25°F
Updated:
12/29/2025
2:38:22pm
Forecast Discussion
NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
709 FXUS63 KOAX 292026 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 226 PM CST Mon Dec 29 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Winds subside this evening. - Cold tonight with lows in the teens. Wind chills values in the single digits to low teens are forecast for early Tuesday morning. - Dry conditions continue for the extended forecast period. Warm up expected by Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday with most seeing temperatures in the 40s. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 226 PM CST Mon Dec 29 2025 .SHORT TERM.../TODAY THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/ 19z RAP objective analysis shows the strong 510dam closed low over the far eastern Great Lakes. The sfc feature which brought the strong northwest winds and banded snowfall yesterday has now pushed well off to the east too, leaving behind a 1034 mb sfc high sitting over much of the Dakotas into Nebraska. Aside from a few scattered cumulus along our far eastern border, lots of sunshine is observed over the forecast area. Breezy winds continue for much of the forecast area this afternoon. The KOAX 18z RAOB shows a shallow mixed layer tapping into a lingering 25-30 kt low level jet above H9. The breeziness coupled with the cold air mass in place is resulting in wind chills ranging from the single digits to low teens for much of OAX despite forecast highs warming to the upper teens to mid 20s. The good news is that the lingering breeziness should subside by the evening hours as mixing ceases and the sfc high moves right over top. Clear skies continue into the overnight hours with lows dropping to the low to mid teens. Although winds will be noticeably lighter overnight, wind chills won`t improve much as most see values in the single digits to low teens by early Tuesday morning. The cold spell will be relatively short lived as a warmer air mass at H8 advects into the Northern Plains for Tuesday. Highs are progged to reach the upper 30s in far western Iowa to low to mid 40s for much of eastern Nebraska. A weak wave at H5 sneaks through on Tuesday, but with the bulk of the synoptic scale forcing and limited moisture transport located well to our east, not really expecting much from this feature other than an increase in mid to high level cloudiness. A few CAM members show weak echoes clipping far northeast Nebraska during the day, but forecast BUFKIT soundings suggest a deep layer of dry air will limit the potential. Lows are forecast to be in the mid to upper 20s. .LONG TERM.../WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/ The H5 western CONUS ridge will stick around for a few days, leaving the area in northwesterly flow. A stronger wave ejects southeast from Manitoba toward the Great Lakes on Wednesday, fusing with the strong H5 closed low mentioned earlier. A cold front emanating from the sfc feature will push through much of the Northern Plains late Wednesday into Thursday. Similar to Tuesday, deterministic guidance develops precip along and behind that front, but well off to our east. Have kept latest NBM extended solution which indicates dry conditions. Highs Wednesday warm to the upper 30s in far western Iowa to around 51F over our far southwest counties. Cooler temperatures return for Thursday with most areas seeing highs in the 30s to near 40F. Dry conditions are forecast as sfc high pressure sits over the area. The H5 ridge dampens slightly Thursday while a wave ejects on the eastern periphery of the ridge near the Rockies. The wave and sfc feature tracks well to our south though on Friday as sfc high pressure once again builds into the Northern Plains with most seeing similar highs to Thursday. Ridging will ensue once again for the weekend, moving into much of the central CONUS. As such, 1000-500 mb thicknesses increase implying warmer air moving into the area. Forecast highs warm to the 40s Saturday and potentially the low to mid 50s Sunday over our far west. While still several days out, a weak wave may ride on top of the ridge into the Dakotas and Nebraska Sunday generating some light QPF. Obviously lots of uncertainty still given we`re several days out, but for now, have kept dry solution with NBM having sub-15% PoPs. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z TUESDAY/... Issued at 1125 AM CST Mon Dec 29 2025 VFR conditions are observed at all terminals late this morning and will continue for the remainder of the TAF cycle. Lingering few to scattered low clouds around 1,500 to 2,000 ft near and east of KOMA will dissipate this afternoon. Northwest winds remain gusty at 25 to 35 kts but should eventually subside after 22z, becoming west southwesterly late tonight into tomorrow morning and under 12 kts. && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Castillo AVIATION...Castillo
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion
Forecast Discussion
NWS Hastings, NE
489 FXUS63 KGID 291741 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 1141 AM CST Mon Dec 29 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Wind chill values as low as ten to near twenty degrees below zero to start the day. Modest improvement this afternoon, but a cool (highs in the 20s/low 30s) and breezy (NW winds 15 to 25 MPH) start to the week. - Generally warm (40s/50s) temperatures expected for the remainder of the period with a brief dip in temperatures to near seasonable values (30s/40s) Thursday afternoon behind a back door cold front. - No precipitation is expected through at least next Monday (and likely continuing through much of next week). && .UPDATE... Issued at 342 AM CST Mon Dec 29 2025 A cold and breezy start to the day across the region with temperatures in the single digits and teens along with widespread wind chill values below zero. Some locations north of I-80 could see wind chills fall to near 20 degrees below zero around daybreak, with gradual improvement expected by late morning/early afternoon. While a few clouds can be seen on satellite across north central Nebraska early this morning, this cloud cover should mostly erode by mid-morning as an area of surface high pressure slides south across the region. This area of high pressure will help to relax winds across the area by afternoon, with light and variable winds returning this evening. As winds shift and become predominantly westerly overnight tonight, expect a more mild start to the day on Tuesday along with a return to above normal temperatures Tuesday afternoon. Overall, a mild and dry period is in store for the local area through at least the upcoming weekend with the one exception coming Thursday afternoon when a backdoor cold front is expected to dip temperatures back down closer to normal and bring some increased cloud cover for the latter part of the week. That said, no precipitation appears to be in sight with long range models/ensembles not having much of a precip signal until the middle of the following week (7th and beyond), and even these chances look fairly sporadic amongst the different ensemble members. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 146 PM CST Sun Dec 28 2025 Following this morning`s cold frontal passage and quick burst of snow, we can now observe clouds clearing out for the afternoon. Temperatures this evening and tonight, despite the clearing skies, will only continue to tumble as those strong northerly winds continue to pelt the area. Winds this afternoon have already surpassed their peak values (45-55MPH) and are gradually on their way back down, though gusty winds are expected to continue through the rest of the day/night. Occasional gusts overnight may still reach as high as 25-35MPH. These gusty north to northwest winds will continue to suck down colder air through the first half of Monday. Temperatures, as result, will drop to as low as the single digit to low teens with wind chill values falling as low as 0 to -15 degrees overnight tonight. The coldest temperatures and wind chills will generally be concentrated towards northward lying locations (-10 to -15 degrees for locations north of I-80) Rising pressure on Monday will mark the stabilization and in turn lightening of the surface wind field. Though winds will continue to keep their northwesterly direction, speeds will diminish through the day, eventually calming in the evening. Despite clear skies, temperatures will only be able to return to similar values in comparison to the start of the day today (mid 20s to mid 30s). Lows overnight will fall back to the low teens, though light/calm winds overnight will keep windchill values greater than 0 degrees. Dry conditions continue to dominate the forecast the rest of the week as we soon find ourselves trapped underneath northwest flow established from western U.S. ridging and eastern U.S. troughing. A mini-warm up will more than likely take place Tuesday and Wednesday as light winds, influenced from the weak pressure gradient, turn westerly. This will close off the cold air advection pattern and will open up a warming downslope one. Highs may reach the mid 40s to low 50s Tuesday and the upper 40s to upper 50s Wednesday. Following this brief warmup, a fairly weak New Years Day cold front may drop highs down 10-15 degrees again (mid 30s to upper 40s). There still remains some uncertainty on how much temperatures could fall this day (15 degree temperature spread between the NBM 25th and 75th percentile). Looking at cluster analysis, it is more apparent why this spread appears. The two leading clusters diverge on both the cloud coverage and the strength of a Central U.S. ridging pattern. The leading cluster (greater weight from the GEFS and ENS) favors a stronger ridging pattern with greater cloud coverage. This leading cluster also more likely resembles our current forecast. Cluster two (GEPS weighted), the alternative scenario, suggest a weaker ridging pattern with less cloud coverage and warmer temperatures. Either way, steady southerly winds establishing Friday should help warm highs back to the 40s/50s to end the week off. The rest of the forecast remains dry for now. The next shortwave disturbance may not even reach the area until at least next Sunday or Monday, keeping the pattern aloft fairly stagnant. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z TUESDAY/... Issued at 1139 AM CST Mon Dec 29 2025 For KGRI/KEAR Airports: VFR conditions likely through the period with little to no cloud cover. Breezy NNW winds now will weaken through the afternoon and become light and variable this evening thanks to a surface high moving overhead. Winds will turn SW to W on the backside of the departing high tonight and continue into Tuesday AM, generally around 6-9 kt. Confidence: High. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. KS...None. && $$ UPDATE...Rossi DISCUSSION...Stump AVIATION...Thies
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