127  
FXUS63 KGID 222339  
AFDGID  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HASTINGS NE  
639 PM CDT WED APR 22 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
- INTO THIS EVENING: THE COMBINATION OF STRONG SOUTH WINDS  
(GUSTS 35-45 MPH), ALONG WITH RELATIVE HUMIDITY (RH) AS LOW AS  
25-35 PERCENT, WILL CONTINUE TO DRIVE NEAR-CRITICAL TO  
CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS, AND A RED FLAG WARNING  
REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 8 PM FOR NEBRASKA COUNTIES MAINLY  
ALONG AND NORTHWEST OF A BEAVER CITY-KEARNEY-FULLERTON LINE,  
WHERE RH IS OVERALL-LOWEST.  
 
- THIS EVENING (PRIOR TO MIDNIGHT): THERE IS A SMALL CHANCE THAT  
A THUNDERSTORM OR TWO COULD TRY BRUSHING INTO THE EXTREME  
WESTERN FRINGES OF OUR FORECAST AREA...MAINLY DAWSON/GOSPER/FURNAS  
COUNTIES...ALTHOUGH IT IS MORE LIKELY THAT ANY STORMS REMAIN  
ENTIRELY WEST OF THIS AREA.  
 
- VERY LATE OVERNIGHT-EARLY THURS AM: THERE IS A SLIGHTLY  
BETTER CHANCE THAT ISOLATED TO PERHAPS SCATTERED THUNDERSTORMS  
COULD DEVELOP INTO MORE OF OUR AREA, BUT MAINLY FAVORING  
NEBRASKA COUNTIES ALONG AND NORTH OF INTERSTATE 80. THIS  
ACTIVITY SEEMS UNLIKELY TO BE SEVERE.  
 
- THURSDAY FIRE WEATHER: FROM MID-MORNING THROUGH EARLY  
EVENING, NEAR- CRITICAL TO CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS  
WILL DEVELOP ACROSS MUCH OF OUR AREA. THE HIGHEST POTENTIAL  
FOR CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS WILL RESIDE WITHIN  
COUNTIES ALONG AND WEST OF A LINE FROM GREELEY TO GRAND ISLAND  
NEBRASKA, TO PHILLIPSBURG KANSAS...WHERE A RED FLAG WARNING  
WILL BE IN EFFECT FROM 10 AM UNTIL 8 PM.  
 
- THURSDAY THUNDERSTORM POTENTIAL: ALTHOUGH IT NOW APPEARS THAT  
THE VAST MAJORITY OF ANY SEVERE THUNDERSTORM THREAT DURING THE  
AFTERNOON AND EVENING SHOULD FOCUS SLIGHTLY EAST AND SOUTHEAST  
OF OUR FORECAST AREA ALTOGETHER, OUR FAR EASTERN AND  
SOUTHEASTERN COUNTIES REMAIN UNDER AT LEAST A MARGINAL RISK  
FOR SEVERE STORMS AT THIS TIME, JUST IN CASE STORMS HAPPEN TO  
DEVELOP FARTHER WEST OVER OUR AREA (CHANCES HAVE REALLY  
DECREASED VERSUS 24 HOURS AGO).  
 
- FRIDAY NIGHT-SUNDAY NIGHT: VARIOUS/INTERMITTENT CHANCES FOR  
MUCH-NEEDED RAIN AND THUNDERSTORMS. STORMS SHOULD MOSTLY BE  
SUB-SEVERE, BUT CANNOT RULE OUT LIMITED SEVERE POTENTIAL  
MAINLY SUNDAY.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
ISSUED AT 439 PM CDT WED APR 22 2026  
 
-- FORECAST CHANGES OF NOTE/BIG PICTURE COMMENTS:  
 
- ANOTHER RED FLAG WARNING HAS BEEN ISSUED FOR THURSDAY (10 AM-8  
PM) FOR ROUGHLY THE NORTHWEST HALF OF OUR CWA. THIS MIGHT  
ACTUALLY BE OUR LAST CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONCERN FOR SEVERAL  
DAYS, WHICH WOULD BE WELCOMED! PLEASE REFER TO SEPARATE FIRE  
WEATHER SECTION BELOW FOR ALL FURTHER DISCUSSION ON THIS  
TOPIC.  
 
- DECREASING SEVERE THUNDERSTORM THREAT FOR THURSDAY AFTERNOON-  
EVENING: WHAT A CHANGE 24 HOURS HAS MADE! YESTERDAY, VARIOUS  
FORECAST MODELS SLOWED DOWN THE PASSAGE OF THURSDAY'S COLD  
FRONT/DRYLINE...SEEMINGLY BRINGING AT LEAST THE EASTERN ONE-  
THIRD TO PERHAPS ONE-HALF OF OUR CWA "UNDER THE GUN" FOR A  
SEVERE STORM THREAT DURING THE AFTERNOON-EVENING. HOWEVER,  
OVERNIGHT MODEL RUNS (AND CONTINUING INTO TODAY) HAVE ABRUPTLY  
SPED UP THIS FRONT AGAIN...IN TURN FIRING UP ANY SEVERE STORMS  
AT LEAST SLIGHTLY EAST-SOUTHEAST OF OUR CWA ALTOGETHER. OUT OF  
AN ABUNDANCE OF CAUTION, SPC HAS FOR NOW MAINTAINED AN  
OFFICIAL SLIGHT RISK (LEVEL 2 OF 5) FOR A FEW OF OUR FAR EAST-  
SOUTHEAST COUNTIES ON THEIR LATEST DAY 2 OUTLOOK, BUT THEY DID  
SHIFT THE WESTERN EDGES OF THEIR MARGINAL RISK (LEVEL 1) TO  
THE EAST OF HWY 281. IN SUMMARY: BARRING A SURPRISING "LAST  
MINUTE" SHIFT BACK WEST (UNLIKELY BUT CANNOT TOTALLY RULE IT  
OUT JUST YET), THE THREAT FOR SEVERE STORMS IN OUR CWA ON  
THURSDAY APPEARS TO HAVE DIMINISHED QUITE A BIT VERSUS 24  
HOURS AGO.  
 
-- 7-DAY FORECAST CHRONOLOGICAL DETAILS (THROUGH WED. APRIL 29):  
-- CURRENT/RECENT WEATHER SCENE AS OF 4 PM:  
OVERALL, TODAY HAS TURNED OUT VERY MUCH AS EXPECTED: WINDY  
(SOUTHERLY GUSTS 30-40 MPH WITH SPOTTY 45 MPH) AND WARM, WITH  
HIGHS ON TRACK TO TOP OUT MAINLY 80-86 DEGREES. IT'S ALSO  
REMAINED RAIN/STORM-FREE.  
 
IN THE BIG PICTURE OF THE MID-UPPER LEVELS, WATER VAPOR  
SATELLITE AND SHORT TERM MODEL DATA CONFIRM THE ONSET OF A MORE  
ACTIVE WEATHER PATTERN THESE NEXT SEVERAL DAYS, AS WE ARE UNDER  
INCREASING SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW ALOFT...DOWNSTREAM FROM A POTENT  
SHORTWAVE TROUGH/CLOSED LOW CURRENTLY CHURNING THROUGH THE  
NORTHERN ROCKIES. DOWN AT THE SURFACE, THE PRESSURE GRADIENT HAS  
REALLY TIGHTENED UP ACROSS OUR CENTRAL PLAINS REGION TODAY,  
DRIVEN BY A STRONG (ROUGHLY 990 MILLIBAR) LOW PRESSURE CENTER  
OVER EASTERN MT, WHICH HAS IN TURN KICKED UP OUR STOUT SOUTHERLY  
WINDS.  
 
- THIS EVENING (MAINLY PRE-MIDNIGHT):  
THE VAST MAJORITY OF OUR CWA WILL SURELY REMAIN DRY AND  
CONTINUED WINDY/BREEZY OUT OF THE SOUTH (GUSTS AT LEAST 25-35  
MPH EVEN AFTER DARK), AS A SURFACE TROUGH/WEAK COLD FRONT SLOWLY  
APPROACHES OUR AREA FROM THE WEST-NORTHWEST. TECHNICALLY, THE  
EXTREME WESTERN FRINGES OF OUR CWA (MAINLY WESTERN  
DAWSON/GOSPER/FURNAS) REMAIN UNDER A MARGINAL RISK FOR A ROGUE  
SEVERE STORM VIA THE LATEST SPC DAY 1 OUTLOOK, AND WE ARE  
CARRYING SOME LOW-END CHANCES/POPS TO COVER THIS POSSIBILITY.  
HOWEVER, HIGH-RES MODELS (HRRR/NAMNEST) STRONGLY SUGGEST THAT  
THE VAST MAJORITY OF THIS ACTIVITY SHOULD REMAIN AT LEAST 25-50  
MILES WEST OF OUR CWA ALTOGETHER...WITH STORMS TRACKING MORE  
NORTH THAN EAST. THAT BEING SAID, WE WILL HAVE TO KEEP AN EYE ON  
OUR WESTERN FRINGES...JUST IN CASE A NON-ZERO THUNDERSTORM  
THREAT DOES MATERIALIZE.  
 
- LATE OVERNIGHT (POST MIDNIGHT):  
AS THE EARLY MORNING HOURS GO BY, THE SURFACE COLD FRONT WILL  
GRADUALLY INVADE OUR CWA FROM WEST-TO-EAST...REACHING ROUGHLY  
HALFWAY THROUGH BY SUNRISE. AHEAD OF THIS BOUNDARY, SOUTHERLY  
WINDS WILL REMAIN BREEZY BUT GRADUALLY DIMINISH IN SPEED, WHILE  
BEHIND THE BOUNDARY BREEZES WILL SWITCH TO OUT OF THE NORTHWEST.  
 
AS FOR RAIN/THUNDERSTORM CHANCES, ODDS STILL FAVOR MOST AREAS  
STAYING DRY. THAT BEING SAID, SOME FAIRLY WEAK ELEVATED  
INSTABILITY (ROOTED MAINLY ABOVE 800 MILLIBARS) COULD SPARK SOME  
ISOLATED/SCATTERED SHOWERS AND POSSIBLY SOME WEAK THUNDERSTORMS.  
THESE COULD OCCUR ALMOST ANYWHERE IN OUR CWA, BUT APPEAR TO  
MOSTLY FAVOR COUNTIES ALONG/NORTH OF I-80. THAT BEING SAID,  
CHANCES ARE CURRENTLY NO HIGHER THAN 20-40%.  
 
AS FOR LOW TEMPS, THEY WILL HOLD UP WELL INTO THE UPPER 50S-LOW  
60S MOST PLACES (AIDED IN PART BY A LARGE MASS OF LOW CLOUDS  
EXPECTED TO OVERSPREAD MOST OF OUR CWA), WITH SOME COOLER LOW-  
MID 50S SNEAKING INTO ONLY OUR FAR WEST-NORTHWEST COUNTIES  
AROUND/JUST AFTER SUNRISE AS DRIER AIR MOVES IN THERE FIRST.  
 
- THURSDAY DAYTIME-EARLY EVENING:  
AS ALREADY HIGHLIGHTED ABOVE, THE FASTER PASSAGE OF THE FRONTAL  
BOUNDARY/DRYLINE REPRESENT A FAIRLY BIG CHANGE VERSUS  
EXPECTATIONS FROM 24 HOURS AGO.  
 
THE MORNING STARTS WITH LINGERING LOW-LEVEL CLOUDS MAINLY OVER  
THE EASTERN 1/3 OF OUR CWA, WHILE MID-HIGH LEVEL CLOUDS LINGER  
CENTRAL/WEST. THERE MIGHT BE A FEW LINGERING SHOWERS/WEAK STORMS  
OVER OUR EASTERN COUNTIES IN THE MORNING-EARLY AFTERNOON AS  
WELL, BUT THESE APPEAR TO BE FAR FROM "SOAKING RAINS". OUT OF  
CAUTION AS MUCH AS ANYTHING (AND IN LINE WITH SPC DAY 2  
OUTLOOK), WE LINGER SOME SMALL THUNDERSTORM CHANCES INTO OUR  
FAR EAST-SOUTHEAST COUNTIES DURING THE LATE AFTERNOON-EARLY  
EVENING, BUT LATEST HRRR/NAMNEST FOCUS MOST ALL SEVERE POTENTIAL  
NOW 25-50 MILES EAST-SOUTHEAST OF OUR CWA ALTOGETHER.  
 
IN OTHER DEPARTMENTS: THE POST-FRONTAL WEST-NORTHWESTERLY  
BREEZES WILL TAKE OVER OUR ENTIRE AREA, GENERALLY SUSTAINED  
10-20 MPH/GUSTING 15-30 MPH (HIGHEST WEST/WEAKEST EAST). HIGH  
TEMPS WERE CHANGED VERY LITTLE, RANGING MID-UPPER 70S NORTH/WEST  
TO LOW 80S SOUTH/SOUTHEAST.  
 
- THURSDAY LATE EVENING-OVERNIGHT:  
ANY THUNDERSTORM CHANCES THAT MIGHT HAVE EXISTED QUICKLY WANE,  
WITH SKIES BECOMING MOSTLY CLEAR IN THE WAKE OF THE PASSING  
UPPER DISTURBANCE. NORTHERLY BREEZES WILL AVERAGE AT LEAST 5-10  
MPH, WHICH WILL KEEP TEMPS FROM "TANKING" TOO FAR, BUT STILL  
LOWS WILL BE QUITE A BIT COOLER THAN TONIGHT...AIMED FROM MID-  
UPPER 30S NORTHWEST TO LOW-MID 40S SOUTHEAST (VERY LOW CHANCE  
FOR A LITTLE FROST FAR NORTHWEST AROUND ORD?...NOT CURRENTLY IN  
OFFICIAL FORECAST).  
 
- FRIDAY-FRIDAY NIGHT:  
THE VAST MAJORITY OF THE DAY-EARLY EVENING LOOKS DRY AS BREEZES  
SHIFT FROM NORTHERLY TO MORE EASTERLY. HIGH TEMPS AIMED 60S  
NORTH TO LOW-70S SOUTH. HOWEVER, ALREADY BY EARLY EVENING AND  
ESPECIALLY OVERNIGHT, SOME LOW-END RAIN/WEAK THUNDERSTORM  
CHANCES ARRIVE FROM THE WEST...MAINLY TARGETING OUR NORTHERN  
COUNTIES PER LATEST MODEL DATA.  
 
- SATURDAY-SUNDAY:  
WHILE NOT A NON-STOP RAIN SITUATION BY ANY MEANS, THIS WILL BE  
AN OVERALL-ACTIVE FEW DAYS AS ANOTHER LARGE-SCALE SHORTWAVE  
TROUGH GRADUALLY APPROACHES/INVADES OUR REGION FROM THE WEST-  
SOUTHWEST. ALTHOUGH RAIN CHANCES/POPS ARE AT LEAST NO HIGHER  
THAN 50% FOR SATURDAY, THEY STILL MIGHT BE OVERDONE. HOWEVER,  
MORE WIDESPREAD AND HIGHER-CONFIDENCE CHANCES ARRIVE SUNDAY-  
SUNDAY NIGHT WITH THE MAIN WAVE...DURING WHICH TIME MUCH OF OUR  
AREA COULD PICK UP AT LEAST 0.50-1.00" OF RAIN. ALTHOUGH FAR TOO  
EARLY TO PINPOINT DETAILS, AT LEAST OUR SOUTHERN COUNTIES MAY  
NEED MONITORED FOR A STRONG TO SEVERE STORM THREAT MAINLY  
SUNDAY...ALTHOUGH THIS WOULD APPEAR TO MAINLY BE AN ELEVATED  
STORM THREAT (MEANING MAINLY HAIL). HIGH TEMPS BOTH DAYS AIMED  
MAINLY 60S, WITH LOWS MAINLY UPPER 30S-40S.  
 
- MONDAY-WEDNESDAY:  
VARIOUS, INTERMITTENT CHANCES FOR RAIN SHOWER AND MAINLY WEAK  
THUNDERSTORMS CONTINUE, AS OUR FLOW ALOFT REMAINS QUASI-ZONAL  
(WEST-EAST) BEFORE TURNING MORE SOUTHWESTERLY MID-WEEK.  
TEMPERATURES CONTINUE TO LEAN AT LEAST SLIGHTLY TOWARD THE  
COOLER SIDE (ESPECIALLY COMPARED TO LATELY), WITH HIGHS AIMED  
MAINLY UPPER 50S-UPPER 60S...AND LOWS MAINLY MID 30S-MID 40S.  
 
 
   
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z FRIDAY/  
 
ISSUED AT 625 PM CDT WED APR 22 2026  
 
FOR KGRI/KEAR AIRPORTS:  
 
A FEW HIGH-LEVEL CLOUDS HAVE RECENTLY MOVED IN OVERTOP OF THE  
AREA. LATER TONIGHT (AROUND 4-6Z), A DECK OF LOW-LEVEL STRATUS  
IS EXPECTED TO SWEEP BY AHEAD OF A PASSING COLD FRONT. THESE  
CLOUDS WILL LIKELY (60-75% CONFIDENCE) HAVE BASES NEAR 2,000FT,  
BRINGING MVFR CEILINGS TO BOTH TERMINAL SITES (AROUND A 25%  
CHANCE OF IFR CEILINGS). MVFR CONDITIONS WILL LOOK TO STICK  
AROUND THROUGH 9-13Z, FIRST CLEARING OUT OF KEAR AHEAD OF KGRI.  
A FEW THUNDERSTORMS MAY ADDITIONALLY APPEAR IN THE VICINITY OF  
THE TERMINAL SITES BETWEEN 8-12Z. AT THIS TIME, CONFIDENCE DOES  
NOT WARRANT A MENTION OUTSIDE OF A PROB30 GROUP. BROKEN TO  
SCATTERED NON-MVFR SKIES SHOULD CARRY OUT THROUGH THE REMAINDER  
OF THE PERIOD.  
 
AS FAR AS WINDS GO, BREEZY SOUTHERLY WINDS CURRENTLY IN PLACE  
WILL BE SLOW TO LIGHTEN TONIGHT UNTIL THE COLD FRONT NEARS THE  
AREA THURSDAY MORNING. GUSTS ARE EXPECTED TO MAINTAIN BETWEEN  
30-40KTS THROUGH THE REST OF THE NIGHT. THE FRONTAL PASSAGE  
BETWEEN 10-14Z WILL STEER WIND DIRECTIONS FROM THE SOUTH TO THE  
NORTHWEST. WINDS, THOUGH LIGHTER THAN TONIGHT, WILL STILL BE  
POSSIBLE TO GUST AS HIGH AS 20-25KTS THROUGH THURSDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
ISSUED AT 439 PM CDT WED APR 22 2026  
 
- THROUGH EARLY THIS EVENING:  
DESPITE DEWPOINTS/RELATIVE HUMIDITY (RH) TECHNICALLY RUNNING  
HIGHER THAN OUR "USUAL" CRITICAL CRITERIA (MAINLY DROPPING NO  
LOWER THAN 25-35 PERCENT), THIS RH IS DEEMED "LOW  
ENOUGH"...GIVEN THE PRESENCE OF STRONG SOUTH WINDS GUSTING AS  
HIGH AS 35-45 MPH ALONG WITH LONG-STANDING DRYNESS...TO JUSTIFY  
THE CONTINUATION OF A RED FLAG WARNING THROUGH 8 PM FOR ROUGHLY  
THE NORTHWESTERN 1/3RD OF OUR FORECAST AREA (CWA). ALTHOUGH  
MODERATELY-STRONG SOUTH WINDS WILL CONTINUE BEYOND 8 PM, RH WILL  
STEADILY RECOVER UPWARD LATER THIS EVENING...CLIMBING BACK TO  
60+% BY 10-11 PM.  
 
- THURSDAY:  
ONE FINAL ROUND OF CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS (PERHAPS OUR  
LAST FOR SEVERAL DAYS?) ARRIVES THURSDAY, AS ALTHOUGH IT WILL  
NOT BE AS WINDY AS TODAY (NORTHWEST WINDS GUSTING UP TO AROUND  
25-30 MPH), RH WILL BE CONSIDERABLY LOWER...BOTTOMING OUT 10-15%  
WITHIN ALL BUT OUR FAR EASTERN-SOUTHEASTERN CWA. AS A RESULT, A  
RED FLAG WARNING HAS BEEN ISSUED FOR MOST OF OUR NEBRASKA  
COUNTIES ALONG/WEST OF HIGHWAY 281...ALONG WITH PHILLIPS COUNTY  
KS...VALID 10 AM-8 PM. PLEASE NOTE THIS IS AN EARLIER-THAN-USUAL  
"START TIME" DUE TO THE VERY DRY AIR CAUSING RH TO FALL QUICKLY  
POST-SUNRISE. THE MAIN LIMITING FACTOR AS TO WHY THIS WARNING  
DOES NOT EXTEND FARTHER EAST-SOUTHEAST AT THIS TIME, IS THAT  
WINDS ARE CURRENTLY EXPECTED TO CONSISTENTLY FALL SHORT OF  
GUSTING 25+ MPH, BUT THIS WILL NEED CLOSELY MONITORED IN LATER  
FORECASTS IN CASE EASTWARD EXPANSION BECOMES MORE WARRANTED.  
 
 
   
GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
NE...RED FLAG WARNING FROM 10 AM TO 8 PM CDT THURSDAY FOR NEZ039-  
040-046-047-060>062-072>074-082>084.  
RED FLAG WARNING UNTIL 8 PM CDT THIS EVENING FOR NEZ039>041-  
046-047-060-061-072-073-082.  
KS...RED FLAG WARNING FROM 10 AM TO 8 PM CDT THURSDAY FOR KSZ005.  
 
 
 
 
 
DISCUSSION...PFANNKUCH  
AVIATION...STUMP  
FIRE WEATHER...PFANNKUCH  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab NE Page
The Nexlab KS Page
Main Text Page