57°F
Updated:
2/9/2026
9:37:45pm
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
504
FXUS63 KOAX 092322
AFDOAX
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE
522 PM CST Mon Feb 9 2026
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Continued potential for ice movement is expected today for the
Platte, Loup and Elkhorn rivers. With the continuous warmer
temperatures, we are monitoring these areas closely. A Flood
Watch remains in effect through this evening.
- Very High fire danger is in place across northeast Nebraska,
with winds shifting northwesterly this evening to complicate
fire response.
- Above seasonal temperatures continue through the week along
with the potential for record highs being set this afternoon.
- Periodic chances for rain and snow are expected between
Wednesday evening and Sunday.
&&
.DISCUSSION...
Issued at 132 PM CST Mon Feb 9 2026
Today:
Water vapor imagery this afternoon features split flow in the upper
levels across much of the CONUS, with the heart of the northern
stream staying just north of the area. Zooming in locally, we find
ourselves behind a warm front and ahead of an incoming cold front
from the northwest. Temperatures have climbed quickly this afternoon
behind the warm front, despite winds under-performing and
under-mixing compared the initial expectation. The warm
temperatures have driven humidity values down into the 20-30%
range in northeast Nebraska, with some further reduction
expected before our heating tops out at 3 PM. With that said,
very high fire danger will continue through the afternoon, with
potential for extreme danger if winds gust to 25 or 30 mph
across northeast Nebraska (10% chance). Flooding risk due to
ice jamming on the Platte, Elkhorn, and Loup Rivers continues
with those warm temperatures and resultant melting causing some
minor jumps and dips in the hydrographs. As of now, there still
is plenty of ice in the Loup River near Columbus to eventually
flush out into the Platte River to cause potential issues,
sustaining the risk into the next few days. Later this evening,
a wind shift and gusty winds will move through behind the cold
front to the northwest, with speeds briefly hitting 25-30 mph
around 10 PM to 2 AM before diminishing through 6 AM.
Tuesday and Beyond:
By Tuesday, we`ll see the departure of the record-breaking warmth in
favor of highs in the upper 40s to low 50s (well above our normal
mid 30s for this time of year). Northwesterly winds will linger
through most of the day, continuing to decrease in speed into the
afternoon while clouds become increasingly sparse by 6 PM. Our dry
weather pattern is poised to hold on going into the mid-to-late
portions of the forecast, with some form of quasi-zonal flow warding
away southern moisture, making us rely on clippers and mountain-
surviving moisture to result in any rain/snow locally. Highs do look
to remain well-above normal in the 40s and 50s through the next
week, making any of those snow chances entirely dependent on
what time of day they fall.
Focusing more on any precipitation, models continue to focus on an
initial clipper that moves through the area Thursday from the
northwest, providing only glancing blows at trace moisture. The next
shot at precipitation remains with a compact shortwave that
ejects east-northeast across the Desert Southwest, making into
the Central and Southern Plains early Saturday. Run-to-run model
trends have the guts of the system drifting farther southward,
and the latest suite of deterministic models favor Kansas and
points south for any precipitation. Ensembles continue to
indicate we have an outside chance at seeing something this
weekend, but anything that does reach the ground will struggle
to hit 0.1", and not really making a dent in our dryness so far
this winter.
&&
.AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z WEDNESDAY/...
Issued at 515 PM CST Mon Feb 9 2026
VFR conditions prevail through the period. A cold front is
beginning to sweep south through the region. This front is
currently near OFK and will reach OMA and LNK within the next
couple of hours. Ahead of this front, southerly winds continue.
Behind the front, a northerly wind shift can be expected with
some gusts through the overnight hours. LLWS may briefly develop
at OMA and LNK just behind the cold front as low-level winds
remain southwesterly just above the surface. Any LLWS is
anticipated to be relatively short-lived as the front continues
to move south of the area. North winds remain into Tuesday.
&&
.OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
NE...Flood Watch through Tuesday morning for NEZ016-017-031>033-
042>045-050>053-067.
IA...None.
&&
$$
DISCUSSION...Petersen
AVIATION...Chehak
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
079 FXUS63 KGID 092345 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 545 PM CST Mon Feb 9 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - A Red Flag Warning remains in effect until 6PM tonight for Valley, Greeley, Sherman and Howard counties in Nebraska and Rooks, Osborne and Mitchell counties in Kansas. - A cold front powering through tonight (9PM-1AM) will bring a brief period of gusty northerly winds with gusts high as 30-40MPH immediately following its passage. - Temperatures will drop around 25 degrees from today (70s) to Tuesday (upper 40s to low 50s) following the cold frontal passage. - The next chance of rain lies Friday and Saturday with peak probabilities ranging as low as 35% across far northwestern portions of the area up to 70% across far southeastern portions of the area. Despite these generally higher PoPs, precipitation amounts currently look to remain minimal. A lot of uncertainty still resides. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 316 PM CST Mon Feb 9 2026 Short Term Period (This Afternoon Though Wednesday)... The Red Flag Warning in effect for Valley, Greeley, Sherman and Howard counties in Nebraska as well as Rooks, Osborne and Mitchell counties in Kansas, will remain in effect until 6PM this afternoon. Record high temperatures today have helped dry conditions considerably, allowing relative humidity values to drop as low as 10- 25% across the area. Wind gusts approaching 25MPH across the Nebraska Sandhills as well as across portions of north central Kansas this afternoon, provoke these areas of critical fire weather conditions. Near-critical fire weather conditions additionally lie for the rest of the area outside of the warning. Do not get use to this record heat today as temperatures will drop around 20-25 degrees for Tuesday and Wednesday (from the 70s down to the upper 40s to low 50s). A (dry) cold front will lead the charge later this evening, dropping southeast and initiating this cool down. Winds behind the front will flip northward with a short window of overnight gusts as high as 40-45MPH possible (40-70% chance). The timing of the front is expected to pass between 9PM and 1AM. Higher surface pressure infiltrating behind this front will help nudge these winds back some by the second half of the day Tuesday. Steady to occasionally light winds (gusts
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