65°F
Updated:
5/28/2026
06:21:22am
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
911 FXUS63 KOAX 281055 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 555 AM CDT Thu May 28 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Precipitation chances return to the forecast Thursday as a mid-level shortwave lifts into the region. Severe storms are not currently anticipated. - A shift in the current weather pattern will result in some cooler temps (highs in the 80s) and daily chances for shower/storms across at least a portion of the forecast area from Friday through early next week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 1111 PM CDT Wed May 27 2026 The forecast period begins with surface high pressure over Minnesota, Manitoba and Ontario. A mid-level ridge sits over the Midwest into Canada and low pressure is currently centered over central California. A mid-level shortwave trough over northern Texas and southern Oklahoma will lift north into south central Kansas and northern Oklahoma through the day Friday. Warm, moist gulf air will move into the region as well. Showers and maybe a few thunderstorms will be possible for areas mainly south of Interstate 80. Severe weather is not expected at this time. Afternoon high temperatures will reach the mid-80s near the KS/NE border to the upper 80s and low 90s for areas along and north of I- 80. Lows heading into Thursday night/Friday morning will be in the upper 50s to mid-60s. Friday, the ridge pushes eastward, extending north over Manitoba, Ontario and Minnesota, while the westward extent of it shifts into western Iowa and the eastern portion of the Dakotas. The continued presence of the mid-level shortwave trough over north central Kansas and southeastern Nebraska will bring additional shower/thunderstorm chances (20-40%) to the region on Friday. Areas lucky enough to receive any rainfall may pick up a tenth or two, with some localized higher amounts with any thunderstorms. Saturday into the extended forecast period: We will see a pattern shift as the closed mid-level low over California will begin pushing to the east. As the low pushes east toward the Four Corners region, it is expected to open into a broad trough. Several shortwaves moving around the main trough will lift into Nebraska and Iowa over the weekend and into next week. With moisture advecting into the region and the shortwaves moving through, there will be daily chances for showers/storms across at least a portion of the CWA through early next week. Expected high temperatures will be in the low to mid-80s while lows will range from the mid-50s to mid-60s. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 555 AM CDT Thu May 28 2026 VFR conditions are observed at terminals this morning with broken to overcast ceilings at or above 25,000 ft. Light easterly winds will become southeasterly late this morning into the afternoon hours, becoming gusty at KOFK and KLNK at 20 to 25 kts. Gustiness subsides by 00z with winds remaining from the southeast but under 12 kts. Have introduced -SHRA at KLNK at 06z as model guidance is in good agreement that widespread showers move into the terminal with over 50% confidence. A drop to MVFR ceilings may occur at this terminal toward the very end of the TAF period. Some guidance hints at much earlier start times for -SHRA around 19z but chances remain less than 50% for occurrence at this time. && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...ANW AVIATION...Castillo
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
455 FXUS63 KGID 281110 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 610 AM CDT Thu May 28 2026 .KEY MESSAGES... - Showers and thunderstorms will continue to gradually push northward across the forecast area today...with the overall best chances across central and southern portions. Severe weather is not anticipated through tonight. - The potential remains for an active pattern for the end of the work week and upcoming weekend. While not looking at a non- stop rain-out, there are chances for storms each day Fri-Sun. There will be increasing potential for a few strong to severe storms as we get into Sat-Sat night, and almost the entire area is included in the SPC Day 3 Marginal Risk area. - For the start of the new work week...overall confidence in how the upper level pattern evolves and accompanying precipitation chances remain on the lower side. Still plenty of details for models to iron out through this weekend let alone early next week. && .UPDATE... Issued at 302 AM CDT Thu May 28 2026 Currently... Isolated showers and storms have been gradually working their way north into extreme SSW portions of the forecast...a trend that will continue on through the remainder of the overnight hours. Looking aloft, definitely not a simple in place across the CONUS early this morning. Satellite and upper air data show a large area of low pressure spinning over roughly the northern half of the CA/NV border...while over the east, high pressure remains anchored off the coast of FL, with eastward shifting troughing digging into the north/mid-Atlantic coast. The pattern remains blocked, and across the central CONUS...we have a ridge axis extending from the SErn CONUS northwestward into the Dakotas, with shortwave troughing draped NW-SE roughly through KS/OK. At the surface, the pattern across the area is on the weaker side...resulting in light/variable to outright calm winds across the forecast area. Today on through the weekend... The pattern today will continue to be primarily driven by that northward-shifting upper level shortwave troughing. Models remain in good agreement showing the northward progress being pretty slow-going today...thanks to that ridging in place over the Dakotas that itself is slow to shift out of the way. Increasing precipitation chances will continue spreading north through the day...with models not in too bad of agreement showing the swath of activity remaining largely over our KS counties through the early morning hours, pushing north to roughly the I-80 corridor around midday, then points further north through the afternoon hours. While for some locations it`ll be a pretty wet/dreary day, models show the potential for activity to be more scattered in nature at times...so precip may be more come and go for others. Looking at the end of the week and weekend...the potential for an active pattern continues, keeping storms chances around each day. The upper level trough axis moving through today continues pushing north into the Nrn Plains...but additional shortwave disturbances look to be swinging through from SW-NE. Models, to varying degrees, show the large upper low currently over CA/NV making more of an eastward push inland...again very much slowed by the continued troughing over the East Coast and ridging sandwiched in between...the the rough placement over the weaker but still broad low looking to have shifted into the Nrn Rockies. Not looking at a non-stop rainout through the weekend...but models do have these waves of increased storm chances moving through each day...with the better chances looking to be focused during the late day-overnight hours. For severe weather potential...models continue to show the overall threat for severe weather being on the lower side through Friday, instability and shear remain lacking today...though start to improve on Friday and again into Saturday. Dewpoints are forecast to climb into the mid-60s on Saturday, with models showing MUCAPE values exceeding 2000 j/kg mainly over the central/southern portions of the area...with deeper layer shear around 30kts. Storms may be developing late in the day Fri-Sat over a sfc boundary that models have running roughly through western NE down into srn KS then push NNE...but confidence in where the exact placement ultimately ends up being is on the lower side, and what happens Fri-Fri night could impact the pattern for Saturday. Still plenty of things to iron out with models...but Saturday currently looks to be the next day with more potential for severe weather, and almost all of the forecast area is included in the SPC Day 3 Marginal Risk area. Think some strong storms are not out of the question for Friday. First half of the new work week... Main question for the start of the new work week remains with just how the upper level pattern ends up evolving...with models continuing to show stubborn troughing/low pressure near the East Coast keeping things clogged. The pattern over the central CONUS continues to be a battle between ridging trying to build north and low pressure/troughing over the Rockies/western CONUS potentially sending additional disturbances across the region. Confidence in the forecast is not high...and intermittent, generally low (20-40 percent) preciptiation chances remain in the forecast. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 1131 AM CDT Wed May 27 2026 Short Term...Today through Thursday Night Steady southeast winds this afternoon blowing between 10-15 MPH and gusting as high as 25 MPH with highs in the mid 80s to low 90s will become a familiar occurrence across the next several days. Similar returning conditions (highs mainly in the 80s with southeast winds) will come as a western U.S. upper-level cutoff low temporarily slows down the forward translation of a negative tilted intermountain west trough. This feature should lock the southeasterly winds in place across the area through quite possibly the first half of next week. Meanwhile, a weak shortwave disturbance sliding up from the Texas/Oklahoma panhandle and western Kansas region today will gradually shimmer northward and into western Nebraska by Friday. A few scattered showers and non-severe storms in association with this disturbance will later be slung up into the area from the south across the next several days. The first storms could arrive as early as this evening and overnight tonight for a few isolated northern Kansas and far southwestern Nebraska locations (20-50% chances, greatest to the southwest). Any activity tonight will be fairly spotty and isolated in coverage. More showers and storms should move into the the area Thursday bringing the full area up to a 20-60% precipitation chances with the highest confidence concentrated towards northern Kansas and southwest Nebraska locations. Shower/storm coverage is still expected to remain spotty to scattered through the day with likely off-and-on periods of wet and dry conditions (potentially more dry than wet periods). Any storm that does form will not be expected to become severe given little available conditional instability (
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