15°F
Updated:
12/3/2025
11:13:49pm
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
332 FXUS63 KOAX 040501 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 1101 PM CST Wed Dec 3 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Temperatures fall this evening into the overnight and winds diminish. Most see frigid lows ranging from 0 to -10F by Thursday morning. Wind chills of -10 to -20F are expected north of Interstate 80 Thursday morning as wind speeds increase again. - Dry and cold conditions expected for Thursday. Highs warm to the low to mid 30s for Friday. - Cold temperatures return Saturday and Sunday. A 20-40% chance of snow exists on Saturday. Highs warm to the upper 30s to mid 40s Monday and Tuesday && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 330 PM CST Wed Dec 3 2025 .SHORT TERM.../TODAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/ Sfc cold front has now pushed well southeast of the forecast area this afternoon. Strong H8 cold air advection has resulted in temperatures falling throughout the day with many areas already having reached their highs. Strong subsidence from the trailing sfc high currently in the Dakotas has kept pesky stratus across far western and northwest areas too, while sunshine is observed across the rest of the area. Winds have been rather breezy with most seeing north northwest winds of 15 to 20 mph and gusts of 25 to 30 mph. Looking aloft, RAP 19z objective analysis at H5 shows a longwave trof across Ontario extending southeast into northern Minnesota, leaving much of the Northern Plains in northwesterly flow. Despite most locations seeing sun this afternoon, temperatures will continue to fall. Winds weaken late this afternoon into the evening as the sfc high moves over the forecast area. The pesky stratus should erode too resulting in clearing skies. The light winds and clear skies will result in pretty good radiational cooling, so have lowered minimum temperatures from NBM guidance a degree or two for tonight. Most areas will see frigid lows in the 0 to -10F range, and records may potentially be broken at Lincoln (-3F record low in 1902). Winds speeds will pick up by Thursday morning resulting in wind chill values of -10 to -20F primarily north of Interstate 80. Those who plan to venture outside tomorrow morning should plan to bundle up. Expect a mix of clouds and sun Thursday with dry conditions. The cold air will linger, especially across far eastern Nebraska into western Iowa where highs in the mid teens to low 20s are forecast. Slightly warmer highs are expected across far northwest portions of our service area (low 30s) as H8 warm air advection returns given the baroclinic zone lifts east northeast. Winds will also be breezy from the southwest as the sfc pressure gradient tightens again. Lows Thursday night will still be chilly, with most areas seeing low teens to low 20s. .LONG TERM.../FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/ H5 northwest flow continues on Friday as a weak shortwave trof rounding the base of more potent longwave over northern Manitoba into western Ontario ejects southeast. Current model guidance shows the best Q-vector convergence and implied forcing for ascent primarily north and east of the area. Moisture appears limited too, so have kept latest NBM solution which keeps the area dry. With the aforementioned H8 baroclinic zone moving northeast on Thursday, Friday should be warmer with most seeing highs in the low to mid 30s and maybe pushing 40F across our far western fringes. The parent H5 longwave trof should help induce cyclogenesis across northern Ontario, and the sfc cold front from said feature should extend well southeast into the Northern Plains Friday. The front should be at our doorstep by Friday night, crossing the area early Saturday. With more H8 cold air advection funneling in, expect temperatures to dip on Saturday with highs in the mid 20s to low 30s north of Interstate 80, and mid 30s near the Nebraska/Kansas border. A shortwave will eject from the Wyoming/Montana area toward the Nebraska Panhandle/northeast Colorado on Saturday morning. Ensemble and deterministic guidance keys in on a developing sfc low with the feature, but quite a bit of spread exists with where the sfc low will track. Notably, the EPS ensemble shows the most spread with the sfc low track, potentially taking the low into eastern Nebraska, while the majority of GEFS and CMC ensembles keep the sfc low well west of the area. Regardless of the low track, H7-H5 Q-vector convergence and implied lift should overspread a good chunk of the forecast area on Saturday. The mid level wave and sfc feature should have some moisture to work with resulting in a 20 to 40% chance for snow across the forecast area. Deterministic and ensemble guidance shows varying locations in where the snow band will develop at this time as expected, likely within the deformation zone of said low. Regarding snowfall amounts, latest LREF suite suggests most areas seeing less than a half inch at best, primarily across northeast Nebraska. Details regarding this disturbance track and snowfall amounts are likely to change in the coming days, so please stay tuned to the forecast for updates. Chilly temperatures return for Sunday as we`ll be behind the front, with most seeing highs in the mid teens to mid 20s. Lows Saturday night and Sunday night will be frigid in the single digits to low teens. Temperatures are expected to warm again to the upper 30s to mid 40s by Monday and Tuesday as 1000-500mb thicknesses increase and overspread much of the Central Plains. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 1058 PM CST Wed Dec 3 2025 Wind speeds continue to weaken as surface high pressure settles into the region. VFR conditions are expected to prevail, but a thin band of MVFR ceilings is passing over LNK currently. This should quickly move out of the TAF site. Overnight, winds become light and variable with clearing skies. As surface high pressure moves east of the area during the morning, southerly winds return. Wind speeds gradually increase by afternoon with a few gusts possible. && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Castillo AVIATION...Chehak
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
022 FXUS63 KGID 032342 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 542 PM CST Wed Dec 3 2025 ...AVIATION UPDATE... .KEY MESSAGES... - Cold tonight into Thursday morning. Wind chills in the 5 to -15 degree range (coldest north and east). - Low chance (20-30%) for light snow on Saturday. - Above-normal temperatures return next week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 210 PM CST Wed Dec 3 2025 Temperatures are starting to fall behind a cold front that pushed through the area earlier today. KLNX radar shows some light returns dropping southward across the Sandhills, but this should remain to our west. Skies clear out this evening into tonight, and winds decrease as high pressure moves into the area. As such, temperatures should fall off rather quickly. Winds return to the south/southwest early Thursday morning, which will prevent temperatures from completely "tanking," especially in the west and southwest. Regardless, wind chills are expected to bottom out around -10 in some areas (especially north of I-80), and local areas could see values dip as low as -15 degrees. Temperatures on Thursday will likely be wide-ranging. Eastern areas may struggle to reach 25 degrees, while some western areas could reach the low 40s, aided by increasing southwesterly winds. Friday will trend warmer across the area, and highs are anticipated to be in the 40s for most locations. Chances have increased for snowfall on Saturday as a weak perturbation drops southward through the northwesterly flow. Accumulating snow is not guaranteed, but the latest NBM does show a 10-20% chance for 1"+ across the northern half of the area. Dry (but cooler) conditions return Saturday night into Sunday. Then temperatures trend warmer Monday/Tuesday as the large upper trough over the central/eastern CONUS nudges further east. There is a relatively high (50-80%) chance for temperatures to exceed 50 degrees for at least the western half of the area Tuesday. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 522 PM CST Wed Dec 3 2025 For KGRI/KEAR Airports: MVFR CIGS will hold tough for a few more hours with low confidence of exactly when they will scatter out across the region. Widespread MVFR CIGS can be seen on satellite stretching from Kansas into South Dakota. Given the apparent expanse of this cloud cover, have a hard time believing it will clear very rapidly this evening and extended their presence at both terminals through 04/04Z. That said, the expanse of this low level stratus is being partially obscured by high level clouds streaming from the southwest across the local area, and it could be a bit more scattered below high level cloud cover than thought. Either way...models/soundings suggest this cloud cover should eventually scatter out overnight as winds become light before shifting and becoming southerly, helping to eventually scour out any remaining MVFR stratus. As a result...VFR conditions will return at some point late in the night and southerly winds will become gusty during the late morning through afternoon hours as return from around an area of surface high pressure to our east increases across the local area. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. KS...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Mangels AVIATION...SR
Navigation
