31°F
Updated:
12/11/2025
01:30:24am
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
320 FXUS63 KOAX 110447 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 1047 PM CST Wed Dec 10 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Light, mixed-precipitation is possible (30-40% PoPs) near the SD border into west-central IA late tonight into Thursday morning. Minor ice accumulation could lead to minor travel impacts (10-20% chance). - Confidence is increasing (30-50% PoPs) in another round of light snow in northeast Nebraska and west-central Iowa late Friday night and Saturday. There is a 20-50% chance of minor travel impacts in those areas. - Temperatures turn much colder Friday through Sunday morning before warming again by early next week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 243 PM CST Wed Dec 10 2025 Tonight and Thursday: Mid-level heights are slowly building across the northern and central Plains this afternoon with that process continuing into tonight ahead of a low-amplitude disturbance that will move through the northern Plains Thursday. In the low levels, a surface ridge axis currently extending from the central Dakotas into the mid-MO Valley will build east of the area this evening with a warm-advection regime overspreading the area tonight into Thursday. Lift tied to that process will promote top-down saturation with a chance (15-25%) of light snow or flurries (or a very low probability of freezing sprinkles) developing across our western counties between 8 PM and midnight. Overnight into Thursday morning, the sustained warm advection will support the development of an above-freezing, warm nose in the 3-5 kft layer, which would result in the transition of any light snow to light freezing rain. The best potential for that occurrence (30-40% PoPs) is along the SD border into west- central IA where this forecast update will indicate the potential for a few hundredths of ice accumulation. Currently, there is a 10-20% chance of minor travel impacts in those areas. We will continue to monitor model and observational trends for the potential necessity of a Winter Weather Advisory later tonight. Any lingering, light precipitation is expected to end Thursday afternoon with high temperatures ranging from the mid 50s in the far southwest part of our area to low 30s in the far northeast. Friday through Saturday night: A surface cold front is expected to push south through the area Thursday night ahead of a broad, Arctic high that will build from the northern High Plains into the mid-MO Valley during this time period. Aloft, another clipper system is forecast to move through the northern Plains and upper Midwest Saturday with an associated zone of mid-level frontogenesis supporting the development of a snow band from the Dakotas into IA. Current model solutions indicate the northern part of our area in the southern fringe of the snow band with this forecast update increasing PoPs to 30-50% Saturday. Snowfall amounts remain uncertain with the EPS and GEFS indicating generally a 20-40% chance of 3+" along the SD border into northwest IA. Accordingly, the probabilistic WSSI shows up to a 20-50% chance of minor travel impacts (i.e., snow-coverd roads) from northeast NE into west-central IA. Winds are expected to remain relatively light, which should limit the amount of blowing snow. As alluded to above, temperatures will turn colder with highs in the 20s and 30s Friday falling into the teens and 20s Saturday. Some single digits are even possible in our far northern counties. The coldest temperatures are expected Saturday night into Sunday morning when readings will range from the single digits above zero in southeast NE to as low as -10 in the Onawa, IA and Harlan, IA areas. Associated wind chills will be below zero with the lowest readings of -10 to -20 forecast in northeast and east-central NE into west-central and southwest IA. Sunday through Tuesday: The 12z global models are in reasonably good agreement in suggesting the progression of a flattening, mid-level ridge into the northern and central Plains Sunday into Monday. By Tuesday, there is some model signal that a low-amplitude disturbance will move into the northern Plains. Those upper-air developments will translate to a warmer surface pattern. We will begin to see scouring of the Arctic air mass in our western counties Sunday, and by Monday and Tuesday, afternoon temperatures are expected to warm into the 30s and 40s. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 1043 PM CST Wed Dec 10 2025 VFR conditions should hold through the next 24 hours at all three terminals, with the main forecast point to keep an eye on being winds that have already begun shifting. KLNK and KOMA are expected to follow KOFK`s lead in becoming southwesterly wind direction at less than 10 kts, with those winds expected to shift once again late afternoon tomorrow into the evening. Gusts are expected to develop with the northwesterly winds. CLouds should generally stay in the mid-to-high levels before lowering at KOMA/KOFK tomorrow evening as precipitation chances drift to the north of them. && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Mead AVIATION...Petersen
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
121 FXUS63 KGID 110530 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 1130 PM CST Wed Dec 10 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Light rain/snow possible (15-20%) this evening/night for areas northeast of the Tri-Cities. Little snowfall accumulation (T-0.5") expected. - Temperatures will rebound to near 60 across the area Thursday, which looks like the warmest day of the period. - A cold front will bring below normal temperatures back to the area over the upcoming weekend along with a very small chance for snow across areas mainly north of Highway 92 Friday evening/night. - A rapid return to seasonably warm temperatures expected by Monday afternoon and then likely continuing through the end of next week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 245 PM CST Wed Dec 10 2025 Winds have subsided nicely across the region this afternoon as an area of surface high pressure has transitioned into the central portion of the area. This area of high pressure is expected to push east tonight as an upper level disturbance and surface trough move in from the northwest. This trough will push a warm front across the area overnight, resulting in a quick rebound in temperatures Thursday afternoon. Ahead of the warm front, however, there will be a brief window for some very light precip across our north tonight, and have some very light QPF in the forecast for areas northeast of the Nebraska Tri- Cities this evening. Given the weak forcing relatively dry airmass near the surface, this is a low probability event, and little to no snowfall accumulation (T-0.5") is anticipated across northeastern portions of the area. While significant thin/high level cloud cover will likely trail the aforementioned disturbance during the daytime hours Thursday, this should have a minimal impact on afternoon high temperatures tomorrow, which once again are expected to climb into the lower 60s across the majority of the area. This warm-up will be short lived, however, as the next upper level disturbance and cold front push across the area Friday. While there is still some spread in model guidance for temps Friday afternoon and there correspondingly will likely be a significant gradient in temperatures across the local area, the cold air is expected to reach the tri-cities before peak heating, and this should hold temperatures in the 30s across the central and eastern portions of the area, while portions of Kansas and western areas may still top out in the 40s to near 50. As the cold front then spreads southwest across the entire area Friday night, could see some light snow develop around daybreak Saturday, but again this looks like a low qpf event that will be focused across northern/northeastern portions of the area. The main impact will therefore likely be the much cooler temperatures and significant cloud cover (especially Saturday) anticipated over the weekend. As the main upper level low then swings further east by Monday, expect the cold air in place to retreat to the east, and for a rapid rebound in temperatures to start next week as weak ridging aloft if realized and temperatures likely return to the 50s for much of the week. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/... Issued at 1126 PM CST Wed Dec 10 2025 For KGRI/KEAR Airports: VFR conditions expected through TAF period. Southeast winds shift to the southwest this morning, becoming westerly during the afternoon, gusting 15-20kts. Winds shift to the northwest behind a cold front Thursday evening. SCT-BKN ceilings of 050-100 are expected overnight, with SCT high level clouds possible during the day. Late in the TAF period Mid-level clouds build back over the area. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. KS...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Rossi AVIATION...Davis
Navigation
