493  
FXUS63 KGID 171718  
AFDGID  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HASTINGS NE  
1118 AM CST TUE FEB 17 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
- EXTREMELY DANGEROUS FIRE WEATHER REMAINS VERY LIKELY TO IMPACT  
THE ENTIRE REGION TODAY. RARE "EXTREME" CONDITIONS POSSIBLE  
ALONG AND W OF HIGHWAY 183. A RED FLAG WARNING REMAINS IN  
EFFECT FOR THE ENTIRE AREA THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING.  
IMPROVEMENT WILL BE UNUSUALLY SLOW THIS EVENING.  
 
- RECORD-BREAKING HEAT TODAY WILL GIVE WAY TO COOLER, BUT STILL  
UNSEASONABLY MILD, TEMPERATURES ON WEDNESDAY WITH HIGHS STILL  
IN THE 60S. WINDS WON'T BE AS STRONG AS TODAY, BUT CONTINUED  
DRY AIR AND MODERATE WINDS WILL KEEP FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS IN  
PLACE FOR ONE MORE DAY.  
 
- MUCH COOLER WEATHER, ALONG WITH THE POTENTIAL FOR ACCUMULATING  
SNOW FOR AT LEAST PORTIONS OF THE AREA, ARRIVE ON THURSDAY AND  
CONTINUE INTO FRIDAY. BEST CHANCES FOR IMPACTFUL SNOW LOOK TO  
BE ALONG AND N OF I-80.  
 
 
   
UPDATE  
 
ISSUED AT 430 AM CST TUE FEB 17 2026  
 
BY FAR, THE MAIN FORECAST CONCERN IN THE SHORT TERM REMAINS  
CENTERED AROUND LIKELY 'VERY CRITICAL' TO POSSIBLY EVEN  
'EXTREME' FIRE WEATHER THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING. SEE DEDICATED  
FIRE WEATHER SECTION BELOW FOR MORE DETAILS.  
 
BESIDES THE FIRE WEATHER...ANOTHER SIGNIFICANT WEATHER HEADLINE  
WILL BE THE VERY WARM TEMPERATURES. LATEST MODEL GUIDANCE  
REMAINS ON TRACK TO SHATTERED RECORD HIGHS FOR THIS DATE FOR  
BOTH GRAND ISLAND AND HASTINGS - OUR TWO LONGEST PERIOD-OF-  
RECORD SITES. FORECAST HIGHS REMAIN LARGELY UNCHANGED FROM THE  
PREVIOUS PACKAGE - WIDESPREAD UPPER 70S TO EVEN SOME LOWER 80S.  
STILL NOT READY TO COMPLETELY RULE OUT A BRIEF SPIKE TO 79-81  
DEGREES EVEN IN THE TRI-CITIES - WHICH WOULD THEN BRING MONTHLY  
RECORDS INTO PLAY. TODAY REALLY DOES HAVE ALL THE INGREDIENTS  
ONE WOULD LIKE TO SEE FOR EXTREME WARM TEMPERATURES BY FEBRUARY  
STANDARDS: MULTI-DAY WARM LEADING INTO TODAY, MILD MORNING THAT  
JUMP STARTS TEMPERATURES, LIMITED EXPECTED CLOUD COVER, DEEP  
MIXING TO AT LEAST 8-10K FT, UNIDIRECTIONAL SW TO W LOW LEVEL  
WINDS, AND VERY DRY SOIL/GROUND CONDITIONS. A DEEPENING TROUGH  
OVER THE CENTRAL AND NORTHERN ROCKIES WILL ADVECT AN EXTREMELY  
WARM AIR MASS THAT HAS ALREADY BEEN OBSERVED TO BE ONE OF THE  
WARMEST EVER SAMPLED IN MID-FEBRUARY. BOTH THE 850MB AND 700MB  
OBSERVED TEMPERATURES ON LAST EVENING'S 00Z SOUNDING FROM  
AMARILLO WERE AT OR ABOVE THE 10-DAY MAX MOVING AVERAGE.  
SO...HIGHLY ANOMALOUS TO BEGIN WITH THAT WILL ONLY BE FURTHER  
MODIFIED BY THE AFOREMENTIONED FAVORABLE FACTORS.  
 
DID ADD SOME BLOWING DUST TO THE GRIDS FOR TODAY. DUST IS NEVER  
AN EASY HAZARD TO FORECAST AROUND HERE AS CONDITIONS CAN BE  
HIGHLY VARIABLE OVER VERY SHORT PERIODS...BUT PAST EXPERIENCE,  
ALONG WITH THE ALREADY MENTIONED FACTORS - NAMELY VERY STRONG  
WINDS OVER ALREADY VERY DRY GROUND, LEAD ME TO BELIEVE IT'S  
GOING TO BE AN ISSUE TO DEAL WITH FOR SOME. GROUPS OF THE  
POPULATION THAT ARE SENSITIVE TO POOR QUALITY SHOULD KEEP THIS  
IN MIND FOR THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING. A PACIFIC COLD FRONT  
WILL SWING THROUGH FROM W TO E THIS EVENING AND KEEP MODERATE TO  
STRONG WINDS GOING WELL PAST SUNSET.  
 
WEDNESDAY WON'T BE NEARLY AS HOT, BUT STILL UNSEASONABLY WARM,  
WITH WIDESPREAD HIGHS IN THE 60S. FORTUNATELY, WINDS WON'T BE  
NEARLY AS STRONG AS TODAY...BUT DRY AIR WILL REMAIN IN PLACE.  
 
STILL LOOKING AT A SIGNIFICANT PATTERN CHANGE BY THURSDAY -  
THURSDAY NIGHT TO MUCH COLDER AND MORE WINTRY-LIKE. GENERAL  
MODEL CONSENSUS CONTINUES TO INDICATE A POTENTIAL W TO E BAND  
OF ACCUMULATING SNOW SOMEWHERE OVER MAINLY OUR NEBRASKA  
COUNTIES. LATEST DETERMINISTIC EC AND GFS ARE ACTUALLY IN PRETTY  
GOOD AGREEMENT THAT THE BAND WILL FOCUS N OF I-80, FROM THE  
SANDHILLS E/NE INTO THE SIOUXLAND REGION. WILL CONTINUE TO  
MONITOR TRENDS AND COMMUNICATE THIS POTENTIAL MORE BROADLY ONCE  
WE GET PAST TODAY'S FIRE WEATHER.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
ISSUED AT 242 PM CST MON FEB 16 2026  
 
CURRENTLY THROUGH TONIGHT...  
 
THE COMBINATION OF LIGHT WINDS AND WELL ABOVE NORMAL  
TEMPERATURES IS MAKING FOR QUITE A NICE START TO THE NEW WORK  
WEEK. UPPER AIR AND SATELLITE DATA SHOWING A QUIET PATTERN ALOFT  
ACROSS THE REGION, WITH ZONAL FLOW/BROAD RIDGING DOMINATING THE  
CENTRAL CONUS. SKIES REMAIN MOSTLY CLEAR TO PARTLY CLOUDY, WITH  
BATCHES OF UPPER LEVEL CIRRUS PASSING THROUGH THE AREA. AT THE  
SURFACE, WE'RE SITTING BETWEEN AREAS OF HIGH PRESSURE OFF TO OUR  
NORTH AND EAST, WITH OVERALL WEAK TROUGHING ALONG THE HIGH  
PLAINS. THIS IS KEEPING WINDS LIGHT, AROUND 5-10 MPH...WITH  
VARYING DIRECTION. NO BIG SURPRISES AS FAR AS TEMPERATURES GO,  
WITH EVERYONE TOPPING OUT AT LEAST IN THE 60S THIS AFTERNOON,  
WITH READINGS NEAR 70 ACROSS WESTERN AREAS.  
 
THIS EVENING AND TONIGHT, QUIET CONDITIONS CONTINUE. MODELS ARE  
IN GOOD AGREEMENT SHOWING THE CURRENT ZONAL UPPER LEVEL FLOW  
TURNING MORE SOUTHWESTERLY WITH TIME...AS UPPER LEVEL TROUGHING  
CURRENTLY OVER THE WEST COAST PUSHES FURTHER INLAND. EXPECTING  
TO SEE MORE CLOUD COVER OVERNIGHT, WITH VERY MILD OVERNIGHT LOWS  
TONIGHT...MID-UPPER 30S NW TO MID 40S IN THE SE (NORMAL IS MID  
TEENS-NEAR 20). THE THREAT OF NEW RECORD WARM LOWS REMAINS...SEE  
THE CLIMATE SECTION BELOW FOR MORE.  
 
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY...  
 
OVERALL DRY CONDITIONS REMAIN IN THE FORECAST THROUGH THE DAY ON  
WEDNESDAY, WITH THE MAIN FORECAST CONCERN DURING THIS PERIOD  
REMAINING WITH FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS ON TUESDAY AFTERNOON. MORE  
DETAILS ON FIRE WEATHER SPECIFICS CAN BE FOUND IN THE FIRE  
WEATHER SECTION BELOW.  
 
LOOKING AT THE DAYTIME/EVENING HOURS ON TUESDAY, THERE HASN'T  
BEEN ANY SIGNIFICANT CHANGES IN THE MODELS. BROAD VIEW, MODELS  
CONTINUE SHOW A LARGE AREA OF UPPER LEVEL LOW PRESSURE MOVING  
INTO THE PAC NW AND CONTINUED TROUGHING ALONG THE WEST  
COAST...WHILE A SHORTWAVE DISTURBANCE (CURRENTLY OVER SRN CA)  
WILL BE SWINGING NORTHEAST OUT OF THE NRN/CENTRAL ROCKIES ONTO  
THE NRN/CENTRAL PLAINS. AHEAD OF THIS APPROACHING DISTURBANCE,  
SFC TROUGHING/LOW PRESSURE OVER THE HIGH PLAINS DEEPENS,  
BRINGING MORE SSERLY WINDS BY 12Z TUESDAY. WINDS ARE EXPECTED TO  
INCREASE IN SPEED THROUGH THE DAY, TURNING MORE SWRLY AHEAD OF  
SFC TROUGH AXIS DURING THE MORNING, THEN SWITCHING TO THE WEST  
AS THAT BOUNDARY PUSHES THROUGH THE FORECAST AREA. TUESDAY  
REMAINS THE OVERALL WARMEST DAY OF THIS 7-DAY FORECAST PERIOD,  
WITH INCREASED MIXING AND DOWNSLOPING WESTERLY WINDS TAPPING  
INTO A WARMER AIRMASS...FORECAST HIGHS REMAIN IN THE MID 70S FOR  
MOST SPOTS (A FEW SPOTS REACHING CLOSER TO 80 IS NOT TOTALLY  
OUT OF THE QUESTION), WITH RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES LOOKING TO  
BE BROKEN (SEE CLIMATE SECTION BELOW). ONE QUESTION WITH  
TEMPERATURES LIES WITH CLOUD COVER, ESPECIALLY ACROSS THE  
SOUTHERN HALF OF THE FORECAST AREA, WHERE MODELS SHOW THE  
POTENTIAL FOR MORE CLOUD COVER. THE INCREASED MIXING AND PUSH OF  
DRIER AIR WITH THE SURFACE BOUNDARY IS EXPECTED TO BRING A  
NOTABLE DROP IN DEWPOINTS, WITH THE CURRENT FORECAST CALLING FOR  
TEENS TO PUSH INTO WESTERN PORTIONS OF THE COVERAGE AREA.  
 
THE LONE MENTION OF PRECIPITATION DURING THIS PERIOD REMAINS IN  
THE TUESDAY EVENING PERIOD...BUT CHANCES REMAIN LOW AROUND 20  
PERCENT. MODELS, TO VARYING DEGREES, CONTINUE TO SHOW THE  
POTENTIAL FOR AT LEAST SPOTTY RAIN SHOWERS ACROSS ENERN PORTIONS  
OF THE FORECAST AREA LATE IN THE DAY/EVENING, DRIVEN BY THAT  
SFC FRONTAL BOUNDARY AND MAIN UPPER LEVEL TROUGH AXIS SWINGING  
THROUGH. THESE LOOK TO BE SHORT-LIVED CHANCES, WITH MODELS  
SHOWING THE BETTER PRECIP POTENTIAL FOCUSING OFF TO OUR NNE.  
 
FOR THE DAYTIME HOURS ON WEDNESDAY, MODELS SHOW THE AREA SITTING  
UNDER UPPER LEVEL SHORTWAVE RIDING, SET UP BETWEEN TUESDAY'S  
DEPARTING SHORTWAVE DISTURBANCE AND THE NEXT ONE THAT WILL BE  
WORKING ITS WAY INTO/THROUGH THE ROCKIES. THE WIND FORECAST IS A  
BIT UNCERTAIN, AS WE'LL BE LOSING THE INFLUENCE OF ONE AREA OF  
SFC LOW PRESSURE (KEEPING WINDS WESTERLY) AND GAINING THE  
INFLUENCE OF THE NEXT ONE DEEPENING OVER THE HIGH PLAINS, WHICH  
WILL BE SWITCHING WINDS BACK TO MORE OF SSERLY DIRECTION.  
COOLER, BUT STILL ABOVE NORMAL TEMPERATURES ARE EXPECTED, WITH  
LOW-MID 60S FORECAST.  
 
THURSDAY ON INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK...  
 
FOLLOWING HOT-BY-FEB-STANDARDS TEMPS ON TUESDAY, A TASTE OF  
WINTER RETURNS FOR THURSDAY AS SNOW RETURNS TO THE FORECAST.  
THIS NEXT UPPER LEVEL SHORTWAVE DISTURBANCE EMERGES OUT ONTO THE  
HIGH PLAINS LATE WED NIGHT-THU AM...TAKING A BIT MORE OF AN  
EASTERLY TRACK ACROSS THE CENTRAL PLAINS, ANY NORTHWARD PROGRESS  
STOPPED UP BY TUESDAY'S SYSTEM WHICH MODELS HAVE SITTING NEAR  
THE MN/CAN BORDER. COLDER AIR IS USHERED IN BY THE SYSTEM'S  
ACCOMPANYING COLD FRONT, MEANING THE LIKELY P-TYPE IS SNOW. THE  
BEST CHANCES CONTINUE TO FAVOR THE NORTHERN HALF OF THE FORECAST  
AREA...AND WITH THIS STILL A FEW DAYS OUT AND SOME MODEL  
DIFFERENCES, NBM POPS ARE PRETTY BROAD, WITH 50-60 PERCENT  
CHANCES THROUGH THE TRI-CITIES AND 30 PERCENT CHANCES DOWN INTO  
NORTH CENTRAL KS. LATEST RUNS OF GFS/EC DETERMINISTIC AND  
ENSEMBLES SHOW A TIGHTER GRADIENT FROM NORTH TO  
SOUTH...SOMETHING TO BE WORKED ON IN THE COMING DAYS. LATEST RUN  
OF THE GFS/EC TRENDED THE PRECIP AND SNOWFALL AMOUNTS TIED TO  
THE WEST- EAST ORIENTATED AXIS OF STRONGER MID-UPPER LEVEL  
FRONTOGENETICAL FORCING A TOUCH FURTHER NORTH...BOTH SHOWING  
AREAS SOUTH OF I-80 WITH LESS THAN 10-20 PERCENT CHANCE OF  
SEEING ONE INCH OR MORE OF SNOW ACCUMULATION. WHETHER YOU GET  
SNOW OR NOT, THURSDAY LOOKS TO BE ANOTHER WINDY DAY, WITH  
NORTHWESTERLY WINDS BUILDING ACROSS THE AREA BEHIND THE COLD  
FRONT...GUSTS OF AT LEAST 30-35 MPH WILL BE POSSIBLE.  
 
ADDITIONAL LOW-END CHANCES FOR PRECIP REMAIN IN THE FORECAST FOR  
THE END OF THE WEEK FRI-SAT...BUT CONFIDENCE IN THOSE CHANCES  
ARE NOT HIGH, AS MODELS SHOW SOME NOTABLE DIFFERENCES WITH WHERE  
OTHER DISTURBANCES TRACK AND WHETHER THEY BRING PRECIP AT ALL  
TO THE FORECAST AREA. UPPER LEVEL RIDGING AND DRY CONDITIONS  
RETURN FOR THE START OF THE NEW WEEK SUN-MON.  
 
AS FAR AS TEMPERATURES GO, FOLLOWING THE 70S TUESDAY AND 60S  
WEDNESDAY, THE REINFORCING COLD FRONT PASSING THROUGH LOOKS TO  
DROP HIGHS FOR THURSDAY AND FRIDAY BACK CLOSER TO NORMAL IN TO  
THE 30S-LOW 40S. EXPECTING A REBOUND AS WE GET THROUGH THE  
WEEKEND/EARLY NEXT WEEK, WITH HIGHS BY MONDAY BACK IN THE MID  
40S-LOW 50S.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z WEDNESDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 1114 AM CST TUE FEB 17 2026  
 
FOR KGRI/KEAR AIRPORTS:  
 
DRY WEATHER WITH VFR CONDITIONS ARE FORECAST FOR THIS TAF  
PERIOD...MAIN CHANCES FOR ANY SHOWERS LATER TODAY CURRENTLY LOOK  
TO BE FOCUSED NORTH AND EAST OF THE TERMINAL AREAS. WIND IS THE  
MAIN CONCERN THROUGH THE PERIOD, WITH GUSTY CONDITIONS EXPECTED  
THROUGH EARLY WEDNESDAY MORNING. THIS AFTERNOON, GUSTS  
NEAR/EXCEEDING 40 MPH WILL BE POSSIBLE. CURRENT DIRECTION IS  
SSWRLY, BUT WIND WILL BE TURNING MORE WESTERLY WITH TIME THIS  
AFTERNOON. SPEEDS TAPER OFF A BIT THIS EVENING/OVERNIGHT, BUT  
GUSTS NEAR 25-30 MPH WILL REMAIN POSSIBLE THROUGH ROUGHLY 12Z.  
MODELS CONTINUE TO SHOW THE POTENTIAL FOR SOME MARGINAL LLWS  
DURING THE MID-LATE EVENING HOURS, KEPT THAT MENTION GOING AT  
BOTH SITES.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
ISSUED AT 445 AM CST TUE FEB 16 2026  
 
WIDESPREAD CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS REMAIN VERY LIKELY  
FOR THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING FOR THE ENTIRE FORECAST AREA.  
HIGH-END/EXTREME FIRE WEATHER WILL BE POSSIBLE ALONG AND W OF  
HWY 183 - PARTICULARLY IN THE 21Z-01Z TIME FRAME.  
 
CAN'T STRESS ENOUGH OF JUST HOW HIGH END OF A FIRE WEATHER DAY  
IT APPEARS TODAY WILL BE METEOROLOGICALLY, AND POTENTIALLY HIGH  
IMPACT FOR ANYONE THAT HAS TO DEAL WITH NEW FIRE STARTS. FOR  
SOME HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE, BEFORE YESTERDAY, THE NWS HASTINGS  
FORECAST AREA HAS ONLY BEEN INCLUDED IN A SPC DAY 2 "EXTREME"  
FIRE WEATHER CATEGORY THREE TIMES OVER THE PRIOR 20 YEARS. THE  
LAST "EXTREME" FIRE WEATHER DAY WAS DECEMBER 15, 2021...AND WE  
ALL KNOW HOW THAT TURNED OUT. NOW...WE'RE NOT GOING TO HAVE THE  
EXTREME HIGH WIND AND GUSTS WELL OVER 60 MPH LIKE WE HAD THAT  
DAY...BUT WHAT WE'LL BE "LACKING" IN WIND WILL BE MADE UP FOR IN  
VERY HOT/DRY AIR AND VERY DRY FUELS.  
 
THE MOST INTENSE FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS STILL APPEAR TO FAVOR  
AREAS ALONG/W OF HWY 183, WHERE THERE MAY BE THE GREATEST  
OVERLAP OF 40-50 MPH WIND GUSTS AND RHS ONLY IN THE LOW TO MID  
TEENS. RECENT HRRR AND RAP RUNS ARE FORECASTING A SURGE OF  
SINGLE-DIGIT DEW POINTS BEHIND A W TO E SWEEPING FRONT. THIS  
FRONT WILL TURN WINDS FROM SW TO W AND BASICALLY MAXIMIZE THE  
DOWNSLOPING CHINOOK POTENTIAL. THE OTHER THING THIS FRONT WILL  
DO IS KEEP DANGEROUS FIRE WEATHER GOING WELL INTO THE MID TO  
LATE EVENING - MUCH LATER THAN WHAT WE TYPICALLY SEE AROUND  
HERE. SO, ANY FIRE STARTS THIS AFTERNOON THAT CONTINUE INTO THE  
EVENING WILL REMAIN DIFFICULT TO FIGHT.  
 
FOR AREAS E OF HWY 183, CONDITIONS WON'T BE QUITE AS BAD - BUT  
CONDITIONS WILL STILL BE VERY CONCERNING. HERE, WIND GUSTS  
SHOULD AVERAGE MORE IN THE 30-45 MPH RANGE, AND MINIMUM HUMIDITY  
LEVELS AROUND 15-20 PERCENT. THIS IS STILL NEAR THE UPPER-END OF  
CLIMATOLOGY AND FUELS - EVEN IN AREAS THAT EXPERIENCED DECENT  
RAINFALL ON SATURDAY - WILL STILL BE VERY DRY BY THIS AFTN.  
 
THOUGH COOLER ON WEDNESDAY, DEWPOINTS REMAIN LOW, AND AFTERNOON  
RELATIVE HUMIDITY VALUES MAY ONCE AGAIN DROP INTO THE TEENS TO  
NEAR 20 PERCENT. WINDS ARE EXPECTED TO BE LIGHTER, TRANSITIONING  
FROM WESTERLY TO START THE DAY TO MORE SOUTHERLY BY THE END OF  
THE DAY. AS SUCH, ELEVATED TO NEAR-CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER WILL  
STILL BE POSSIBLE FOR AT LEAST PORTIONS OF THE FORECAST AREA  
(FAR S FAVORED THE MOST) FOR A FEW HOURS WEDNESDAY AFTN.  
 
 
   
CLIMATE  
 
ISSUED AT 445 AM CST TUE FEB 17 2026  
 
RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURES AND WARM LOW/MIN TEMPERATURES ARE  
LIKELY TO BE APPROACHED/BROKEN AT VARIOUS POINTS TODAY FOR BOTH  
THE GRAND ISLAND AIRPORT (RECORDS BACK TO 1896) AND HASTINGS  
AIRPORT (RECORDS BACK TO 1908).  
 
- RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURE | LATEST FORECAST  
 
GRAND ISLAND, NE (GRI)  
 
FEB. 17: 72 IN 2017 | 78  
 
---------------  
 
HASTINGS, NE (HSI)  
 
FEB. 17: 74 IN 1981 | 77  
 
- RECORD WARM LOW/MIN TEMPERATURE | LATEST FORECAST  
 
GRAND ISLAND, NE (GRI)  
 
FEB. 17: 41 IN 1981 | 43  
 
---------------  
 
HASTINGS, NE (HSI)  
 
FEB. 17: 37 IN 1972 | 44  
 
 
   
GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
NE...RED FLAG WARNING UNTIL 10 PM CST THIS EVENING FOR NEZ039>041-  
046>049-060>064-072>077-082>087.  
KS...RED FLAG WARNING UNTIL 10 PM CST THIS EVENING FOR KSZ005>007-  
017>019.  
 
 
 
 
 
UPDATE...THIES  
DISCUSSION...ADP  
AVIATION...ADP  
FIRE WEATHER...THIES  
CLIMATE...THIES  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab NE Page
The Nexlab KS Page
Main Text Page