744  
FXUS63 KLBF 091709  
AFDLBF  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NORTH PLATTE NE  
1209 PM CDT MON MAR 9 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED MONDAY WITH RED  
FLAG WARNINGS IN PLACE FOR MUCH OF WESTERN NEBRASKA.  
 
- A COOL FRONT WILL DIVE SOUTH EARLY MONDAY EVENING INTO  
TUESDAY, BRINGING COOLER TEMPERATURES AS WELL AS THE POTENTIAL  
FOR A LIGHT RAIN/SNOW MIX IF NOT ALL SNOW FOR PORTIONS OF THE  
AREA.  
 
- CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS ARE LIKELY ON THURSDAY DUE TO A  
COMBINATION OF STRONG WEST WINDS AND VERY LOW RELATIVE  
HUMIDITY.  
 

 
   
SHORT TERM /THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/
 
 
ISSUED AT 245 AM CDT MON MAR 9 2026  
 
EARLY THIS MORNING, STRAY MID-LEVEL CLOUDS CONTINUE TO SHUFFLE WEST  
TO EAST ACROSS THE AREA. WESTERLY WINDS REMAIN ELEVATED ACROSS THE  
AREA WITH STRAY GUSTS IN THE 20 TO 25 MPH RANGE NOTED OVER THE  
SANDHILLS INTO THE PANHANDLE. KLNX VWP DATA SHOWS 20-30 KNOT WINDS  
JUST OFF THE SURFACE AND THIS IS LIKELY TO PERSIST THROUGH THE  
REMAINDER OF THE PREDAWN HOURS. THE RESULT IS MILD OVERNIGHT LOWS  
ONCE AGAIN WITH VALUES LIKELY TO REMAIN ABOVE THE FREEZING MARK AND  
SOME AREAS LIKELY HOLDING ONTO THE 40S.  
 
MONDAY/MONDAY NIGHT...ENHANCED MID-LEVEL FLOW ACROSS THE NORTHERN  
CONUS WILL SLOWLY SETTLE SOUTH OVERNIGHT INTO EARLY MONDAY. ZONAL  
MID-LEVEL FLOW WILL CONTINUE THROUGH THE DAY. AS A MID-LEVEL  
DISTURBANCE APPROACHES THE LARAMIE RANGE BY EARLY AFTERNOON, A  
SURFACE LOW AND ASSOCIATED LEE TROUGHING WILL FORM TO THE WEST.  
GRADUALLY THROUGH THE AFTERNOON, THIS LOW WILL TRACK EAST ALONG THE  
NEBRASKA/SOUTH DAKOTA BORDER LIFTING A WARM FRONT NORTH AND EAST  
THROUGH WESTERN NEBRASKA. BEHIND THIS FEATURE, WINDS WILL STRENGTHEN  
BENEATH A MODEST H7 SPEED MAX NEARING 40 KNOTS. WITH STRONG  
DOWNSLOPING WINDS, TEMPERATURES SHOULD AGAIN QUICKLY CLIMB THIS  
AFTERNOON ACROSS THE WHOLE FORECAST AREA. LEANED HEAVILY ON MET/MAV  
GUIDANCE, WHICH PAINTS UPPER 60S TO NEAR 80F NORTHEAST TO SOUTHWEST,  
AS THESE SOLUTIONS WERE THE WARMEST AND SHOWED FAIRLY GOOD AGREEMENT  
IN OUR WARMEST AREAS (HIGHWAY 2 AND POINTS SOUTH). IT'S THESE AREAS  
WHERE UPPER 70S TO NEAR 80F IS IN PLACE AND A FEW RECORD HIGHS COULD  
BE THREATENED. DETAILS PERTAINING TO THAT CAN BE FOUND IN THE  
CLIMATE SECTION BELOW. GIVEN THE EXPECTED WARM TEMPERATURES OF UP TO  
30F ABOVE NORMAL, INVADING DRY AIR, AND GUSTY WINDS, FIRE WEATHER  
CONCERNS ARE THE MAIN ISSUE FOR TODAY AND DETAILS CAN BE FOUND IN  
THE FOLLOWING FIRE WEATHER DISCUSSION. LATE TONIGHT, AS THE WEAK  
SURFACE LOW CONTINUES TO MOVE EAST, A TRAILING COLD FRONT WILL  
QUICKLY CLEAR THE AREA BY EARLY TUESDAY MORNING. WINDS BEHIND THIS  
FRONT SHOULD BE GUSTY AS PRESSURE RISES QUICKLY FILL IN THE REGION.  
COLD AIR ADVECTION (CAA) WILL LEAD TO COOLER LOWS ACROSS THE AREA  
WITH FORECAST VALUES IN THE MIDDLE 20S TO LOW 30S.  
 
TUESDAY/TUESDAY NIGHT...NORTHERLY FLOW WILL CONTINUE THROUGH THE DAY  
AND PROLONG CAA. FORECAST HIGHS WERE DECREASED SLIGHTLY AS A RESULT  
UTILIZING A NAM/MET BLEND WHICH TYPICALLY HANDLES CAA SETUPS BETTER.  
FORCING WILL LAG THE FRONT BY A FEW HOURS AND BE MORE CLOSELY TIED  
TO A PV ANOMALY CROSSING WYOMING. WHILE POPS MAY ARRIVE AS EARLY AS  
LATE MORNING NEAR THE PINE RIDGE, MORE WIDESPREAD PRECIPITATION  
POTENTIAL SHOULD HOLD OFF UNTIL TUESDAY EVENING INTO EARLY  
WEDNESDAY. HIGHS DURING THE DAY WILL STILL BE PLENTY WARM TO  
SUPPORT ALL RAIN, WITH MIDDLE 40S NORTH TO NEAR 60F SOUTH, BUT  
AS COOLER AIR CONTINUE TO FILTER IN A TRANSITION TO AT LEAST A  
SNOW MIX IF NOT ALL SNOW APPEARS LIKELY DURING THE OVERNIGHT.  
TOP DOWN SATURATION SHOULD ALLOW FOR A CLEAN RAIN TO SNOW  
TRANSITION AND AS MID-LEVEL FORCING PEAKS CLOSER TO MIDNIGHT,  
MODERATE TO PERHAPS BRIEFLY HEAVY SNOWFALL WILL BE POSSIBLE. NBM  
PROBABILITIES OF EXCEEDING 0.05" LIQUID EQUIVALENT CLIMB TO  
AROUND 60% ALONG THE NEBRASKA/SOUTH DAKOTA BORDER BUT NAM/GFS  
DETERMINISTIC OUTPUTS ARE BOTH FURTHER SOUTH AND SHOW BULLSEYES  
OF 0.10" FOR A FEW LOCATIONS. FOR NOW, CONFIDENCE IS FAIRLY LOW  
IN SEEING THE HEAVIER SCENARIOS PLAY OUT. BECAUSE OF THIS,  
SNOWFALL TOTALS REMAIN LIGHT AT ONE INCH OR LESS FOR ANYWHERE IN  
THE AREA. WE CAN'T RULE OUT SOME NECESSARY INCREASES IN  
EXPECTED SNOWFALL WITH LATER FORECASTS SO STAY TUNED. THE COLDER  
INCOMING AIR SHOULD LEAD TO A FAIRLY COLD NIGHT WITH LOWS IN  
THE UPPER TEENS TO MIDDLE 20S FOR WESTERN NEBRASKA.  
 

 
   
LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 245 AM CDT MON MAR 9 2026  
 
NORTHWEST FLOW ESTABLISHES ALOFT INTO MIDWEEK, POINTING TO  
DRIER CONDITIONS ACROSS THE AREA. THOUGH TEMPERATURES WILL BE  
MUCH COOLER ON WEDNESDAY (HIGHS IN UPPER 40S TO LOW 50S) VERSUS  
EARLIER IN THE WEEK, VERY DRY AIR WILL STILL PUSH HUMIDITY  
VALUES TO AS LOW AS 18- 25% WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. WINDS REMAIN  
GUSTY FROM THE NORTHWEST THROUGH THE DAY AS WELL, WITH GUSTS OF  
25 TO 30 EXPECTED FOR ALL. THIS WILL LEAD TO ELEVATED TO NEAR  
CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONCERNS.  
 
CONFIDENCE CONTINUES TO INCREASE IN A HIGHER END FIRE WEATHER THREAT  
ACROSS THE AREA FOR THURSDAY. AS STRONG DOWNSLOPE FLOW ESTABLISHES  
BY THURSDAY AFTERNOON (H7-H85 FLOW ~40-50KTS), WIND GUSTS WILL  
INCREASE TO AS HIGH AS 45 TO 55 MILES PER HOUR FOR MUCH OF WESTERN  
AND SOUTHWEST NEBRASKA. THESE STRONG WEST WIND GUSTS WILL OVERLAP  
NEAR RECORD TEMPERATURES AND RELATIVE HUMIDITY VALUES IN THE TEENS.  
THE CURRENT FORECAST CONTINUES TO SIT ON THE LOWER END OF THE  
GUIDANCE ENVELOPE (NEAR THE 25TH PERCENTILE), WITH HIGHS IN THE  
LOWER TO MIDDLE 70S. SHOULD THESE TEMPERATURES CONTINUE TO TREND  
WARMER, WITH 50TH PERCENTILE GUIDANCE IN THE UPPER 70S/LOW 80S, THIS  
WILL ONLY LEAD TO LOWER RELATIVE HUMIDITY AND FURTHER INCREASE FIRE  
CONCERNS. THE ONE CAVEAT AT THIS RANGE LOOKS TO BE A THREAT FOR HIGH  
CLOUDINESS, WHICH COULD IMPACT BOTH THE DEGREE OF MIXING AND HIGH  
TEMPERATURES SOMEWHAT. REGARDLESS, CONFIDENCE IS INCREASING IN A  
HIGHER END FIRE WEATHER DAY, WITH A THREAT FOR LARGE FIRE GROWTH AND  
RAPID FIRE SPREAD ACROSS THE AREA.  
 
A COLD FRONT THEN PASSES THROUGH THE AREA THURSDAY NIGHT, AS A  
SURFACE LOW EJECTS ACROSS KANSAS AND MISSOURI. THIS BRINGS A RETURN  
OF COOLER TEMPERATURES FRIDAY, PRIMARILY FOR NORTH CENTRAL NEBRASKA.  
WARMER TEMPERATURES REMAIN ACROSS SOUTHWEST NEBRASKA, AND FIRE  
CONCERNS MAY PERSIST INTO LATE WEEK AS WELL. A SECOND COLD FRONT  
PUSHES THROUGH INTO SUNDAY MORNING, BRINGING A RETURN OF COOLER  
TEMPERATURES FOR THE ENTIRE AREA AS WE HEAD INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
THIS COULD ALSO BRING A RETURN OF PRECIPITATION, THOUGH CONFIDENCE  
IN THIS REMAINS LOW FOR NOW.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z TUESDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1208 PM CDT MON MAR 9 2026  
 
VFR CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED TO PREVAIL THROUGH TUESDAY MORNING  
ACROSS WESTERN AND NORTH CENTRAL NEBRASKA. WEST TO SOUTHWEST  
WINDS, WITH GUSTS OF 20 TO 30KTS ACROSS THE WESTERN SANDHILLS,  
WITH GUSTS TO 20KTS AT KLBF. WINDS TO REMAIN LIGHT AND VARIABLE  
AT KVTN THIS AFTERNOON. WINDS BRIEFLY WEAKEN FROM THE SOUTH THIS  
EVENING, BEFORE A COLD FRONT MOVES THROUGH AFTER SUNSET. NORTH  
WIND GUSTS OF 20 TO 25KTS CAN BE EXPECTED WITH ITS PASSAGE.  
 

 
   
FIRE WEATHER
 
 
ISSUED AT 245 AM CDT MON MAR 9 2026  
 
RED FLAG WARNINGS REMAIN IN EFFECT FOR ZONES 204, 206, 208, AND 210  
ON MONDAY.  
 
APPROACHING MID-LEVEL DISTURBANCE WILL FOSTER A DEVELOPING LOW  
PRESSURE CENTER OVER EASTERN WYOMING BY MIDDAY. AS THIS FEATURE  
TRACKS EAST ALONG THE NEBRASKA/SOUTH DAKOTA BORDER, A WARM FRONT  
WILL LIFT NORTH AND EAST ACROSS THE AREA. THE RESULTING  
STRENGTHENING WEST TO SOUTHWESTERLY WINDS WILL BOOST AFTERNOON HIGHS  
TO NEAR RECORD LEVELS WITH VALUES IN THE UPPER 70S TO NEAR 80F. DEEP  
MIXING WITHIN THE WARMING/DRYING DOWNSLOPE WINDS WILL PROMOTE STRONG  
MOMENTUM TRANSFER WIND GUSTS BENEATH A BELT OF STRONGER WINDS AROUND  
H7 (~3KM AGL). THOUGH MID AND HIGH LEVEL CLOUDS MAY HAMPER THE  
DIURNAL WARMUP SLIGHTLY, CONFIDENCE IS FAIRLY HIGH IN AFTERNOON  
TEMPERATURES. HIGHER RESOLUTION GUIDANCE IS FAIRLY BULLISH ON  
CRITICAL HUMIDITY LEVELS WITH MANY LOCATIONS SOUTH OF HIGHWAY 2 AND  
WEST OF HIGHWAY 183 FALLING INTO THE LOWER TEENS AND POTENTIALLY  
APPROACH SINGLE DIGITS IN PORTIONS OF ZONE 210. WINDS SHOULD BE  
STRONGEST ACROSS THE WESTERN SANDHILLS WHERE PEAK GUSTS SHOULD CLIMB  
UP TO 40 MPH. ELSEWHERE, GUSTS SHOULD FALL OFF CONSIDERABLY WITH  
PEAK SPEEDS OF 20 MPH OR LESS. THESE MARGINAL WINDS ARE THE  
JUSTIFICATION FOR OMITTING ZONES 209 AND 219 AT THIS TIME. AS THE  
FRONTAL BOUNDARY SAGS SOUTH TONIGHT, WINDS SHOULD ABRUPTLY SHIFT  
FROM WESTERLY TO NORTHERLY AND GUSTS MAY REMAIN ELEVATED FOR A BRIEF  
MOMENT. EVEN WITH THIS POTENTIAL, THE DECISION WAS MADE TO KEEP THE  
END TIME AS IS DUE TO THE MAGNITUDE OF COLD AIR COMING IN SHOULD  
ALLOW FOR REASONABLE HUMIDITY RECOVERY WITHIN THE FIRST FEW HOURS OF  
FRONTAL PASSAGE.  
 
AFTER A BRIEF RETURN OF COOLER TEMPERATURES AND INCREASED  
HUMIDITY ON TUESDAY, FIRE CONCERNS ARE EXPECTED AGAIN FOR  
WEDNESDAY AND THIS PERSISTS INTO LATE WEEK. THOUGH COOLER HIGHS  
ARE EXPECTED WEDNESDAY (HIGHS IN UPPER 40S TO 50S), VERY DRY AIR  
WILL LEAD TO LOW RELATIVE HUMIDITY OVERLAPPING GUSTY NORTHWEST  
WINDS (20 TO 30MPH). ELEVATED TO NEAR CRITICAL FIRE CONCERNS ARE  
EXPECTED ON WEDNESDAY.  
 
ATTENTION THEN TURNS TO A POTENTIALLY HIGHER END FIRE WEATHER DAY ON  
THURSDAY ACROSS THE AREA. NEAR RECORD TEMPERATURES IN THE 70S TO LOW  
80S WILL COMBINE WITH DRY AIR TO PUSH RELATIVE HUMIDITY VALUES INTO  
THE TEENS THURSDAY AFTERNOON. MOST CONCERNING, STRONG WEST WINDS  
LOOK TO DEVELOP ACROSS WESTERN NEBRASKA INTO THE SANDHILLS AS WELL,  
WITH GUSTS AS HIGH AS 45 TO 55 MILES PER HOUR POSSIBLE. THIS LOOKS  
TO LEAD TO A PERIOD OF CRITICAL FIRE CONCERNS THURSDAY, AND POINTS  
TOWARDS A VERY CONCERNING SETUP FOR LARGE AND RAPID FIRE SPREAD.  
TRENDS WILL NEED TO BE MONITORED VERY CLOSELY AND FUTURE FIRE  
WEATHER HEADLINES MAY BE NEEDED ACROSS MUCH OF WESTERN AND NORTH  
CENTRAL NEBRASKA ON THURSDAY.  
 

 
   
CLIMATE
 
 
ISSUED AT 245 AM CDT MON MAR 9 2026  
 
FORECAST HIGHS VS RECORD (YEAR OF LAST OCCURRENCE)  
 
MONDAY 03/09  
 
NORTH PLATTE 79/81 (2021)  
VALENTINE 70/78 (2021)  
BROKEN BOW 77/79 (2021)  
IMPERIAL 78/80 (1989)  
 

 
   
LBF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
RED FLAG WARNING UNTIL 8 PM CDT /7 PM MDT/ THIS EVENING FOR  
NEZ204-206-210.  
 

 
 

 
 
SHORT TERM...NMJ  
LONG TERM...BROWN  
AVIATION...ROBERG  
FIRE WEATHER...BROWN/NMJ  
CLIMATE...NMJ  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab NE Page Main Text Page