854  
FXUS64 KLUB 171101  
AFDLUB  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LUBBOCK TX  
501 AM CST TUE FEB 17 2026  
   
..NEW AVIATION  
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
ISSUED AT 500 AM CST TUE FEB 17 2026  
 
- HIGH WINDS LIKELY FOR PORTIONS OF THE FORECAST AREA TODAY ALONG  
WITH BLOWING DUST AND AN ELEVATED TO CRITICAL FIRE DANGER.  
 
- NOT AS WARM WEDNESDAY, NONETHELESS DRY AND WINDY CONDITIONS  
WILL LEAD TO CRITICAL FIRE CONDITIONS ONCE AGAIN.  
 
- WARM AND BREEZY CONDITIONS EXPECTED THROUGH THURSDAY, BEFORE  
SLIGHTLY COOLER AND CALMER CONDITIONS RETURN.  
 
 
   
SHORT TERM  
 
(TODAY AND TONIGHT)  
ISSUED AT 1129 PM CST MON FEB 16 2026  
 
A WEALTH OF HIGH-LEVEL PACIFIC MOISTURE CONTINUED TO INFILTRATE  
WESTERN TEXAS LATE THIS EVENING AHEAD OF A REMNANT UPPER LOW  
TRANSITIONING INTO AN OPEN WAVE OVER THE GREAT BASIN. AS THIS TROUGH  
ACCELERATES EAST AND EJECTS ACROSS THE HIGH PLAINS OF EASTERN CO AND  
WESTERN KS TUESDAY AFTERNOON, A SOUTHWESTERLY GRADIENT FLOW WILL  
SHARPEN CONSIDERABLY RESULTING IN UP TO 180 KNOTS AT H3, 115 KNOTS  
AT H5, AND 75 KNOTS AT H7. THE CORES OF THE H5 AND H7 WIND MAXIMA  
ARE PROGGED TO RUN FROM EAST-CENTRAL NM TO THE OK PANHANDLE BY  
TUESDAY AFTERNOON WHILE AFFECTING A GOOD CHUNK OF OUR NW ZONES. EVEN  
WITH THICKER HIGH CLOUDS EARLY IN THE DAY, MODELS AGREE IN THIS  
LAYER THINNING BY THE AFTERNOON WHICH WILL OPEN THE DOOR TO EVEN  
DEEPER MIXING INTO THE H7 LAYER FOR MANY AREAS. AS SUCH, AN UPGRADE  
TO A HIGH WIND WARNING WAS MADE FOR MOST AREAS ON THE CAPROCK WITH A  
WIND ADVISORY BUFFERING THE WARNING. LATER SHIFTS MAY NEED TO EXPAND  
THE SOUTHERN END OF THE HIGH WIND WARNING AS SOME HIGHER RES MODELS  
ARE PROGGING A SECOND WIND MAX OF 40 KNOTS AT 850 MB FROM SEMINOLE  
TO LUBBOCK THAT TRANSLATES OFF THE CAPROCK THROUGH SUNSET.  
 
BLOWING DUST MENTION WAS BOOSTED AREA WIDE THIS AFTERNOON GIVEN THE  
MAGNITUDE AND DURATION OF STRONG AND HIGH WINDS, ALTHOUGH IT'S  
UNCLEAR HOW LOW VISIBILITIES WILL BECOME AS THIS IS THE FIRST  
WIDESPREAD HIGH WIND EVENT OF THE SEASON. AS SUCH, WE'LL REFRAIN  
FROM BLOWING DUST HEADLINES AT THIS TIME. THE SURFACE PATTERN  
THROUGH THE DAY WILL EVOLVE FROM A SHARPENING SURFACE TROUGH  
BISECTING THE CWA FROM N-S FOLLOWED BY A PACIFIC FROPA IN OUR  
WESTERN ZONES BY MID-AFTERNOON THAT QUICKLY SWEEPS THROUGH THE  
ROLLING PLAINS BY SUNSET. WITH THE 850 MB THERMAL RIDGE HANGING OFF  
THE CAPROCK FOR MUCH OF THE DAY, HIGH TEMPS WILL VARY FROM NEAR  
RECORD HIGHS AT CHILDRESS (87 FORECAST, RECORD IS 88) TO THE LOWER  
70S NEAR TX-NM BORDER. WESTERLY WINDS REMAIN BREEZY FOR MUCH OF THE  
EVENING BEFORE STRONGER DECOUPLING AND A DIMINISHING GRADIENT FLOW  
ARRIVE AFTER MIDNIGHT MAKING FOR COOLER LOWS IN THE 30S WEST TO 40S  
 
 
   
LONG TERM  
 
(WEDNESDAY THROUGH NEXT MONDAY)  
ISSUED AT 1129 PM CST MON FEB 16 2026  
 
WINDY CONDITIONS WILL REMAIN THE THEME OF THE EXTENDED FORECAST  
PACKAGE, ALTHOUGH NOT AS WINDY TO WHAT WE EXPECT TO SEE TUESDAY. AT  
THE H5 LEVEL, A WAVE TRAIN IS EXPECTED AS A SERIES OF SHORTWAVE  
TROUGHS TRACK THROUGH THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST INTO THE HIGH PLAINS  
THROUGH MID-WEEK. AS A RESULT, FLOW ALOFT WILL REMAIN SOUTHWESTERLY  
TO NEAR ZONAL IN NATURE AS STRONG 90+KT JET STREAKS PASS THROUGH THE  
PANHANDLE REGION. SIMULTANEOUSLY, IN RESPONSE TO THE WAVE TRAIN  
ALOFT, A SERIES OF LEE CYCLONES ARE EXPECTED TO DEVELOP AND DIVE  
INTO THE SOUTH PLAINS EACH AFTERNOON WEDNESDAY, THEN AGAIN ON  
THURSDAY. AS THESE SURFACE LOWS DIG SOUTHWARD, PRESSURE GRADIENT  
INCREASES ARE EXPECTED TO TAKE PLACE WITH CURRENT GUIDANCE  
SUGGESTING 3 HOUR MSLP CHANGES AROUND 4 TO 5 MB WITH THE TIGHTENING  
GRADIENT. GIVEN THIS AND THE FACT THE CORES OF NOT ONLY THE  
H7(~50KT) BUT THE H8(~40 KT) WIND MAXIMA IS PROGGED TO PASS DIRECTLY  
OVERHEAD SUGGESTS THAT NBM BASE WINDS OF 15 TO 20 MPH WILL NEED TO  
BE INCREASED, CLOSER TO THE NBM 75TH PERCENTILE WITH WIND SPEEDS  
AROUND 20 TO 35 MPH, GUSTING UP TO 40 MPH. WHICH WOULD ALIGN BETTER  
CONSIDERING FORECAST SOUNDINGS FRO THE NAM AND GFS DEPICT A  
DEEPENING BOUNDARY LAYER IN RESPONSE TO THE WARM TEMPERATURES AND  
DRY CONDITIONS. ALTHOUGH WE REMAIN JUST BELOW ADVISORY CRITERIA, THE  
LIKELIHOOD OF EXCEEDING ADVISORY THRESHOLDS LOOKS TO BE POSSIBLE  
GIVEN RECENT MODEL RUNS. LATEST HREF PROBABILITIES SUGGEST THE  
LIKELIHOOD OF EXCEEDING ADVISORY LEVEL CRITERIA FOR WEDNESDAY  
AFTERNOON RANGE FROM ABOUT 40% ACROSS THE SOUTH PLAINS AND NEAR 90%  
ACROSS THE FAR SOUTHWESTERN TEXAS PANHANDLE. TO DIVE A LITTLE  
DEEPER, THE PROBABILITY OF EXCEEDING WIND SPEEDS OF 40 MPH ACROSS  
THE FAR SWTP ARE ABOUT 30%. AS FOR THURSDAY WIND SPEEDS, CONFIDENCE  
IS NOT AS CERTAIN GIVEN THE MORE NORTHERN TRACK OF THE H5 SHORTWAVE,  
IN ADDITION TO THE WEAKER H7 (~50 KT) AND H8 (~30 KT) WIND MAXIMAS  
THAT DO NOT LOOK TO SET UP DIRECTLY OVERHEAD BUT IN FACT MORE EAST  
ACROSS THE OKC METRO. RIGHT NOW NBM PROBABILITIES OF EXCEEDING  
ADVISORY LEVEL CRITERIA THURSDAY AFTERNOON RANGE FROM ABOUT 10%  
ACROSS THE SOUTH PLAINS AND AROUND 30% ACROSS THE FAR SOUTHWESTERN  
TEXAS PANHANDLE. WHILE LREF PROBABILITIES ARE EVEN LOWER ACROSS THE  
FAR SWTP LESS THAN 10%. THEREFORE, THIS WILL BE SOMETHING WE ARE  
KEEPING CLOSE EYE ON IN THE COMING DAYS, BUT FOR NOW WILL OPT TO  
LEAVE IN THE NBM BASE WINDS DEPICTING SPEEDS AROUND 15 TO 20 MPH.  
 
CONDITIONS LOOK TO REMAIN CRITICALLY DRY ACROSS OUR AREAS BOTH  
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY. DESPITE THE DECREASE IN GEOPOTENTIAL HEIGHTS  
WITH THE PASSING WAVES NEARBY, TEMPERATURES WILL STILL CLIMB ABOVE  
SEASONAL NORMALS EACH AFTERNOON IN THE 60S AND 70S. THEREFORE, WITH  
WINDY CONDITIONS EXPECTED AND MINIMUM RH VALUES IN THE SINGLE DIGITS  
TO LOWER TEENS WILL GIVE WAY TO THE CONTINUATION OF CRITICAL FIRE  
CONDITIONS WEDNESDAY AND ELEVATED TO NEAR CRITICAL THURSDAY. AS A  
RESULT, A FIRE WEATHER WATCH IS IN EFFECT BEGINNING 11 AM WEDNESDAY  
THROUGH 7 PM WEDNESDAY. AS THIS EVENT GETS CLOSER, CONDITIONS ARE  
LOOKING TO SOLIDIFY IN NEEDING TO UPGRADE TO A WARNING AT LEAST FOR  
PORTIONS OF THE AREA WEDNESDAY. FRIDAY THROUGH THE WEEKEND LOOKS TO  
QUIET DOWN WITH TEMPERATURES SLIGHTLY COOLER AND WINDS MUCH CALMER AS  
FLOW ALOFT TURNS MORE ZONAL AS THE WAVE TRAIN DEPARTS TO THE EAST.  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
(12Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 500 AM CST TUE FEB 17 2026  
 
VFR CONDITIONS ARE EXPECTED TO PREVAIL. SOME VIS REDUCTION DUE TO  
BLDU IS EXPECTED AT THE TERMINALS TODAY DUE TO WESTERLY WINDS OF  
30-40+ KNOTS, BUT CONFIDENCE IN MVFR CIGS OR LOWER IS LOW AT THIS  
TIME.  
 
 
   
FIRE WEATHER  
 
ISSUED AT 1129 PM CST MON FEB 16 2026  
 
CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER IS LIKELY ON TUESDAY FOR ALL BUT THE FAR  
SOUTHERN ROLLING PLAINS DUE TO SOUTHWEST WINDS OF 25 TO 40 MPH  
COMBINING WITH HIGH TEMPS OF 15 TO 25 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL AND LOW  
RHS IN THE TEENS. ELEVATED FIRE WEATHER IS LIKELY FOR THE FAR  
SOUTHERN ROLLING PLAINS WHERE FUELS ARE LESS RECEPTIVE TO FIRE  
SPREAD. THE MOST VOLATILE WILDFIRE CONDITIONS LOOK TO TARGET THE FAR  
SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH-CENTRAL TX PANHANDLE THIS AFTERNOON AS THIS AREA  
FEATURES THE HIGHEST ERCS AND STRONGEST WIND POTENTIAL MARKED BY  
FREQUENT GUSTS OF 55 TO 65 MPH. THIS AREA ALSO ALIGNS WITH THE  
REGIONAL WILDFIRE COMPOSITE PATTERN AS BEING BOUND BETWEEN A LOW-  
LEVEL THERMAL RIDGE TO THE EAST AND A MID-LEVEL WIND MAXIMUM NEARBY.  
CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER CONDITIONS WILL SUBSIDE TUESDAY EVENING AS  
WESTERLY WINDS SLOWLY DECLINE. RH RECOVERIES WILL BE MODERATE (40S  
TO 50S) OVERNIGHT AHEAD OF ANOTHER CRITICAL FIRE WEATHER THREAT ON  
WEDNESDAY, ALTHOUGH 20-FOOT SW WINDS SHOULD BE MOSTLY IN THE 20-30  
MPH RANGE FOR WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON WITH MINIMUM RHS FALLING INTO THE  
LOWER TEENS AREA WIDE.  
 
 
   
LUB WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
RED FLAG WARNING FROM 11 AM THIS MORNING TO 8 PM CST THIS  
EVENING FOR TXZ021>037-039>042.  
 
HIGH WIND WARNING FROM 11 AM THIS MORNING TO 7 PM CST THIS  
EVENING FOR TXZ021>024-027>029-033>035.  
 
FIRE WEATHER WATCH FROM WEDNESDAY MORNING THROUGH WEDNESDAY  
EVENING FOR TXZ021>036-039>041.  
 
WIND ADVISORY FROM 11 AM THIS MORNING TO 7 PM CST THIS EVENING  
FOR TXZ025-026-030>032-036-037-039>042.  
 
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...93  
LONG TERM....12  
AVIATION...51  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab TX Page
Main Text Page