361  
FXUS63 KOAX 300428  
AFDOAX  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OMAHA/VALLEY NE  
1128 PM CDT SUN JUN 29 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- A FEW ISOLATED SHOWERS AND STORMS ARE POSSIBLE ALONG A WEAK  
FRONT LEFT OVER IN NORTHEAST NEBRASKA FROM THE MORNING  
STORMS (30% CHANCE).  
 
- A STRONGER COMPLEX OF STORMS IS EXPECTED TO MOVE IN FROM THE  
WEST OVERNIGHT, WITH STRONG WINDS AND HAIL BEING THE PRIMARY  
HAZARDS ALONGSIDE HEAVY RAINS AFTER 2 AM.  
 
- MUCH OF MONDAY AND TUESDAY WILL BE DRY, WITH TEMPERATURES  
HEATING BACK UP BY LATE IN THE WEEK.  
 
- CHANCES ARE INCREASING FOR AN ACTIVE HOLIDAY WEEKEND, AS A  
FRONTAL SYSTEM ARRIVES FROM THE WEST FRIDAY INTO THE WEEKEND.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
ISSUED AT 357 PM CDT SUN JUN 29 2025  
 
TODAY:  
 
WATER VAPOR IMAGERY THIS AFTERNOON DEPICTS A MESSY PATTER THAT WE  
FIND OURSELVES IN, WITH WIDESPREAD DEBRIS FROM PREVIOUS AND CURRENT  
CONVECTION WHILE AN ARM OF FORCING ASSOCIATED WITH A MID/UPPER  
SHORTWAVE TROUGH STARTING TO GROW INITIAL CONVECTION UP THE HIGH  
PLAINS. THAT MORNING CONVECTION THAT SWEPT THROUGH EASTERN NEBRASKA  
AND SOUTHWEST IOWA HAS COMPLICATED THE FORECAST FOR TODAY, TANKING  
TEMPERATURES AND OVERTURNING THE AIRMASS IN PLACE, DELAYING ROBUST  
CONVECTION INTO THE LATE EVENING/OVERNIGHT HOURS. TAKING A LOOK AT A  
RECENT SURFACE ANALYSIS, A SURFACE LOW WAS PLACED OVER SOUTHEAST  
COLORADO, WITH A SURFACE BOUNDARY EXTENDING NORTHEAST FROM IT ACROSS  
NORTHERN KANSAS, WHERE IT RUNS INTO THE CONVECTIVELY TURNED OVER  
AIRMASS ACROSS EASTERN KANSAS AND NEBRASKA. A NARROW CORRIDOR OF  
SURFACE MOISTURE EXTENDS ALONG THE NORTHERN SIDE OF THE BOUNDARY  
ACROSS MUCH OF SOUTH-CENTRAL AND INTO EASTERN NEBRASKA, WITH A  
LARGELY FLAT FIELD OF CUMULUS EXTENDING FROM NORTHEAST KANSAS TO  
GRAND ISLAND. ACROSS NORTH-CENTRAL NEBRASKA, AN IMPINGING COLD FRONT  
HAS RESULTED IN ANOTHER NARROW FIELD OF CUMULUS THAT STRETCHES FROM  
NORTHWEST NEBRASKA EAST-NORTHEASTWARD INTO SOUTHEAST SOUTH DAKOTA.  
AS THE FORECAST SITS RIGHT NOW, WE'RE CARRYING A 20% CHANCE THAT  
CONVERGENCE BECOMES STRONG ENOUGH ALONG EITHER OF THOSE BOUNDARIES  
FOR AN ISOLATED SHOWER OR STORM TO FORM ALONG THEM THROUGH THE  
EVENING HOURS. IF ONE WOULD FORM, IT WOULD LIKELY STRUGGLE TO  
REACH SEVERE LEVELS, THOUGH IT COULD PROVIDE A NUISANCE FOR  
THOSE OUTSIDE.  
 
WHAT IS ANTICIPATED TO BE THE MAIN PLAYER FOR STORM CHANCES LATE  
THIS EVENING INTO THE OVERNIGHT HOURS WILL COME IN THE FORM OF A  
CLUSTER OF STORMS, SWEPT OFF THE HIGH PLAINS BY THE INCOMING  
FRONT/SHORTWAVE, THEN LIKELY RIDING THE THETA-E GRADIENT DRAPED  
NEAR THE NE/KS BORDER. THERE STILL IS QUITE A BIT OF DIVERGENCE  
IN CAM SOLUTIONS FOR THE LOCATION AND ORIENTATION OF THAT  
GRADIENT, WITH THE LATEST RUNS OF THE CAMS SUGGESTING THAT THE  
FORECAST AREA IS IN PLAY FOR AT LEAST A PORTION OF THE MCS AS IT  
MOVES EASTWARD; ESPECIALLY THE SOUTHERN HALF. TAKING A LOOK AT  
INGREDIENTS THAT THE MCS WILL BE DRIVING INTO, LOW-LEVEL WIND  
FIELDS LOOK RATHER FLAT, WITH SHEAR VALUES OF LESS THAN 25 KTS  
TO GO ALONG WITH STEEP MID/UPPER LAPSE RATES WITH POOR NOCTURNAL  
LAPSE RATES AT THE SURFACE TAKING AWAY FROM OVERALL CAPE  
VALUES. SUB-SEVERE STORMS LOOK MOST PROBABLE AT THIS TIME FOR  
THE OVERNIGHT HOURS, WITH A STRONGER SECTION OF THE SYSTEM  
LOOKING TO TRACK ACROSS NORTHERN KANSAS, WHERE POTENTIALLY VERY  
STRONG WINDS OF 75 MPH OR MORE ARE POSSIBLE. OUR PRIMARY HAZARDS  
WILL BE ASSOCIATED WITH MARGINALLY SEVERE WINDS OF UP TO 60  
MPH, AND QUARTER-SIZED HAIL AS THE FRONT EDGE OF THE CLUSTER'S  
UPDRAFTS PULSE UP BEFORE WEAKENING. IN ADDITION, WE COULD SEE  
HEAVY RAIN RATES CREATE LOCALIZED FLOODING IF SUFFICIENT BACK-  
BUILDING OCCURS (WHICH IS POSSIBLE WITH THE WNW ORIENTATION OF  
0-1 KM SHEAR VECTORS). THIS AREA HAS TAKEN LESS WATER THAN  
POINTS TO THE NORTHWEST, MAKING INCREASED COVERAGE OF FLOODING  
DIFFICULT.  
 
TIMING THIS OUT BASED ON THE LATEST CONVECTIVE MODEL TRENDS, WE'LL  
SEE CLUSTERS OF STORMS ACROSS WEST-CENTRAL NEBRASKA AND WESTERN  
KANSAS BY MIDNIGHT, THAT PUSH INTO THE FORECAST AREA BETWEEN 2-4 AM  
BEFORE EXITING THE AREA 8-10 AM.  
 
MONDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH THURSDAY:  
 
NORTHWESTERLY WINDS WILL BE LEFT IN PLACE FOR THE AFTERNOON HOURS  
MONDAY, AS PORTIONS OF THE INCREASING PRONOUNCED SHORTWAVE TROUGH  
TRAVELING THROUGH THE AREA SWING SOUTHWARD AND BRING LOW-END  
(~10%) CHANCES FOR A SPRINKLE/LIGHT RAIN DURING THE AFTERNOON  
AND EVENING HOURS. HIGHS WILL FEEL THE COOLER WINDS, WITH HIGHS  
EXPECTED TO ONLY TOP OUT IN THE LOW 80S, MAKING A BEAUTIFUL  
START TO THE WORK WEEK. FROM THERE, A CUTOFF LOW OVER THE  
CALIFORNIA COAST IS POISED TO AMPLIFY THE RIDGING PATTERN OVER  
THE WESTERN HALF OF THE CONUS, HELPING TO DRIVE HIGHS UPWARDS  
THROUGH THE WEEK. LOW CHANCES OF PRECIPITATION ARE FORECAST,  
WITH A DECAYING MCS BEING OUR ONLY HOPE FOR SEEING RAIN BEFORE  
THE END OF THE WEEK.  
 
FRIDAY AND BEYOND:  
 
THE LATEST RUNS OF THE GLOBAL DETERMINISTIC MODELS SUGGEST THAT THE  
AFOREMENTIONED CUTOFF LOW WILL BEGIN SWEEPING UP WITH THE  
MID/UPPER FLOW AND HELP TRANSITION INCREASED FORCING FOR ASCENT  
INTO THE CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS FOR FRIDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING.  
THE POSITION AND TIMING OF THE FRONT/FORCING THAT COMES WITH  
THIS SYSTEM WILL BE OF MUCH INTEREST FOR THOSE WANTING TO ENJOY  
THE HOLIDAY WEEKEND, WHICH IS LOOKING INCREASINGLY ACTIVE.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z TUESDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1128 PM CDT SUN JUN 29 2025  
 
AS WINDS HAVE WEAKENED THIS EVENING, WE'VE SEEN WIND DIRECTIONS  
BECOME MORE VARIABLE ACROSS THE AREA AS SUBTLE BOUNDARIES FLUX  
ACROSS THE AREA. THIS WILL LIKELY CONTINUE THROUGH THE NEXT  
SEVERAL HOURS AS STORMS OVER NORTHWEST NEBRASKA TRACK SOUTHEAST  
INTO CENTRAL NEBRASKA. WE'RE WATCHING SHOWERS AROUND ONEILL FOR  
POTENTIAL STORMS THAT COULD MOVE THROUGH KOFK AROUND 06-08Z  
TONIGHT. IF THIS CAN SOLIDIFY INTO A SOLID LINE OF STORMS, WE  
MAY SEE STORMS MAKE IT ALL THE WAY ACROSS TO KOMA, BUT RIGHT NOW  
JUST NOT CONFIDENT ENOUGH TO KEEP STORMS IN THE TAF FOR KOMA  
RIGHT NOW. KLNK HAS THE HIGHEST CHANCE OF SEEING STORMS, BUT  
MORE TOWARDS DAYBREAK AS THE STORMS IN CENTRAL NEBRASKA CONTINUE  
SOUTHEAST CLIPPING KLNK TO THE NORTH. ONCE THIS BOUNDARY PUSHES  
THROUGH, EXPECT PREDOMINANTLY NORTH-NORTHWESTERLY WINDS FOR THE  
REMAINDER OF THE DAY, INCREASING THIS AFTERNOON WITH GUSTS TO  
20-25 KT, THEN RELAXING AGAIN MONDAY EVENING. QUIET WEATHER  
EXPECTED MONDAY NIGHT.  
 

 
   
OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
 
 
NE...NONE.  
IA...NONE.  
 

 
 

 
 
DISCUSSION...PETERSEN  
AVIATION...MCCOY  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab NE Page
The Nexlab IA Page Main Text Page