51°F
Updated:
4/5/2026
10:56:46am
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
606 FXUS63 KOAX 051029 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 529 AM CDT Sun Apr 5 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Warmer Sunday with highs in the 60s. - Rain could mix with or change over to all snow on Monday and Tuesday mornings with some minor accumulations possible. The highest potential for slick spots will be during the Tuesday morning commute (10-20% chance). - An active weather pattern will lead to continued shower and storm chances for much of the upcoming week. - Very high fire danger is forecast in northeast Nebraska Wednesday afternoon as high temperatures warm into the 60s and 70s and winds gust 25-35 mph. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 1153 PM CDT Sat Apr 4 2026 Relatively quiet across the area this evening with surface high pressure building into western NE. This will allow for clear skies overnight with temperatures falling into the upper 20s to lower 30s. Sunday will be warmer than Saturday as the surface high pushes into eastern KS and westerly downslope flow sets up through at least central NE, allowing temperatures across eastern NE and western IA to get into the lower to mid 60s in most spots. Guidance also suggests it may get a touch breezy by mid to late afternoon with model soundings showing 25-30+ kts at the top of the mixed layer and EPS members showing mean gusts of 25-30 mph across much of the area. A cold front will push south through the area Sunday night into early Monday, with strengthening mid-level frontogenesis setting up behind it and leading to increasing precipitation chances starting early Monday across northeast NE into west- central IA. Model soundings show a fair amount of low level dry air to overcome, but most still show at least a brief period where the column saturates enough for something to reach the ground, but it should be pretty light. As far as type through Monday, it should be a mix of rain and snow early Monday transitioning to mainly rain as we warm up during the day. Currently expecting maybe a couple tenths of an inch of snow with relatively warm ground helping to melt anything of note through Monday. That said, ensembles do give a 10-20% of 1" falling in a narrow band across northeast NE through Monday morning. Precipitation chances will spread southward Monday night through Tuesday as the aforementioned frontogenesis edges south and warm air advection strengthens. Expect rain to switch to a rain/snow mix or all snow as we cool down Monday night with a transition back to rain during the day Tuesday. Soundings suggest saturation will last much longer at a given spot compared to Monday, thus increasing potential for accumulating snow and slick spots. Still a fair amount of spread on where the primary band will set up, but guidance suggests a 30- 50% chance of at least 1". Should this pan out, the Tuesday morning commute could be slick in some spots. By Wednesday, guidance is in good agreement of a strong upper level trough and associated surface low pushing along or just south of the Canadian border and eventually dragging a cold front through the forecast area. Still some questions on exact timing, but guidance is in decent agreement that we`ll have some showers and storms along the front. Ahead of the front, EPS guidance suggests we`ll see southwest winds gusting 25-40 mph with temperatures getting into the 60s and 70s and RH in the 20s and 30s. Pending precipitation, this could lead to some very high fire danger, especially in northeast NE where RH will be lowest. Again, this will likely depend on front timing. The boundary looks to stall in or just south of the forecast area while various bits of shortwave energy look to eject out of a larger scale trough building into the western CONUS. Still lots of details to work out, with the primary one probably being the position of the front, but for now, the setup favors maintaining a 40-70% chance of showers and storms Thursday through the weekend. Finally, for what it`s worth, GEFS-based machine learning severe weather probabilities indicate at least small (5%) daily chances of severe weather in this period. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z MONDAY/... Issued at 527 AM CDT Sun Apr 5 2026 VFR conditions will prevail through the forecast period. Light westerly winds will increase to 10 to 15 kts late this morning, with gusts up to 20 to 30 kts possible through the afternoon. Wind speeds will decrease below 12 kts shortly after 00Z this evening. && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...CA AVIATION...KG
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
700 FXUS63 KGID 051139 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 639 AM CDT Sun Apr 5 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Warmer, less windy, and seasonably pleasant for Easter Sunday. - Cooler to start the new work week with some potentially significant temperature gradients across the local area from north to south. Mainly dry through Wednesday with precipitation chances generally low and/or light. - Warmer on Wednesday, though exactly how warm will depend on the timing of our next significant cold front. - Much better rain chances for the second half of the week and perhaps into next weekend, as well, but still some model differences on specifics and location of highest rain amounts. && .UPDATE... Issued at 425 AM CDT Sun Apr 5 2026 Today should be quite a bit nicer than yesterday thanks to full sunshine, lighter winds, and warmer temperatures. It`s not that there`s not going to be ANY wind today, there will be, but it`ll be much lighter at mostly 5-20 MPH (lightest S, strongest N), and the wind won`t have as much bite to it with warmer temps in the 60s to around 70F and good sunshine. Forecast becomes quite a bit trickier for the start of the new work week, particularly in terms of temperatures. A cold front will move into the area from the N tonight, then settle somewhere over central Plains on Monday. This front could try to make some northward progress as a warm front on Tuesday, though some model guidance (such as the 00Z EC) isn`t quite as aggressive with this. All this means there could be some significant temperature gradients across the area Mon-Tue, perhaps on the order of 20 to 30 degrees, with maybe only 40s to lower 50s N, to 60s to around 70 in the S. The cooler northern areas could also have some iso-scat light precipitation, either rain or wet snow...during the day Monday over far N/NE zones, then just about anywhere within south central Nebraska Mon night into Tue AM. None of this activity looks particularly heavy - few hundredths to tenth, or less. Wednesday still looks like the warmest day of the week for the area as a whole. However, the timing of the next cold front has trended a bit faster, which could keep portions of the area (mainly N of I-80) in the 60s, vs 70s to lower 80s elsewhere. Models still support an uptick in precipitation chances for the later half of the week - both in terms of coverage and amounts. With that said, there are still some fairly significant model differences on the latitude of the axis of heaviest amounts. Most recent trends have been to focus the more persistent activity in KS vs NE...but there`s still plenty of time to fine tune the details. Cooler, but still seasonably average-ish temperatures, will accompany the rain chances late week into the weekend. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 203 PM CDT Sat Apr 4 2026 An upper level trough is centered over the Upper Midwest and extends over Nebraska and Kansas. Gusty, northwest winds are across south central and central Nebraska and north central Kansas. High temperatures today will range from the 40s to the 60s but winds will make it feel cooler. Near critical fire weather conditions are expected this afternoon (west of the Tri-Cities area) with minimum humidity values of around 22% - 26% across western portions of the area and wind gusts of 20-30+ MPH. Winds will be light out of the northwest and west tonight with clear skies and temperatures cooling into the 20s and 30s. Winds will transition from the west to north northwest on Sunday but will be much lighter than today. The area will be in between 2 surface lows on Sunday which will allow for temperatures to warm up into the 60s and 70s. Winds will transition to the east northeast Sunday night with low temperatures a little warmer than the previous night but still in the 20s and 30s. Cooler air will move into the area from the northeast on Monday with high temperatures expected to generally range from the 40s to the 60s. Some light rain showers may develop (15%-30% chance) mainly northeast of the Tri-Cities on Monday with an increase in atmospheric lift. Winds will transition to the east and southeast Monday night with precipitation (rain possibly mixed with snow) possible (15% - 40% chance). Low temperatures Monday night are expected to be in the 20s and 30s (cooler than the previous night). Enhanced upper lift will move over the area on Tuesday. This along with southeasterly winds may result in increased cloud cover and moisture. Drizzle along with light rain/light snow will be possible on Tuesday (30% to near 60% chance) with any snow being in the morning hours. There are uncertainties in how long the cloud cover and moisture will remain over the area on Tuesday which has lead to uncertainties in high temperatures. As of now, expecting high temperatures on Tuesday to range from the low 50s to low 70s although some places across the north may not get out of the 40s. Winds will increase out of the south to southwest Tuesday night which will result in warmer low temperatures. At this time, expecting lows to mostly be in the 40s. An upper trough will move over the Northern Plains/Upper Midwest on Wednesday sending a cold front southward. Temperatures are expected to warm up on Wednesday ahead of the cold front but there are some uncertainties in regards to how warm it will get. Showers and thunderstorms are possible Wednesday into Wednesday night. A cold front will move into the area on Thursday with quite a bit of uncertainty in high temperatures. Showers and thunderstorms are expected to develop associated with this front. High uncertainty in regards to temperatures continues into Friday along with a chance of showers and thunderstorms (50% to 75% chance). && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z MONDAY/... Issued at 638 AM CDT Sun Apr 5 2026 For KGRI/KEAR Airports: VFR through the period. Winds will be fairly modest today and tonight out of the W to NW, with highest speeds around 8-13kt during the afternoon. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. KS...None. && $$ UPDATE...Thies DISCUSSION...Schuldt AVIATION...Thies
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