43°F
Updated:
3/3/2026
6:57:32pm
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
777 FXUS63 KOAX 032337 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 537 PM CST Tue Mar 3 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Patchy fog may redevelop overnight in northeast Nebraska. - Cloudy conditions and occasional chances for precip continue through much of the work week, including a few thunderstorms Thursday and Friday. - Temperatures gradually return to the 60s and possibly 70s toward the end of the week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 115 PM CST Tue Mar 3 2026 Overcast skies continue across the CWA this afternoon with temperatures stuck spinning their wheels in the low 40s. Patchy fog this morning has lifted and visibility has improved to over 5 miles in most instances. A CONUS view of IR satellite shows that shortwave trof over the PACNW has meandered southwest over the past 24 hours and is now near Glenwood Springs, CO. This feature will keep minor precip chances in our southern forecast area over the next 30 hours as it continues southeast. Ahead of the H5 low, we`ve got quasi- zonal flow in the sub- tropical jet. AM drizzle wrapped up with the attenuation of low-level lapse rates. Expect chances to increase again after midnight tonight as mid-levels cool and lapse rates ramp back up. Patchy fog may redevelop with best chances where skies clear in northeast Nebraska. Drizzle is possible along and south of I-80 between midnight and noon Wednesday. Probability will remain near 20%. I have changed the dominating precip type from stratiform rain/drizzle to rain showers for Wednesday afternoon and evening. PoPs peak on Wednesday evening as the shortwave passes through the KC metro area. Only points east of a line from Harlan to Beatrice have a better than 20% chance of a rain shower. .THURSDAY... The area will be dry by sunrise and a few rays of sunshine will be welcomed as they`ll be uncommon this week. The mostly sunny skies and southerly winds should help temps make an appreciable jump from Tuesday and Wednesday`s 50s to mid- to upper-60s by Thursday afternoon. As the Wednesday shortwave ejects east, an amplified trof will approach from the west. As it crosses the Rockies on Thursday night, a lee-side sfc low will develop in the Denver area and sweep northwest bringing high-confidence POPs by late Thursday night. QPF values look notable, too. NBM probabilities suggest a 90% chance of 1/2"or more of QPF in western Iowa to closer to 50% for the CWA`s western counties (Antelope, Boone, Jefferson). With an nocturnal LLJ and some very high mid-level lapse rates, the threat for severe weather looks to be a slight hail threat from elevated storms overnight Thursday night (we`re `outlooked` in day 3). With the cloud cover and brisk southerly flow, temps will hold in the 40s and 50s overnight. Expect a close call with setting warm record minimum temps Friday morning. .FRIDAY... Friday will be even warmer if the timing and locations of the fronts work out as anticipated. Current forecast is calling for temps to peak in the lower to mid-70s along the Missouri state line. Another sfc low will eject from the positively titled trof out west. Out of the lee of the Rockies, it`ll work along the baroclinic zone, sweeping northeast on Friday afternoon. Severe weather is looking increasingly likely in the warm sector. The heart of the warm sector may end up just southeast of this CWA, although there`s plenty of time for the forecast to be adjusted. As the threat of the afternoon/evening severe weather pushes east, a cold front will crash in from the north bringing much cooler conditions for the weekend and some post- frontal precip. .THE WEEKEND... Temps slip back into the 50s for Saturday as drier NW flow builds in behind the departing system. Quieter weather may be in store for next week as all three global deterministic models suggest the western trof eventually cuts off and blocks H5 flow for the western Corn Belt. Temps are anticipated to climb under the dry regime. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z THURSDAY/... Issued at 528 PM CST Tue Mar 3 2026 MVFR ceilings are widespread this evening, with KOFK seeing cloud bases still holding above FL020 for a few hours early in the TAF period. All TAF sites are set to head for IFR ceilings overnight, and short term models are not quite as sure that we`ll see widespread drizzle/mist this time around so we`ve shortened the wind in the latest set of TAFs. Nevertheless, MVFR to IFR visibility restrictions are possible beginning at 09z and could last as long as 12/13z before improvements arrive. From there, clouds will slowly lift and eventually scatter out by the afternoon hours into the early evening, in favor of VFR conditions. && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Nicolaisen AVIATION...Petersen
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
307 FXUS63 KGID 040012 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 612 PM CST Tue Mar 3 2026 ...Aviation Update... .KEY MESSAGES... - This evening/tonight bring continued chances for some isolated/scattered sprinkles or light showers, mainly across portions of south central NE. Can`t rule out some patchy fog late tonight-Wed AM, at this point not expecting widespread dense fog. - Precipitation chances for Wed-Wed evening have trended down, forecast currently just has some 20 percent chances across SErn portions of the forecast area. Dry conditions expected through at least the first half of the day on Thursday. - A stronger upper level system brings increasing chances for rain and thunderstorms to the area late in the day Thursday, continuing on into the evening/overnight hours. There will be the potential for some storms to be strong-severe, with the entire forecast area currently included in the SPC Day 3 Marginal Risk area. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 407 PM CST Tue Mar 3 2026 Currently through tonight... Been an overall quiet day across the forecast area, with satellite imagery showing very different sky cover from one end to the other...across the west seeing mostly sunny skies, in central and especially eastern areas, socked in with low level stratus. Looking aloft, upper air and satellite data show an area of low pressure gradually working its way across northern CO, with a mid-upper level trough axis extending east-northeast through NE up toward the Great Lakes. At the surface, the forecast area is sitting between broad high pressure spread across portions of the Central Plains up into the Great Lakes region and deepening low pressure over the TX panhandle...bringing more NNErly winds to the forecast area, with speeds have mainly been 10MPH or less. Not surprisingly, the stubborn cloud cover hasn`t done any favors to temperatures, keeping those areas mainly in the mid 40s...vs further west in the sun have reach into the 50s and even some low 60s. The rest of today on into tonight...models are in good agreement showing that CO upper low continuing to slide east, main question will be with whether or not we see any precipitation. Most models backed off on QPF...but a few models, including some hi-res, still show the potential for at least some isolated/scattered sprinkles or showers lingering this evening and tonight. These chances are mainly focused across portions of south central NE...and not expecting any notable amounts out of anything that does fall. Expecting partly to mostly cloudy skies...with a return of light/variable winds as a surface ridge axis pushes south through the area. Not out of the question that some patchy fog could develop later tonight with those light winds, most models currently showing visibilities not dropping as low as this morning. Mid to late work week... Looking at Wednesday, overall precipitation chances backed off, with small chances (20 percent) now just confined to SErn portions of the forecast area. Models remain in good agreement showing that upper level disturbance current over CO continuing to slide east right through the heart of the area...but keep the better precip chances to our SSE. Some models suggest the 20 percent chances currently in the forecast are too much...if that trend holds, completely removing PoPs is not out of the question. Winds expected to remain on the lighter side, starting out the day variable, turning more southerly through the afternoon ahead of deepening low pressure across the High Plains. Sky cover is once again expected to diminish from west to east...but similar to today, confidence in the exact timing of the clearing is not high. Highs range from the mid 50s in the east to lower 60s in the west...confidence again lower in the east due to uncertainty with the cloud cover. Expecting at least the first half of the day on Thursday to be dry, potentially most of the day. Precipitation chances will be on the increase during the afternoon hours, with the overall best chances looking to be after 00Z. Models showing another upper level low pressure system working its way into the Pac NW during the day on Wednesday, digging south with time, ending up in the Desert SW region by the end of the day on Thursday. During the evening/overnight hours, larger scale lift is picking up ahead of this upper level troughing, aided by increasing moisture/warm advection pushing north thanks to a strengthening southerly low- level jet. These are not just better chances for rain, but thunderstorms as well...and with models showing more instability also working its way in from the south and decent deep layer shear, some of these storms being on the strong to severe side are not out of the question. The entire forecast area is included in the SPC Day 3 Marginal Risk area (main concern being hail), but models today have trended that better potential across roughly the SErn half of the forecast area...will see how things trend over the next 2 days. Outside of the rain/storm chances increasing through the day, expecting breezy southerly winds to develop as surface low pressure deepens over eastern CO...with highs climbing into the mid 60s to low 70s. Precip chances Thursday-Thursday night are tied to lift out ahead of the main upper level system...chances in the forecast for Friday are tied to the passage of that system itself. Confidence in chances through Friday night are not high...as there are some notable differences between models with the strength of the system and exactly where it tracks. Some keep it a more closed system, tracking it a touch further NW and potentially bringing a dry slot to the forecast area, resulting in little precip...others are more open, tracking more over the area and bringing better chances. The accompanying surface cold front is also working its way through the region on Friday, not doing any favors for confidence in high temperatures...current forecast has 50s in the NW to near 70 in the SE. This weekend and on... Forecast for this weekend into the start of the new work week is dry, with models showing northwesterly flow aloft in the wake of Friday`s system turning more zonal with time. The `coolest` day of this period is Saturday, with highs mainly in the mid-60s...with forecast highs climbing into the 70s by Monday. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z THURSDAY/... Issued at 611 PM CST Tue Mar 3 2026 For KGRI/KEAR Airports: - General overview (including winds): High confidence the vast majority of the period features either an MVFR/IFR ceiling. At least a few hours of MVFR visibility (perhaps lower?) also seems fairly probable in at least light fog, but this is of lower confidence. As for winds, they will be be negligible throughout the period, with sustained speeds largely at-or-below 8KT. Direction is best described as variable much of the time, but will generally transition from northeasterly right away this evening...to southerly late in the period Wednesday afternoon. Precipitation-wise, unless some light drizzle manages to develop from the low stratus (currently seems unlikely), this is an otherwise high-confidence dry period. - Ceiling/visibility details: - Ceiling: Right out of the gate this evening, KGRI is under persistent MVFR stratus, while KEAR has temporarily cleared out. However, satellite imagery confirms that the back edge of this MVFR deck is merely 10-12 miles east of KEAR, and is expected to push back overhead from east-to-west probably within the next few hours (currently have prevailing MVFR by 02Z). Then, overnight into Wednesday morning, ceiling is expected to lower to IFR and have prevailing IFR at KEAR 06-16Z/KGRI 09-17Z. Probably cannot rule out at least brief LIFR (especially KEAR), but this is not currently in TAFs given lower confidence. Through the late morning and early-mid afternoon hours, ceiling should first lift to MVFR (tentatively aimed 16Z KEAR/17Z KGRI)...then scatter out as skies clear (tentatively aimed 19Z KEAR/20Z KGRI). - Visibility: This is of lower confidence than ceiling, as there is some uncertainty regarding how much fog might accompany the aforementioned low ceiling. For now, kept a fairly optimistic approach with no worse than prevailing MVFR (06-16Z KEAR/09-17Z KGRI), but there are hints (especially at KEAR) that it could drop to at least IFR at least briefly (if this were to occur, it would be most favored a few hours either side of 12Z). Observational trends will be monitored closely. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. KS...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...ADP AVIATION...Pfannkuch
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