26°F
Updated:
1/3/2026
00:32:46am
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
213 FXUS63 KOAX 030536 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 1136 PM CST Fri Jan 2 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - A wintry mix of light freezing rain, sleet, and snow continues through this evening across much of the area (60-80% Chance), leading to travel impacts (especially along and north of I-80 in Nebraska). A light glaze of ice and a dusting of snow is possible, especially for northeast Nebraska. - A Winter Weather Advisory remains in effect through this evening for northeast and east-central Nebraska. - Temperatures quickly rebound into the 40s and 50s this weekend with largely dry and warmer-than-average weather into next week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 250 PM CST Fri Jan 2 2026 Remainder of Today into Tonight Winter weather has been slow to spread across eastern Nebraska so far this afternoon. As noted in the 18Z OAX sounding, dry air just above the surface has limited coverage thus far. A compact shortwave continues to move into the central Great Plains with weak cyclogenesis to our southwest. This has supported the development of widespread freezing precipitation across much of central Nebraska, but impacts in our area has largely remained west of a Norfolk to Columbus line. That being said, a gradual expansion of winter weather is anticipated through the remainder of this afternoon into this evening as this system moves through. Otherwise, low clouds continue to hold most locations in the 20s this afternoon. By this evening, light freezing rain should have spread into east- central Nebraska. Any freezing rain is forecast to remain light and should quickly change over to snow once the sun sets. The precipitation continues into southwest Iowa after sunset, but everything begins to weaken and dissipate at this point. Any precipitation will vacate the area after midnight. Overall, only a very light amount of ice accumulation and perhaps a dusting of snow is expected. The best chance to see these amounts will be over northeast Nebraska. This threat lessens over east- central Nebraska, though at least isolated areas of accumulation are expected. Elsewhere, little to no accumulations are expected. Whether it is freezing rain or snow, slick spots are likely where precipitation falls. With all of the above in mind, a Winter Weather Advisory remains in effect through this evening for northeast and east-central Nebraska. This Weekend and Beyond Any icy road conditions that linger into this weekend will be short- lived. While temperatures start in the 20s, Saturday afternoon sees everyone push above freezing into the 40s. This is in response to clearing skies as mid-level ridging begins to build over the central Great Plains. By Sunday, temperatures rebound even further, reaching the 50s for many. These above normal temperatures are forecast to continue into the first half of next week as well. With ridging in place, any weather systems remain north of the area. As a result, mostly dry conditions can be expected with only passing high clouds as a few weak disturbances round the periphery of the ridge. Our next potential weather system is not set to arrive until the second half of next week. A broad through across the western half of the United States is anticipated to begin slowly progressing east into the Great Plains. With this disturbance, a return of precipitation chances and colder temperatures is likely. While relatively warm temperatures and rain are initially forecast on Thursday. Cooling temperatures by Friday may see snow enter the picture. Stay tuned for details as forecast confidence remains low at this juncture. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SUNDAY/... Issued at 1130 PM CST Fri Jan 2 2026 KOFK: VFR conditions will persist through the forecast period. Snow has ended for the terminal, with any lingering showers pushing east and southeast. Expect ceilings to rise through the day tomorrow. KOMA: Most of the snow will wrap up by around 06Z; however, a light band of snow may linger through around 07Z. VFR conditions are expected for much of the forecast period along with light winds. KLNK: Snow has ended for the terminal. Expect light winds through the forecast period. Ceilings will gradually improve to VFR conditions by sunrise and continue to rise through the day. && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Chehak AVIATION...ANW
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
785 FXUS63 KGID 030511 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 1111 PM CST Fri Jan 2 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Like the previous few nights, fog could potentially become an issue late tonight into Saturday AM for parts of our area (perhaps mainly our southwest quadrant). At least localized dense fog cannot be ruled out. - The weather turns noticeably warmer/drier for at least Saturday-Wednesday, with widespread highs in the 50s-low 60s and lows near-to-barely below freezing (at least near-record highs and warm lows possible on a few of those days). - Things POTENTIALLY turn more active Thursday and/or Friday with the potential for rain and/or snow, but model uncertainty is significant (as usual) that far out in time. && .UPDATE... Issued at 954 PM CST Fri Jan 2 2026 Area radar continues to shows that precipitation continues to diminish across the area. Therefore the Winter Weather Advisory has been allowed to expire. Travelers should continue to use caution when driving as some untreated roads may remain slick through Friday night. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 444 PM CST Fri Jan 2 2026 -- 7-DAY FORECAST BIG PICTURE COMMENTS, INCLUDING ANY CHANGES/UNCERTAINTIES WORTH MENTIONING: - Of most pressing concern in the very short term: the Winter Weather Advisory first issued early this morning for several of our far northern/east-central counties has been since expanded southward to include several more of our Nebraska counties...as at least light icing potential could extend as far south as roughly a Lexington-Minden-Hebron line. - Honestly no noteworthy forecast changes to speak of. We MIGHT have at least a minor round of rain and/or snow lurking by Thurs-Fri (Jan. 8-9), but model uncertainty is predictably high. -- 7-DAY FORECAST CHRONOLOGICAL DETAILS (through Fri. Jan. 9...but very heavily focused on the first 15 hours): - CURRENT/RECENT WEATHER SITUATION AS OF 345 PM: Not surprisingly in these kind of weather setups with low stratus clouds entrenched in place and fairly light (5-10 MPH) east-southeasterly breezes (not to mention most of the morning featuring widespread fog/localized dense fog), temperatures today will end up falling a good 3-9 degrees short of what was forecast 24 hours ago. More specifically, current readings/afternoon highs range upper 20s-low 30s across roughly our northeastern 2/3rds, while slightly milder mid-upper 30s prevail over our southwestern 1/2 (Cambridge airport very briefly reached 40 in our extreme west, and only a few counties west- southwest of our CWA 50+ was realized). But getting back to the main story, due in part to the aforementioned colder-than-expected temperatures and the freezing line setting up farther south than it appeared even 12 hours ago, the threat for light freezing rain and at least a glaze of ice has also reached farther south and necessitated the southward extension of the Winter Weather Advisory (see below for more on this). Despite the sub-freezing temperatures, the minimal solar radiation getting through the afternoon sun has mostly kept "true" icing impacts on roads so far today confined to counties north of I-80 (per NDOT 511 road conditions), but this could easily change this evening as daylight fades. In the big picture of the mid-upper levels, water vapor satellite imagery and short term model data depict a compact- but-evident vorticity max embedded within a broader, low amplitude shortwave trough...currently tracking southeast directly over our region and providing the forcing/lift for ongoing light wintry precip. At the surface, moist easterly (upslope) low level breezes have maintained the low stratus deck westward through nearly our entire CWA (except for the far western fringes..but even there skies are cloudy/mostly cloudy under considerable mid-high clouds. - THIS EVENING-OVERNIGHT INTO FIRST PART OF SATURDAY: As of this writing, the bulk of our CWA is at least temporarily dry, while a more organized band of mainly light freezing rain (perhaps mixed with a touch of sleet/snow) is traversing our northern/western Nebraska counties. Over the course of the next several hours, this primary batch of precip will steadily march east-southeast through mainly the northeast 2/3rds of our CWA, its departing/back end tied closely to the aforementioned/compact vort max currently evident in radar imagery over the Dawson/Custer County area. Leaning heavily on observational trends along with higher-res guidance from models such as HRRR, precip chances (PoPs) for late this afternoon- evening were raised significantly above previous forecasts...as most models have overall-struggled with the areal coverage of precip today. Over the course of the day, made a couple of southward extensions to the Winter Weather Advisory (which is almost entirely driven by the ongoing/upcoming threat of at least a light glaze (or additional glaze) of ice...with the onset of nightfall taking any minimal solar energy getting through the low clouds out of the picture, and potentially making light icing a greater concern. The southern edge of the Advisory may prove to be plenty "generous" (especially some of the counties south of I-80), but based on actual radar and HRRR modeled reflectivity trends, felt it was prudent to include all counties expected to be most solidly at-or-below freezing until the back edge of precip finally clears our far eastern/southeastern CWA mainly in the 8-10 PM time frame. Speaking of that, the "end time" of the Advisory was extended out until 10 PM...but this is mainly for the eastern-most counties (some west-northwest counties may end up being cancelled early). As for precip type, a few hundredths of an inch of freezing rain is clearly the main feature based on thermal profiles, but a touch of embedded sleet/snow cannot be ruled out either (the Advisory is NOT geared toward sleet/snow however). Once any precip moves out this evening, the next concern is how efficiently skies might start to clear from west-to-east overnight, and resultant fog issues. While mid-high level clouds will surely depart late, models such as RAP/HRRR really hang onto residual lower stratus through the night...especially over our east half. Despite surface/low level breezes turning westerly late tonight in the wake of the departing trough axis, this weak downslope flow might not be strong enough to keep fog from developing. Per latest HRRR modeled-visibility, the southwest quadrant of our CWA would be most favored for possible fog/dense fog development. However, with everything else going on before then and with fog development/coverage inherently uncertain even at this time range, opted to only include generic patchy fog in some western counties along with inclusion in our Hazardous Weather Outlook (HWOGID). Confidence in dense fog simply too low to hoist a formal Advisory yet. Finally for tonight, low temps were raised a little based largely on the assumption that low clouds will remain firm...most places aimed mid-upper 20s. However, any unexpected clearing could easily end up getting some places down into the low 20s. - SATURDAY-SATURDAY NIGHT: Once any potential morning fog/lingering low stratus dissipates, the afternoon should give way to a seasonably-pleasant day, featuring light westerly breezes (mainly 5-10 MPH) and sunny/mostly sunny skies. High temps forecast to range low-mid 50s most areas, except some mid-upper 40s far east/northeast. Saturday evening-overnight, breezes turn more southerly and pick up a bit with time. The combo of the slightly increasing winds and increasing high clouds will keep low temps on the milder side...most areas aimed 28-32. At this time, fog issues are not anticipated for a change, but this bears watching especially in northern counties. - SUNDAY-WEDNESDAY: In short, this still looks like an unseasonably-mild/pleasant and dry stretch of weather. Although models such as the ECMWF occasionally bring transient rounds of precip close to our CWA at times, for now this are expected to remain slightly to our north. Winds don`t look overly-strong most days, with Sunday probably overall-breeziest (gusts to around 25 MPH from the south). Most noteworthy though are temperatures, with highs forecast well into the 50s if not low 60s each day, and overnight lows only dropping to a few degrees either side of freezing most nights. - THURSDAY-FRIDAY: Our official forecast calls for generic slight chances (mainly 20 percent) of rain and/or snow during this time, as both the ECMWF/GFS suggest a more unsettled weather pattern as a large- scale western U.S. upper trough tracks into the central states. However, deterministic models "all over the place" on whether we actually see meaningful/impactful precip or whether these chances mostly split around north/south of our area. Obviously PLENTY of time to sort this out. Temperatures are forecast to trend down, with highs mainly 40s Thurs and 30s Friday (but even this is still "near-normal". && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SUNDAY/... Issued at 1109 PM CST Fri Jan 2 2026 For KGRI/KEAR Airports: IFR/LIFR ceilings and pockets of IFR fog will continue tonight into Saturday morning. Skies then scatter out from west to east in the 15-18Z timeframe. Winds remain light through the day on Saturday. The HRRR and RAP hint that some stratus may return Saturday night, but overall probabilities remain low, and this is largely after the end of this TAF period. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. KS...None. && $$ UPDATE...Mangels DISCUSSION...Pfannkuch AVIATION...Mangels
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