


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Hastings, NE
Issued by NWS Hastings, NE
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890 FXUS63 KGID 251010 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 510 AM CDT Wed Jun 25 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Ongoing showers/storms that have produced locally heavy rain will end from south to north over the next few hours, leaving warm and steamy conditions for the rest of the day. - Yet another round of thunderstorms is expected to redevelop by mid to late afternoon, and continue into tonight. Some of this activity could be severe and produce large hai and damaging wind gusts - particularly near and N of I-80. - Perhaps the greater threat will be training thunderstorms and another bout of locally heavy rainfall of 2-3 inches, or more. This could lead to flash flooding. Sherman County area will be of particular concern due to recent heavy rain last night. - Forecast generally dries out and heats up for Friday and Saturday before periodic storm chances and more seasonable temperatures return Saturday night into early next week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 440 AM CDT Wed Jun 25 2025 Have had quite a bit of convection for much of the night, with only a few counties missing out on at least a half inch of new rain. Some areas have received quite a bit more than that, however, particularly within a SW to NE swath from around Arapahoe to North Loup. 1-2.5" will likely be fairly common within this swath, and much of Sherman Co. could easily average 2.5-3.5" before all is said and done by around dawn. This activity is being fed by a decent 30-40kt LLJ per regional VADs amidst an environment with very high PWATs. The LLJ is forecast lift and veer next few hours, which should take the main band of rain N and E of the area by ~12Z. Increasingly breezy S winds and decreasing clouds should allow for warm and steamy conditions to develop for the aftn hours. Expect highs to top out in the mid 80s to mid 90s from N to S, which combined with dew points around 70F and the recent overnight rain, it`ll feel a couple/few deg warmer than that. Attention then turns to the next round of thunderstorms that is forecast to develop between 3pm-6pm along a lingering boundary that looks to setup SW to NE just W through N of the Tri-Cities. Expect moderate instability (MLCAPE 1500-2000 J/kg) and modest, but sufficient, deep layer shear (25-35kt) to develop prior to convective initiation. Greatest combination of instability and shear looks to favor the N half of the CWA, which is where SPC has raised into the Slight Risk (level 2 of 5) with the latest Day 1 outlook. Main severe threats look to be large hail (quarter to half dollar) and damaging wind (60-65 MPH) in the late afternoon through evening time frame. Weak mid level lapse rates and high PWATs suggest a transition to mainly hydro concerns for the overnight. These concerns are discussed in greater detail below. Models have come into decent agreement that Wed night`s convection should push the aforementioned boundary through most of the area by mid to late Thu AM. This should all but eliminate convection concerns for most of the CWA by mid to late AM. Will have to still monitor far SE zones where the boundary could hang up and be the focus for renewed development during the mid to late aftn. Even so, shear and lapse rates are weak, so probably only looking at an iso, "pulsey" severe threat, if any, from Beloit to Hebron. Subsidence and light Nrly flow should lead to nice summer day in the 80s for the rest of the area. Shortwave ridging and rising heights will favor mainly dry conditions and a warm-up to widespread 90s for the daytime hours Friday into Saturday. Saturday looks to be the hotter of the two days (though not quite as hot as last Saturday!), with SW zones possibly rising into the low 100s. Elsewhere could still feel like 100F thanks to dew points in the mid 60s to around 70F. There are non-zero chances for convection to move in from the W each night, but confidence on this is low. Models bring next shortwave trough and associated cold front into the region Sunday eve/night. PoPs have increased into the 40-60% range Sun night, which seems more than reasonable given potential for convection that develops over the High Plains during the afternoon to roll E/SE with the front overnight. Temperatures fall back to seasonable levels behind this front for early next week. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z THURSDAY/... Issued at 1251 AM CDT Wed Jun 25 2025 For KGRI/KEAR Airports: Significant weather: Periods of MVFR showers/storms Next 6 hours: Scat showers and weak thunderstorms will continue at both terminals over the next 3-5 hours. Within this activity, drops in CIGs and VSBYs to MVFR levels can be expected. Otherwise, primarily VFR conditions should prevail. Most activity should be N/NE of the area by around dawn. Winds will be SE to S around 8-13kt, with some higher gusts around 20kt possible. Confidence: Medium to high. Rest of the period: Should be mainly dry and primarily VFR conditions for the AM into early aftn hours. Winds will pick up a bit out of the S. Scattered convection is forecast to redevelop mid to late aftn, so have PROB30s returning around 21Z. Could even see an increase in coverage near and after sunset. Severe weather appears fairly unlikely, but heavy downpours and reductions to MVFR CIGs/VSBYs will be possible with any storm. Winds will continue to be primarily Srly Wed eve. Confidence: Medium && .HYDROLOGY... Issued at 445 AM CDT Wed Jun 25 2025 Recent swaths of heavy rain and model trends are leading to increasing hydro concerns for later today and into tonight. As mentioned above, will likely have some swaths of 1.5-3" of observed rain from last night, the heaviest and most widespread of which will be over the NW third, or so, of the CWA. Unfortunately, these areas also look to be under the gun for another round of moderate to locally heavy rain this afternoon into tonight. Of concern is that the orientation of the primary initiation zone looks to be roughly parallel to the 850-300mb mean flow...and a nocturnally 30-40kt low level jet could allow for some backbuilding. These factors suggest that training cells could be a real possibility. Throw on top of that the fact that PWATs will continue to run abnormally high in the 1.75-1.9" range - which is 2-2.5 standard deviations above normal - and we could be looking some training convection that is also very efficient at producing high rain rates. This general scenario is supported by 03Z SREF max 24hr QPF values of 1.5-3.0", and similar values from the 06Z HRRR. Strongly considered a Flash Flood Watch on this shift, but will ultimately pass along concerns to day shift and allow for additional HRRR/RAP/HREF runs and possible coordination with neighbors. Areas along and N of a line from Gosper to Nance appear to be most at risk. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. KS...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Thies AVIATION...Thies HYDROLOGY...Thies