997  
FXUS63 KGID 132333  
AFDGID  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HASTINGS NE  
633 PM CDT SUN APR 13 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- THE OVERALL-BIGGEST CONCERN OF THESE NEXT FEW DAYS CONTINUES  
TO BE FIRE WEATHER, AND A RED FLAG WARNING IS IN EFFECT MONDAY  
AFTERNOON-EARLY EVENING FOR OUR ENTIRE FORECAST AREA (CWA).  
MONDAY'S WARNING HAS A BETTER CHANCE OF VERIFYING/MEETING  
OFFICIAL CRITERIA THAN TODAY'S ONGOING ONE (STILL IN EFFECT  
FOR A HANDFUL OF OUR FAR NORTHERN/WESTERN COUNTIES).  
 
- RAINFALL-WISE: ALTHOUGH SOME LIMITED/LUCKY SPOTS COULD PICK UP  
A FEW HUNDREDTHS OF AN INCH TONIGHT INTO EARLY MON AM, AT  
LEAST SOMEWHAT BETTER CHANCES FOR SPOTTY SHOWERS/THUNDERSTORMS  
ARRIVE AROUND WED-THURS AND CONTINUE INTERMITTENTLY THROUGH  
NEXT WEEKEND (NEXT SUNDAY A VERY PRELIMINARY CANDIDATE FOR THE  
MOST WIDESPREAD RAINFALL/OVERALL-HIGHEST CHANCES).  
 
- ALTHOUGH OUR CWA IS CURRENTLY A "SPLIT SITUATION" IN TERMS OF  
EARLY-SPRING VEGETATION BEING SUSCEPTIBLE TO FROST/FREEZE  
CONDITIONS (OUR SOUTH...ESPECIALLY KS...BEING MORE SUSCEPTIBLE  
VERSUS ESPECIALLY OUR NORTH/NORTHWEST COUNTIES), LATE MON  
NIGHT-TUES AM NONETHELESS BRINGS OUR FIRST OFFICIAL FORECAST  
INCLUSION OF FROST THIS SPRING (AND A FROST ADVISORY/FREEZE  
WARNING MAY EVENTUALLY BE NEEDED FOR ESPECIALLY OUR KS ZONES).  
 
- TEMPERATURE-WISE: AT LEAST A "MODEST" ROLLER COASTER RIDE WILL  
PERSIST, WITH HIGHS MAINLY 60S MON-TUES, SPIKING TO MAINLY 80S  
WED-THURS, THEN FALLING BACK DOWN TO MAINLY 60S FRI-SUN. LOWS  
MOST NIGHTS SHOULD DROP NO COLDER THAN MID 30S-LOW 50S, WITH  
THE MAIN COLDER EXCEPTION BEING MON NIGHT-TUES AM (SEE ABOVE).  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
ISSUED AT 509 PM CDT SUN APR 13 2025  
 
-- PRIMARY 7-DAY FORECAST BIG PICTURE THOUGHTS, CHANGES,  
UNCERTAINTIES:  
 
- FIRST A QUICK "ADMIN NOTE": FOR ALL FURTHER METEOROLOGICAL  
DISCUSSION OF FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS, PLEASE REFER TO THE  
DEDICATED FIRE WEATHER SECTION BELOW.  
 
- AS FOR FORECAST CHANGES (VERSUS OUR PREVIOUS ISSUANCE EARLY  
THIS MORNING), THERE APPEARED TO BE NOTHING OF MUCH  
SIGNIFICANCE IN TERMS OF TEMPERATURES, PRECIP CHANCES.  
 
- AS ALREADY TOUCHED ON ABOVE, WE HAVE INCLUDED A FORMAL MENTION  
OF FROST POTENTIAL IN FORECAST PRODUCTS FOR THE FIRST TIME  
THIS SPRING FOR MON NIGHT-TUES AM. AT LEAST FOR NOW, OUR 6 KS  
COUNTIES HAVE BEEN DEEMED "FULLY ELIGIBLE" FOR POTENTIAL  
FREEZE WARNINGS/FROST ADVISORY ISSUANCE, BUT WE ARE LEAVING  
OUR NEBRASKA ZONES AS A "MAYBE" STATUS FOR NOW AS THEY ARE  
LESS SUSCEPTIBLE TO VEGETATION DAMAGE PER METRICS SUCH AS  
GROWING DEGREE DAYS (GDD). LATER SHIFTS WILL LIKELY NEED TO  
COORDINATE ANY POSSIBLE ADVISORIES/WARNINGS FOR NEBRASKA WITH  
WFO OAX TO OUR EAST. EITHER WAY, TUES AM APPEARS TO BE THE  
ONLY MORNING WITH LEGITIMATE FROST/FREEZE CONCERNS FOR MOST OF  
OUR CWA OVER THE NEXT 7 DAYS.  
 
- FROM A "BIG PICTURE" PERSPECTIVE, THE VARIOUS/INTERMITTENT  
RAIN SHOWER/THUNDERSTORM CHANCES THAT LITTER MUCH OF OUR  
FORECAST FROM WEDNESDAY ONWARD ARE ADMITTEDLY RATHER LOW-  
CONFIDENCE DUE TO VARIOUS MODEL DIFFERENCES IN THE "EXACT"  
PLACEMENT OF POSSIBLE PRECIPITATION, DIFFERENCES IN AVAILABLE  
CONVECTIVE INSTABILITY (CAPE) ETC. THAT BEING SAID, WE WILL  
HAVE TO KEEP A WARY EYE ON AT LEAST SOME POSSIBILITY FOR  
STRONG TO SEVERE STORMS (IT IS MID-APRIL AFTER ALL), PERHAPS  
FIRST AROUND THURSDAY (NOTE SPC'S CURRENT DAY 5 SEVERE  
POTENTIAL CURRENTLY RESIDES BARELY EAST OF OUR CWA), AND THEN  
PERHAPS AGAIN AROUND SUNDAY (ALTHOUGH THIS IS HIGHLY UNCERTAIN  
BEING A FULL WEEK OUT).  
 
-- 7-DAY FORECAST CHRONOLOGICAL RUNDOWN:  
- CURRENT/RECENT WEATHER SITUATION AS OF 430 PM:  
OTHER THAN DEWPOINTS/RELATIVE HUMIDITY (RH) HOLDING UP A BIT  
HIGHER THAN EXPECTED (NOT A BAD THING!) AND MUTING OUR FIRE  
WEATHER THREAT SOMEWHAT, TODAY HAS OVERALL TURNED OUT VERY MUCH  
AS EXPECTED, WITH MOST OF OUR CWA EXPERIENCING A WINDY AND AT  
LEAST SLIGHTLY COOLER DAY VERSUS SATURDAY. IN THE BIG PICTURE OF  
THE MID-UPPER LEVELS, A VIGOROUS SHORTWAVE TROUGH IS CHURNING  
ACROSS ND, WITH OUR AREA UNDER BROUGHT WEST-SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW  
TO ITS SOUTH. AT THE SURFACE, A FAIRLY TIGHT PRESSURE GRADIENT  
(AND DEEP MIXING) HAS SET UP BETWEEN A LOW OVER IA AND HIGH  
PRESSURE NOSING SOUTHEASTWARD FROM THE NORTHERN ROCKIES. AS A  
RESULT, TODAY HAS BEEN MODERATELY-WINDY FROM THE NORTH-  
NORTHWEST BEHIND A COLD FRONT, WITH SPEEDS COMMONLY SUSTAINED  
20-30 MPH/GUSTS AS HIGH AS MAINLY 35-45 MPH. ACTUAL COLD AIR  
ADVECTION HAS BEEN FAIRLY WEAK BEHIND THIS FRONT, BUT WE'VE  
NONETHELESS SEEN ROUGHLY A 10-DEGREE GRADIENT IN AFTERNOON HIGHS  
ACROSS OUR CWA, RANGING FROM NEAR-70 FAR NORTH/NORTHWEST TO MID  
70S CENTRAL, TO UPPER 70S-LOW 80S SOUTH-SOUTHEAST.  
 
- THIS EVENING-OVERNIGHT:  
WHILE THE MAIN FORCING/LIFT WITHIN THE GREATER REGION WILL  
REMAIN WELL TO OUR NORTH WITH THE VIGOROUS WAVE CHURNING TOWARD  
THE GREAT LAKES, A COMBINATION OF MORE SUBTLE LIFT FROM AN UPPER  
JET STREAK AND A WEST-EAST RIBBON OF MID LEVEL  
CONVERGENCE/FRONTOGENESIS WILL SUPPORT AT LEAST SOME CHANCES FOR  
HIGH-BASED SHOWERS (AT LEAST SPRINKLES?) OVERNIGHT FOR VARIOUS  
PARTS OF OUR CWA. THESE CHANCES ARE NOT HIGH (MEASURABLE POPS  
MAINLY ONLY 20-30% FOR NOW), BUT IF A STEADIER RAIN BAND WOULD  
BE ABLE TO OVERCOME THE DRY LOW LEVELS AND START PRECIPITATING  
TO THE SURFACE, AT LEAST A NARROW STRIPE OF OUR CWA COULD PICK  
UP A FEW TO SEVERAL HUNDREDTHS OF AN INCH (AT MOST) OVERNIGHT.  
THE OVERALL-HIGHEST CHANCES FOR THIS LIMITED RAIN POTENTIAL  
ARRIVE AFTER 10 PM, AND WILL GENERALLY SINK SOUTHWARD WITH TIME.  
CANNOT TOTALLY RULE OUT A FEW RUMBLES OF THUNDER (SEE SPC  
"GENERAL THUNDER" AREA ON DAY 1 OUTLOOK), BUT ANY INSTABILITY  
APPEARS QUITE MEAGER AND VERY ELEVATED (MAINLY ABOVE 700  
MILLIBARS), SO WILL FOREGO A FORMAL THUNDER MENTION FOR NOW.  
 
IN OTHER DEPARTMENTS TONIGHT, FOLLOWING A BRIEF LULL IN  
NORTHWEST WINDS AROUND SUNSET AND A FEW HOURS THEREAFTER, SPEEDS  
ARE ACTUALLY EXPECTED TO PICK BACK UP LATE THIS EVENING-  
OVERNIGHT (GUSTS COMMONLY 25-35 MPH). THESE ENHANCED WINDS AND  
WHAT SHOULD EVENTUALLY BE PLENTIFUL CLOUD COVER SHOULD KEEP  
TEMPS FROM FALLING DRASTICALLY, AND HAVE LOWS AIMED FROM UPPER  
30S NORTHWEST TO MID-UPPER 40S SOUTHEAST.  
 
- MONDAY DAYTIME-EVENING:  
AT LEAST FOR NOW, DO NOT HAVE THE OVERNIGHT SPRINKLE/RAIN SHOWER  
CHANCES EXTENDING BEYOND 7 AM INTO THE OFFICIAL DAYTIME FORECAST  
"BLOCK", BUT THIS COULD BE A CLOSE CALL (ESPECIALLY FOR AREAS  
NEAR/SOUTH OF THE KS BORDER) AND LATER SHIFT WILL HAVE TO  
MONITOR RADAR TRENDS. OVERALL THOUGH, MOST OF OUR CWA WILL  
SURELY BE DRY MOST OF THE DAY, AS A SECONDARY SHORTWAVE TROUGH  
DIVES SOUTHEASTWARD ACROSS THE DAKOTAS TOWARD EASTERN  
NE/IA/NORTHERN MO OVER THE COURSE OF THE DAY. MOST OF OUR CWA  
SHOULD REMAIN JUST FAR ENOUGH SOUTHWEST/WEST TO AVOID ANY SPOTTY  
SHOWERS/SPRINKLES ASSOCIATED WITH THIS WAVE, BUT ESPECIALLY OUR  
FAR NORTH-NORTHEAST COUNTIES COULD BE AN EXCEPTION, AND HAVE  
INTRODUCED A BASIC "CHANCE OF SPRINKLES" TO THIS AREA 5-10 PM.  
 
OTHERWISE, MONDAY WILL BE VERY SIMILAR TO TODAY WIND-WISE, WITH  
NORTHWESTERLY SUSTAINED SPEEDS COMMONLY 20-30 MPH/GUSTS AS HIGH  
AS 35-45 MPH. HOWEVER, IT WILL BE ANYWHERE FROM 10-20 DEGREES  
COOLER THAN TODAY (DEPENDING ON LOCATION), WITH HIGHS ONLY UPPER  
50S-LOW 60S IN NEBRASKA, AND MID 60S IN KS.  
 
- LATE MONDAY EVENING-OVERNIGHT:  
AS SURFACE HIGH PRESSURE QUICKLY MOVES IN AND ALLOWS SKIES TO  
CLEAR AND WINDS TO LIGHTEN (ESPECIALLY POST-MIDNIGHT), THE STAGE  
IS SET FOR A SEASONABLY-CHILLY MORNING TUES WITH LOW TEMPS AIMED  
UPPER 20S-LOW 30S MOST AREAS. AS ALREADY TOUCHED ON A FEW TIMES,  
FROST HAS BEEN ADDED TO OUR OFFICIAL FORECAST, AND AT LEAST  
PARTS OF ESPECIALLY OUR SOUTHERN CWA MAY NEED CONSIDERED FOR A  
FROST ADVISORY AND/OR FREEZE WARNING WHERE VEGETATION IS OVERALL  
MOST SUSCEPTIBLE.  
 
- TUESDAY DAYTIME-WEDNESDAY:  
OUR OFFICIAL FORECAST REMAINS DRY THROUGH MOST OF THIS TIME  
FRAME, ALTHOUGH AT LEAST SPOTTY SHOWERS AND EVEN A FEW WEAKER  
THUNDERSTORMS PROBABLY CANNOT BE RULED OUT AS EARLY AS TUES  
NIGHT (PROBABLY MORE FAVORED BY WED DAYTIME-NIGHT PER SOME  
MODELS). TUESDAY WILL FEATURE A SLIGHT WARM UP (MID 60S TO  
AROUND 70), AND ALSO WILL HAVE FAIRLY LIGHT BREEZES. SOUTHERLY  
WINDS THEN PICK UP FOR WEDNESDAY, ALLOWING HIGHS TO SURGE INTO  
THE LOW 80S MOST AREAS (MID-UPPER 80S POSSIBLE SOUTHWEST).  
 
- THURSDAY-FRIDAY:  
ALTHOUGH PLENTY OF FINER DETAILS VARY BETWEEN THE LATEST  
ECMWF/GFS, ESPECIALLY THURS-THURS NIGHT FEATURES AT LEAST SOME  
CHANCES FOR SHOWERS/THUNDERSTORMS, WITH FRIDAY LOOKING OVERALL-  
DRIER BEHIND A PASSING COLD FRONT. WE'LL NEED TO KEEP AN EYE ON  
AT LEAST LIMITED POTENTIAL FOR STRONG/SEVERE STORMS, BUT FOR NOW  
THE MAIN INSTABILITY AXIS LOOKS TO RESIDE TO OUR EAST DURING  
THE THURS-THURS NIGHT TIME FRAME. HIGH TEMPS DROP FROM 80S MOST  
AREAS THURS TO 60S MOST AREAS FRI BEHIND THE FRONT.  
 
- SATURDAY-SUNDAY:  
ALTHOUGH SMALL ALREADY, OUR GOING RAIN CHANCES FOR SAT-SAT NIGHT  
MAY BE OVERDONE AS-IS, AS LATEST ECMWF/GFS SUGGEST A DRY BREAK  
"IN BETWEEN" SYSTEMS. THEN, SHOWER/THUNDERSTORM CHANCES  
INCREASE FOR SUNDAY AS THE NEXT LARGE-SCALE LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM  
EMERGES OUR DIRECTION FROM OUT OF THE SOUTHWEST. THAT BEING  
SAID, THERE IS PLENTY OF UNCERTAINTY IN EXACT TIMING OF THESE  
HEIGHTENED RAIN CHANCES...A LOT TO SORT OUT. FOR NOW, WE ARE  
EXPECTED TO REMAIN IN THE RELATIVELY COOLER SIDE OF THIS SYSTEM,  
WITH HIGH TEMPS ONLY AIMED INTO THE 60S BOTH DAYS.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z TUESDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 631 PM CDT SUN APR 13 2025  
 
FOR KGRI/KEAR AIRPORTS:  
 
VFR CONDITIONS PERSIST THROUGH MUCH OF THE FORECAST PERIOD.  
WINDS REMAIN BREEZY FROM THE NORTHWEST THROUGH THE PERIOD. A FEW  
PASSING SHOWERS WILL BE POSSIBLE THIS EVENING, CLEARING OUT BY  
05-07Z. THERE IS A SMALL CHANCE FOR SOME LOWER LEVEL CLOUDS  
MOVING IN OVERNIGHT.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 509 PM CDT SUN APR 13 2025  
 
- REST OF THIS AFTERNOON-EVENING:  
ADMITTEDLY, TRULY CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS APPEAR THAT  
THEY WILL BE MORE DIFFICULT TO COME BY THIS AFTERNOON-EARLY  
EVENING THAN EXPECTED 24 HOURS AGO (WHEN THE INITIAL FIRE  
WEATHER WATCH WAS ISSUED FOR SOME OF OF OUR FAR NORTHERN/WESTERN  
NEBRASKA COUNTIES). THAT BEING SAID, SOLIDLY ELEVATED TO NEAR-  
CRITICAL CONDITIONS WILL PERSIST ACROSS OUR ENTIRE DISTRICT  
THROUGH AT LEAST 8 PM (AND PERHAPS A BIT LONGER IN LOCALIZED  
AREAS), DUE TO NORTH-NORTHWEST WINDS CONSISTENTLY GUSTING AT  
LEAST 25-35 MPH, AND RELATIVE HUMIDITY (RH) BOTTOMING OUT AS LOW  
AS 20-30 PERCENT (ALTHOUGH THE MAJORITY OF OUR AREA PROBABLY  
WON'T DROP BELOW 25%). WILL LET THE PREVIOUSLY-ISSUED RED FLAG  
WARNING RIDE FOR SEVERAL OF OUR NORTHERN/WESTERN-MOST COUNTIES  
AT THIS TIME.  
 
THIS EVENING-OVERNIGHT, RH WILL ONLY SLOWLY RISE/RECOVER, AND  
FOLLOWING AN EARLY-EVENING LULL (AROUND SUNSET), NORTHWEST WINDS  
WILL PICK UP AGAIN OVERNIGHT WITH GUSTS OF AT LEAST 20-30 MPH  
PROBABLE. ALSO THIS EVENING-OVERNIGHT, A BAND OF LIGHT  
SHOWERS/SPRINKLES WILL LIKELY AFFECT PARTS OF THE DISTRICT, BUT  
MOST PLACES ARE UNLIKELY TO RECEIVE MORE THAN A FEW HUNDREDTHS  
OF AN INCH AT MOST.  
 
- MONDAY:  
ALTHOUGH TEMPERATURES WILL BE AT LEAST 10-15 DEGREES COOLER THAN  
TODAY, THE INVASION OF A MUCH DRIER AIRMASS WILL MORE THAN  
"COMPENSATE" IN TERMS OF PROMOTING VERY LOW RH LEVELS, AND NORTHWEST  
WINDS WILL BE SIMILARLY STRONG AS TODAY (COMMONLY SUSTAINED 20-30  
MPH/GUSTS AS HIGH AS 35-45 MPH). IN FACT, RH VALUES ARE FORECAST TO  
BOTTOM OUT AT LEAST 5-10% LOWER THAN TODAY IN MOST PLACES...WITH MOST  
LOCATIONS AS LOW AS 15-20% FOR AT LEAST A FEW HOURS. AS A RESULT, A  
RED FLAG WARNING HAS BEEN ISSUED FOR OUR ENTIRE FORECAST AREA VALID  
1-9 PM.  
 
- TUESDAY-THURSDAY:  
AT LEAST SPORADIC, NEAR-CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE  
LIKELY EACH OF THESE AFTERNOONS, BUT AT THIS TIME, NO PARTICULAR  
DAY APPEARS AS CONCERNING AS MONDAY DOES.  
 
-- NOTE: NWS HASTINGS ROUTINELY DEFINES CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AS THE  
OVERLAP OF BOTH 20-PERCENT-OR-LOWER RH AND SUSTAINED WINDS/GUSTS OF  
20+ MPH/25+ MPH (FOR 3+ HOUR DURATION).  
 
NWS HASTINGS ROUTINELY DEFINES NEAR-CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER AS THE  
OVERLAP OF BOTH 25-PERCENT-OR-LOWER RH AND SUSTAINED WINDS/GUSTS  
15+MPH/20+ MPH.  
 

 
   
GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
NE...RED FLAG WARNING FROM 1 PM TO 9 PM CDT MONDAY FOR NEZ039>041-  
046>049-060>064-072>077-082>087.  
RED FLAG WARNING UNTIL 10 PM CDT THIS EVENING FOR NEZ039>041-  
046-047-060-072.  
KS...RED FLAG WARNING FROM 1 PM TO 9 PM CDT MONDAY FOR KSZ005>007-  
017>019.  
 

 
 

 
 
DISCUSSION...PFANNKUCH  
AVIATION...WEKESSER  
FIRE WEATHER...PFANNKUCH  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab NE Page
The Nexlab KS Page Main Text Page