892  
FXUS63 KGLD 181749  
AFDGLD  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GOODLAND KS  
1049 AM MST TUE FEB 18 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- AN EXTREME COLD WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT FOR THE ENTIRE TRI-  
STATE AREA THROUGH MID DAY THURSDAY, WHEN A PROLONGED PERIOD  
OF DANGEROUSLY COLD WEATHER WILL AFFECT THE REGION.  
 
- A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT FOR THE ENTIRE  
TRI-STATE AREA THROUGH 11 PM MST TONIGHT (12 AM CST WEDNESDAY  
MORNING). A LULL IN PRECIPITATION IS EXPECTED THIS AFTERNOON.  
ANOTHER ROUND OF ACCUMULATING SNOW WILL AFFECT PORTIONS OF THE  
ADVISORY AREA THIS EVENING, MAINLY IN NORTHEAST CO AND NEARBY  
KS AND NE BORDER COUNTIES.  
 
- MUCH WARMER TEMPERATURES RETURN SATURDAY THROUGH MONDAY WITH  
THE WARMEST DAY BEING MONDAY WHEN HIGH TEMPERATURES WILL BE IN  
THE 60S.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/
 
 
ISSUED AT 315 AM MST TUE FEB 18 2025  
 
TODAY-TONIGHT...LIGHT TO OCCASIONALLY MODERATE SNOW WILL  
CONTINUE THROUGH MID MORNING BEFORE SLOWLY ENDING FROM WEST TO  
EAST THIS AFTERNOON AS MID LEVEL DRY AIR MOVES IN FROM THE WEST.  
ADDITIONAL SNOWFALL ACCUMULATIONS TODAY LOOK TO RANGE FROM A  
FEW TENTHS TO TWO INCHES. WITH ENOUGH MOISTURE BELOW 700MB AND  
SURFACE TEMPERATURES IN THE FAVORABLE AREA FOR DENDRITE GROWTH  
THERE COULD BE SOME SCATTERED FLURRIES THROUGHOUT THE DAY.  
SPEAKING OF TEMPERATURES, TODAYS HIGH TEMPERATURES ARE ONLY  
LOOKING TO BE IN THE 3 BELOW TO LOWER TEENS RANGE, "WARMEST"  
FROM FLAGLER TO KIT CARSON. DAYTIME WIND CHILL READINGS LOOK TO  
RANGE FROM 18 BELOW ZERO TO 26 BELOW ZERO, SO THE EXTREME COLD  
WARNING WILL CONTINUE.  
 
TONIGHT, A PRETTY STRONG WEATHER SYSTEM MOVES THROUGH THE AREA  
FROM THE NORTHWEST. THERE APPEARS TO BE A LITTLE CONVECTIVE  
APPEARANCE TO IT WITH PRETTY STEEP 700-500MB LAPSE RATES.  
PRESENTLY, SNOWFALL AMOUNTS FROM THIS FEATURE RANGE FROM A FEW  
TENTHS TO NEARLY TWO INCHES, AND LOCALLY HIGHER AMOUNTS ARE  
POSSIBLE. PRESENTLY, THE FAVORED AREAS FOR THE HIGHER SNOWFALL  
AMOUNTS ARE GENERALLY NORTH OF A LINE FROM YUMA COUNTY TO  
GOODLAND, OAKLEY AND GOVE. THIS WAS PART OF THE REASONING LAST  
NIGHT FOR RUNNING THE WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY UNTIL 11 PM MST  
(12 AM CST) TONIGHT. THE OTHER ITEM OF CONCERN IS LOW  
TEMPERATURES. THERE COULD BE SOME BREAKS IN THE CLOUDS BEHIND  
THE ABOVE MENTIONED WEATHER SYSTEM WHICH WOULD HELP IN PRODUCING  
LOW TEMPERATURES TO THE CURRENT FORECAST. NON BIAS CORRECTED  
TEMPERATURE GRIDS ARENT AS COLD WHICH IS ALSO CERTAINLY  
POSSIBLE. BLENDING THE TWO PRODUCES LOW TEMPERATURES IN THE 5  
BELOW ZERO TO 13 BELOW ZERO RANGE. WIND CHILL READINGS DROP INTO  
THE 20 BELOW ZERO TO 30 BELOW ZERO RANGE. THIS IS HANDLED WITH  
THE EXCESSIVE COLD WARNING.  
 
WEDNESDAY-WEDNESDAY NIGHT...OUTSIDE OF A SLIGHT CHANCE (20%) OF  
LIGHT SNOW ACROSS YUMA COUNTY IN THE MORNING, THE FORECAST AREA  
WILL BE DRY WITH SLOWLY DECREASING CLOUDINESS. IT WILL REMAIN  
VERY COLD BUT NOT AS COLD AS TUESDAY WITH HIGH TEMPERATURES IN  
THE SINGLE DIGITS TO MIDDLE TEENS. THE LOW TEMPERATURE FORECAST  
WILL BE CHALLENGING. THERE WILL BE INCREASING MOVING OVERHEAD  
FROM THE WEST WHICH COULD OFFSET IDEAL CONDITIONS FOR  
RADIATIONAL COOLING INCLUDING FRESH SNOW COVER AND LIGHT WINDS,  
ESPECIALLY EAST OF HIGHWAY 27. THE CURRENT FORECAST IS CALLING  
FOR LOW TEMPERATURES TO RANGE FROM THE SINGLE DIGITS BELOW ZERO  
WEST OF HIGHWAY 25 TO 10 TO 20 BELOW ZERO EAST OF HIGHWAY 25,  
COLDEST IN THE MCCOOK AND NORTON AREAS. WIND CHILL READINGS ARE  
FORECAST TO BE AS LOW AS 25 DEGREES BELOW ZERO IN SPOTS.  
 
THURSDAY-THURSDAY NIGHT...DRY WEATHER CONTINUES DURING THE DAY  
WITH A 20% CHANCE OF LIGHT SNOW ACROSS EASTERN COLORADO DURING  
THE EVENING AS A WEATHER SYSTEM MOVES IN FROM THE NORTHWEST.  
THIS AREA MAY NEED TO BE EXPANDED FURTHER EAST IF THE NAM AND  
ECMWF MODELS VERIFY GIVEN BETTER MOISTURE IN THE 850-500MB LAYER  
COMPARED TO THE GFS. HIGH TEMPERATURES RISE ANOTHER FEW  
DEGREES, RANGING FROM AROUND 10 DEGREES EAST OF A LINE FROM  
MCCOOK TO HILL CITY WITH LOWER 20S WEST OF A LINE FROM YUMA TO  
TRIBUNE. LOW TEMPERATURES ARE FORECAST TO BE IN THE SINGLE  
DIGITS ABOVE AND BELOW ZERO WITH WIND CHILL READINGS IN THE 5  
BELOW TO 15 BELOW ZERO RANGE.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /FRIDAY THROUGH MONDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 315 AM MST TUE FEB 18 2025  
 
FRIDAY...DRY WEATHER IS CURRENTLY FORECAST WITH A QUICK MOVING  
UPPER TROUGH AXIS MOVING THROUGH. HIGH TEMPERATURES CONTINUE TO  
SLOWLY WARM WITH HIGHS IN THE MIDDLE 20S TO NEAR 40, WARMEST  
ACROSS EASTERN COLORADO. LOW TEMPERATURES ARE FORECAST TO BE IN  
THE SINGLE DIGITS TO UPPER TEENS, COLDEST EAST OF HIGHWAY 25.  
 
SATURDAY...DRY WEATHER CONTINUES UNDER A SLOWLY BUILDING RIDGE  
TO OUR WEST. HIGH TEMPERATURES ARE FORECAST TO BE IN THE LOWER  
40S TO LOWER 50S (WARMEST WEST OF HIGHWAY 27) WITH LOW  
TEMPERATURES IN THE LOWER TO MIDDLE 20S.  
 
SUNDAY...DAYTIME TEMPERATURES CONTINUE TO WARM WITH HIGHS IN  
THE LOWER 50S TO LOWER 60S AND LOW TEMPERATURES IN THE UPPER 20S  
TO LOWER 30S UNDER A BUILDING RIDGE OF HIGH PRESSURE TO OUR  
WEST.  
 
MONDAY...HIGH TEMPERATURES ACROSS THE AREA ARE FORECAST TO BE  
IN THE 60S WITH LOW TEMPERATURES AGAIN IN THE UPPER 20S TO LOWER  
30S WITH DRY WEATHER CONTINUING.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z WEDNESDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1030 AM MST TUE FEB 18 2025  
 
WHILE VFR CONDITIONS ARE ANTICIPATED TO PREDOMINATE THROUGH THE  
AFTERNOON, OCCASIONAL MVFR-IFR CONDITIONS ASSOCIATED WITH LIGHT  
SNOW AND/OR LOWER CEILINGS REMAIN POSSIBLE AT BOTH TERMINALS.  
MORE WIDESPREAD MVFR-IFR CONDITIONS (AND SNOW) ARE ANTICIPATED  
TO RETURN AROUND, OR SHORTLY AFTER, SUNSET (~00Z) AND PERSIST  
OVERNIGHT. WHILE SNOW IS ANTICIPATED TO END BY 09-12Z WED, MVFR  
CEILINGS MAY PERSIST AFTERWARD.. POSSIBLY THROUGH THE REMAINDER  
OF THE WED MORNING. E TO NE WINDS AT 9-13 KNOTS WILL WEAKEN TO  
5-10 KNOTS LATE THIS EVENING AND BECOME LIGHT/VARIABLE EARLY WED  
MORNING.. AS 1045-1050 MB ARCTIC HIGH PRESSURE ESTABLISHES  
ITSELF OVER THE CENTRAL PLAINS.  
 

 
   
CLIMATE
 
 
ISSUED AT 315 AM MST TUE FEB 18 2025  
 
RECORD DAILY LOWS  
_______________________________________________________  
FEB 18 FEB 19 FEB 20 FEB 21  
_______________________________________________________  
GOODLAND -4 (2006) -4 (1908) -1 (1953) -5 (1953)  
MCCOOK -10 (1936) -9 (1929) -8 (1918) -7 (1911)  
HILL CITY -10 (1936) -2 (1929) -4 (1918) -8 (1978)  
BURLINGTON -11 (1942) -6 (2006) -8 (2018) -8 (2018)  
 
RECORD DAILY LOW MAXIMUMS  
_______________________________________________________  
FEB 18 FEB 19 FEB 20 FEB 21  
_______________________________________________________  
GOODLAND 15 (2006) 9 (1955) 16 (1918) 19 (1971)  
MCCOOK 10 (2006) 16 (1955) 9 (1918) 20 (2013)  
HILL CITY 13 (2006) 13 (1955) 14 (1918) 18 (1968)  
BURLINGTON 8 (2006) 9 (2006) 16 (2018) 16 (1913)  
 
____________________________________  
RECORD MONTHLY LOWS FOR FEBRUARY  
____________________________________  
GOODLAND -24 (2/15/2021)  
MCCOOK -26 (2/8/1933)  
HILL CITY -23 (2/8/1933)  
BURLINGTON -24 (2/15/2021)  
 
____________________________________  
ALL-TIME RECORD LOWS  
____________________________________  
GOODLAND -27 (12/22/1989)  
MCCOOK -30 (1/12/1912)  
HILL CITY -26 (12/22/1989)  
BURLINGTON -25 (1/4/1959)  
 

 
   
GLD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
KS...EXTREME COLD WARNING UNTIL 11 AM MST /NOON CST/ THURSDAY FOR  
KSZ001>004-013>016-027>029-041-042.  
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY UNTIL 11 PM MST /MIDNIGHT CST/ THIS  
EVENING FOR KSZ001>004-013>016-027>029-041-042.  
CO...EXTREME COLD WARNING UNTIL 11 AM MST THURSDAY FOR COZ090>092.  
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY UNTIL 11 PM MST THIS EVENING FOR  
COZ090>092.  
NE...EXTREME COLD WARNING UNTIL 11 AM MST /NOON CST/ THURSDAY FOR  
NEZ079>081.  
WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY UNTIL 11 PM MST /MIDNIGHT CST/ THIS  
EVENING FOR NEZ079>081.  
 

 
 

 
 
SHORT TERM...99  
LONG TERM...99  
AVIATION...VINCENT  
CLIMATE...024/VINCENT  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab KS Page
The Nexlab CO Page
The Nexlab NE Page Main Text Page