairie provinces of Canada. Still, temps will quickly moderate and push above normal by Monday and are likely to remain above normal for the foreseeable future. There is no strong signal for precip for next week at this point. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 1043 PM CST Wed Dec 10 2025 VFR conditions should hold through the next 24 hours at all three terminals, with the main forecast point to keep an eye on being winds that have already begun shifting. KLNK and KOMA are expected to follow KOFK`s lead in becoming southwesterly wind direction at less than 10 kts, with those winds expected to shift once again late afternoon tomorrow into the evening. Gusts are expected to develop with the northwesterly winds. CLouds should generally stay in the mid-to-high levels before lowering at KOMA/KOFK tomorrow evening as precipitation chances drift to the north of them. && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Nicolaisen AVIATION...Petersen
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
271 FXUS63 KGID 110913 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 313 AM CST Thu Dec 11 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - A pleasant day is expected with highs in the 50s (northeast) to low 70s (southwest) - Light snow (1" or less) is possible Friday night/Saturday morning along/northeast of an Ord-York line - Colder weather this weekend with highs in the 20s and 30s. - Highs return to the 50s next week. && .UPDATE... Issued at 308 AM CST Thu Dec 11 2025 Temperatures this morning are currently sitting in the upper 20s to 30s under partly to mostly cloudy skies. A warm front will gradually lift north/east across the area this morning, with winds shifting to the west-southwest behind the front. This sets up for temperatures climbing well above normal this afternoon across the forecast area. Most areas will experience highs in the 60s, with low 70s possible along/southwest of a line from Arapahoe, NE to Osborne, KS. The "coldest" locations (highs 50s) will be along and northeast of a line from York to Greeley, closest to the warm front. Breezy winds are possible west of Highway 281 this afternoon, gusting 20-25mph. The warm weather and breezy winds could result in elevated fire weather conditions this afternoon west of Highway 183. Overall it looks to be a very nice day for December standards, get outside and enjoy it if you can! A cold front pushes into the area tonight, with lows in the 20s to low 30s. Near to below normal temperatures (highs low 30s to low 40s) are expected on Friday behind the frontal passage. Robust cloud coverage and steady cold air advection will result in little daytime warming along/north of Interstate 80. The next system/disturbance pushes into the area Friday night/Saturday. This brings a chance for snow to northeastern portions of the area. The band of snow looks to be fairly narrow, with a sharp cutoff in snow accumulations. The core of the band currently looks to track just northeast of the area but a slight shift north/south in the track could result in less/more snow accumulation. For now, 1" or less of snow is possible along and north of an Ord-York line, but again this could increase/decrease with a south/north shift. Otherwise the forecast remains on track as a colder weekend is expected with highs in the 20s and 30s. Lows Sunday morning will drop into the single digits to around zero. Temperatures quickly rebound next week, climbing into the 50s as ridging- northwest builds over the Plains. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 245 PM CST Wed Dec 10 2025 Winds have subsided nicely across the region this afternoon as an area of surface high pressure has transitioned into the central portion of the area. This area of high pressure is expected to push east tonight as an upper level disturbance and surface trough move in from the northwest. This trough will push a warm front across the area overnight, resulting in a quick rebound in temperatures Thursday afternoon. Ahead of the warm front, however, there will be a brief window for some very light precip across our north tonight, and have some very light QPF in the forecast for areas northeast of the Nebraska Tri- Cities this evening. Given the weak forcing relatively dry airmass near the surface, this is a low probability event, and little to no snowfall accumulation (T-0.5") is anticipated across northeastern portions of the area. While significant thin/high level cloud cover will likely trail the aforementioned disturbance during the daytime hours Thursday, this should have a minimal impact on afternoon high temperatures tomorrow, which once again are expected to climb into the lower 60s across the majority of the area. This warm-up will be short lived, however, as the next upper level disturbance and cold front push across the area Friday. While there is still some spread in model guidance for temps Friday afternoon and there correspondingly will likely be a significant gradient in temperatures across the local area, the cold air is expected to reach the tri-cities before peak heating, and this should hold temperatures in the 30s across the central and eastern portions of the area, while portions of Kansas and western areas may still top out in the 40s to near 50. As the cold front then spreads southwest across the entire area Friday night, could see some light snow develop around daybreak Saturday, but again this looks like a low qpf event that will be focused across northern/northeastern portions of the area. The main impact will therefore likely be the much cooler temperatures and significant cloud cover (especially Saturday) anticipated over the weekend. As the main upper level low then swings further east by Monday, expect the cold air in place to retreat to the east, and for a rapid rebound in temperatures to start next week as weak ridging aloft if realized and temperatures likely return to the 50s for much of the week. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 1126 PM CST Wed Dec 10 2025 For KGRI/KEAR Airports: VFR conditions expected through TAF period. Southeast winds shift to the southwest this morning, becoming westerly during the afternoon, gusting 15-20kts. Winds shift to the northwest behind a cold front Thursday evening. SCT-BKN ceilings of 050-100 are expected overnight, with SCT high level clouds possible during the day. Late in the TAF period Mid-level clouds build back over the area. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. KS...None. && $$ UPDATE...Davis DISCUSSION...Rossi AVIATION...Davis
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