680  
FXUS63 KOAX 100536  
AFDOAX  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OMAHA/VALLEY NE  
1236 AM CDT THU JUL 10 2025  
   
KEY MESSAGES
 
 
- A 50 TO 70% CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND STORMS EXISTS THIS EVENING  
INTO THE OVERNIGHT HOURS THURSDAY AS STORMS MOVE FROM WEST TO  
EAST. SOME OF THESE STORMS MAY BE STRONG TO SEVERE WITH  
DAMAGING WIND GUSTS AND SOME HAIL.  
 
- SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS MAY LINGER ACROSS THE FORECAST AREA  
THURSDAY (15-30% CHANCE). 50 TO 60% CHANCE FOR MORE STORMS  
THURSDAY EVENING INTO FRIDAY MORNING, WITH SEVERE CHANCES  
LARGELY DEPENDENT ON WHAT HAPPENS THURSDAY MORNING.  
 
- ACTIVE PATTERN CONTINUES ON FRIDAY WITH MORE CHANCES FOR  
SHOWERS AND STORMS, OF WHICH SOME COULD BE SEVERE.  
TEMPERATURES COOL SLIGHTLY ON SATURDAY BEFORE WARMING UP  
SUNDAY THROUGH TUESDAY.  
 

 
   
DISCUSSION
 
 
ISSUED AT 322 PM CDT WED JUL 9 2025  
   
SHORT TERM
 
/TODAY THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT/  
 
H5 PATTERN SHOWS A LONGWAVE TROF AXIS CENTERED OVER THE GREAT LAKES  
AREA AS A RIDGE SITS OVER THE SOUTHWEST US AND SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA  
AREA THIS AFTERNOON. A FEW SHOWERS AND STORMS WERE OBSERVED EARLIER  
THIS MORNING ACROSS WESTERN PORTIONS OF OUR FORECAST AREA ASSOCIATED  
WITH SOME LOW LEVEL WARM AIR ADVECTION AT H8. THESE HAVE LARGELY  
DISSIPATED THIS AFTERNOON WITH JUST A FEW LINGERING WEAK STORMS  
ACROSS OUR FAR SOUTH AND SOME REMNANT CLOUDS OBSERVED ON  
GOES-19 DAY CLOUD PHASE. 20Z METARS SHOW TEMPERATURES IN THE  
UPPER 80S TO LOW 90S WITH DEW POINTS IN THE 70S MAKING IT RATHER  
UNCOMFORTABLE TO BE OUTSIDE TODAY.  
 
OUR MAIN CONCERNS FOR THE SHORT TERM FORECAST PERIOD CONTINUE TO BE  
THE SEVERE STORM THREAT, PARTICULARLY FOR THIS EVENING INTO THE  
EARLY MORNING HOURS THURSDAY, AND AGAIN THURSDAY EVENING. LATE THIS  
AFTERNOON INTO THE EVENING HOURS, WILL SEE AN H5 SHORTWAVE TRAVEL  
ALONG THE NORTHERN PERIPHERY OF THE RIDGE AND EJECT INTO THE DAKOTAS  
AND NORTH CENTRAL NEBRASKA. THE WAVE WILL TRIGGER AN AREA OF LARGE  
SCALE FORCING FOR ASCENT IN THE AFOREMENTIONED AREAS, AND WITH  
2,000 TO 3,000 J/KG OF MLCAPE, LITTLE TO NO CAPPING SEEN FROM  
SOUNDINGS, AND MODEST BULK SHEAR, CONVECTION APPEARS LIKELY TO  
FORM. 12Z CAM GUIDANCE SEEMS TO HAVE SLIGHTLY BETTER AGREEMENT  
COMPARED TO PREVIOUS FORECAST PACKAGES (AT LEAST FOR INITIAL  
ONSET OF CONVECTION), WITH A FEW SUPERCELLS IGNITING IN CENTRAL  
NEBRASKA BY 00Z AND GROWING UPSCALE INTO AN MCS. SOME  
DIFFERENCES STILL EXIST, HOWEVER, REGARDING HOW THE FEATURE  
EVOLVES AS IT TRAVELS EAST INTO THE FORECAST AREA.  
 
THE NAM 4KM NEST AND NSSL WRF SEEM TO LATCH ON TO A PORTION OF THE  
MCS IN SOUTH DAKOTA LATE THIS EVENING AND DRIVE IT SOUTHEASTWARD  
THROUGH NORTHEAST NEBRASKA INTO WESTERN IOWA, WHILE KEEPING ACTIVITY  
IN CENTRAL NEBRASKA MORE CONFINED IN THE GID FORECAST AREA AND  
KILLING IT OFF. MEANWHILE, CAMS LIKE THE HRRR, HIRES ARW, AND FV3  
SUSTAIN MUCH OF THE CONVECTION IN CENTRAL NEBRASKA THIS EVENING AND  
PUSH IT EAST SOUTHEAST TOWARD THE MISSOURI RIVER VALLEY DURING THE  
OVERNIGHT HOURS. ALTHOUGH AN EML WILL LIKELY CAP SFC BASED  
INSTABILITY THIS EVENING ACROSS EASTERN NEBRASKA AS OBSERVED FROM  
BUFKIT SOUNDINGS, THE ARRIVAL OF A 25-30 KT H8 LLJ POINTING INTO  
MUCH OF NEBRASKA SHOULD HELP LIFT PARCELS ALOFT, TAPPING INTO 1,000  
TO 2,000 J/KG OF MUCAPE ALONG WITH SOME INCREASED SHEAR. THUS  
LEANING TOWARD THE MCS MAINTAINING ITSELF OVERNIGHT AS IT MOVES EAST  
SOUTHEAST. THE SPC HAS EXTENDED MUCH OF THE SLIGHT RISK AREA FOR  
TODAY'S SEVERE OUTLOOK TO INCLUDE ALMOST ALL OF OAX. THE MAIN  
HAZARDS FROM THE MCS WILL BE DAMAGING WIND GUSTS OF 60-70 MPH, GIVEN  
RATHER HIGH DCAPES OF AROUND 1,000 TO 1,500 J/KG ALONG WITH SOME  
LARGE HAIL. EXCESSIVE RAINFALL IS ALSO POSSIBLE, WITH THE WPC HAVING  
ISSUED A MARGINAL RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL THIS EVENING GIVEN  
PWATS OF AROUND 1.75 INCHES AND WARM CLOUD DEPTHS CLOSE TO 4,000  
METERS. POPS CURRENTLY PEAK AT 50-70% AFTER 2Z THIS EVENING FROM  
WEST TO EAST.  
 
SHOWERS AND STORMS MAY LINGER THURSDAY MORNING ACROSS FAR EASTERN  
NEBRASKA INTO WESTERN IOWA (15-30% POPS). CAMS SHOW MUCH OF THIS  
ACTIVITY CONTINUING INTO THE LATE MORNING AND AFTERNOON HOURS, WITH  
THE HRRR SEEMINGLY THE MOST AGGRESSIVE IN TERMS OF COVERAGE.  
MUCH OF THIS ACTIVITY APPEARS TO BE LARGELY DRIVEN BY H8 WARM  
AIR ADVECTION. IF THESE SHOWERS MANAGE TO DEVELOP, THEY MOST  
LIKELY WILL HINDER CONVECTIVE DEVELOPMENT BY EATING AWAY AT  
INSTABILITY, SO WHAT HAPPENS IN THE MORNING HOURS WILL MOST  
LIKELY AFFECT OUR CHANCES FOR SEVERE WEATHER IN THE AFTERNOON  
AND EVENING HOURS THURSDAY. FORCING DOES APPEAR STRONG AS A MID  
LEVEL WAVE EJECTS FROM THE ROCKIES INTO THE CENTRAL PLAINS.  
LATEST MODEL GUIDANCE SHOWS 0-6 KM BULK SHEAR OF 30 KTS, WITH  
ANYWHERE FROM 2,000 TO 3,000 J/KG OF INSTABILITY ACROSS EASTERN  
NEBRASKA. AGAIN THOUGH, A LOT OF UNCERTAINTY EXISTS REGARDING IF  
ENOUGH ATMOSPHERIC RECOVERY WILL OCCUR IF SHOWERS AND STORMS  
FESTER FOR MUCH OF THE MORNING AND AFTERNOON.  
 
CAMS SHOW AN MCS DEVELOPING ACROSS CENTRAL NEBRASKA AND TRACKING TO  
THE EAST THURSDAY EVENING, MOST LIKELY TAPPING INTO ANY MUCAPE IT'S  
ABLE TO FIND. THE SPC HAS CONTINUED THE SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE  
WEATHER FOR MUCH OF THE FORECAST AREA THURSDAY. HEAVY RAIN WILL ALSO  
BE OF CONCERN AS PWATS WILL BE AROUND 2 INCHES WITH FAVORABLE WARM  
CLOUD DEPTHS. AS A RESULT, A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL  
REMAINS IN EFFECT. POPS CURRENTLY PEAK AT 50 TO 60% THURSDAY EVENING  
INTO EARLY FRIDAY MORNING.  
 
TEMPERATURES IN THE SHORT TERM WILL REMAIN WARM WITH HIGHS IN THE  
UPPER 80S TO LOW 90S. LOWS WILL BE IN THE UPPER 60S TO LOW 70S.  
   
LONG TERM
 
/FRIDAY THROUGH TUESDAY/  
 
FRIDAY WILL SEE THE H5 WAVE LINGER ACROSS THE AREA RESULTING IN  
CONTINUED CHANCES FOR SHOWERS AND STORMS (50-70% POPS). A FEW OF  
THESE STORMS COULD ALSO BE STRONG TO SEVERE. HIGHS FRIDAY WILL BE IN  
THE LOW TO MID 80S NORTH OF I-80, AND IN THE UPPER 80S TO NEAR 90  
ALONG THE NEBRASKA/KANSAS BORDER.  
 
NORTHWESTERLY FLOW AT H5 WILL CONTINUE FOR MUCH OF THE WORK WEEK  
WITH DISTURBANCES PASSING THROUGH THE FLOW. SOME OF THESE SHORTWAVES  
MAY TRIGGER SCATTERED SHOWERS AND STORMS, WITH THE BEST CHANCES  
MAINLY ALONG AND SOUTH OF THE NEBRASKA/KANSAS BORDER ON SUNDAY (15%  
POPS). A MORE POTENT WAVE LOOKS TO ARRIVE TUESDAY WITH NBM EXTENDED  
SHOWING WIDESPREAD 30-40% POPS ACROSS THE FORECAST AREA.  
 
HIGHS WILL COOL TO LOW TO MID 80S SATURDAY BEFORE REBOUNDING TO THE  
UPPER 80S AND LOW 90S FOR THE REST OF THE EXTENDED PERIOD.  
 

 
   
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z FRIDAY/
 
 
ISSUED AT 1229 AM CDT THU JUL 10 2025  
 
A LINE OF STRONG TO SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ARE PUSHING SOUTHEAST  
THROUGH THE AREA TONIGHT AND THREATENING WITH WIND GUSTS OF 60  
MPH AND LOTS OF LIGHTNING. EXPECT THESE STORMS TO PUSH THROUGH  
KOFK BY ABOUT 06Z AND THROUGH KOMA AND KLNK BY ABOUT 0830Z.  
BEHIND THE LINE OF STORMS, EACH SITE WILL EXPERIENCE A FEW HOURS  
OF WIND SHEAR. OTHERWISE SOUTHERLY WINDS CONTINUE THROUGH THE  
DAY. WINDS WILL BECOME GUSTY BY MID-DAY.  
 
THERE WILL BE A CHANCE OF ISOLATED/SCATTERED THUNDERSTORMS ON  
THURSDAY, BUT CONFIDENCE IN TIMING AND LOCATION PREVENT THEIR  
INCLUSION IN THIS TAF ISSUANCE AT THIS TIME.  
 

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

 
 

 
 
DISCUSSION...CASTILLO  
AVIATION...NICOLAISEN  
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab NE Page
The Nexlab IA Page Main Text Page