Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Hastings, NE
Issued by NWS Hastings, NE
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839 FXUS63 KGID 210542 AFDGID Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Hastings NE 1242 AM CDT Tue May 21 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - BY FAR the main issue is the likelihood for at least a few (if not several?) severe storms this evening and overnight, followed by one final round of strong to potentially severe storms mainly during the first half of Tuesday daytime (particularly 9 AM-1 PM time frame). Large hail, damaging wind the main hazards, but a tornado or two is not out of the question especially if any isolated supercells can get established near/after sunset. - Although not as big of a concern overall compared to severe storm hazards noted above, there is at least "some" concern for rainfall being abundant enough/heavy enough in narrow corridors to promote localized flooding/flash flooding tonight into Tues daytime, and a Flash Flood Watch has been issued for most of our Nebraska coverage area (CWA). Please see separate HYDROLOGY section below for more details. - Once any strong/possible severe storms vacate our CWA to the east late Tues AM-early afternoon, we`ll have a fairly quiet and mostly dry 48+ hours (especially Wed) with little to no severe storm threat. - From especially Thursday night onward, our forecast is again "littered" with various/intermittent chances for rain/thunderstorms, as a very active upper air pattern continues. At least for now, there are no "obvious" severe storm threats during this time (and we are not outlooked by SPC), but early signs do point to at least a marginal severe environment returning already Thurs evening and/or overnight. - Temp-wise: Nothing unusual at all for late-May, with highs on most days between the upper 60s to around 80, and lows on most nights mainly 40s-50s. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 507 PM CDT Mon May 20 2024 -- 7-DAY FORECAST OVERVIEW/HIGHLIGHTS (heavily focused on these first 24 hours): - CURRENT/RECENT WEATHER SCENE AS OF 430 PM: As expected, the vast majority of our CWA (save for some limited shower activity mainly over Webster County this morning) has remained dry and storm-free today thus far. Under what has become partly to mostly cloudy skies, high temps have or soon will top out in the 74-82 range most areas (coolest north/west and warmest south/east. In the mid-upper levels, the main player(s) tonight will be a series of subtle waves embedded in west-southwesterly flow aloft, downstream from the main wave still out over the Desert Southwest that will track directly overhead the first half of the day Tuesday and take any severe storm/flooding out with it. At the surface, nearly our entire CWA currently resides just north of a developing/somewhat diffuse warm front stretched across northern KS, with breezes most areas currently out of the east-northeast 5-15 MPH. Surface dewpoints are seasonably-moist...mainly low-mid 60s. - THIS EVENING-OVERNIGHT: Most of our CWA should remain storm-free until around 7 PM. However, after that, and especially after 9-10 PM, all bets are off as scattered to numerous/widespread thunderstorms are expected to blossom over mainly our Nebraska CWA (along and north of the warm front) as weak upper forcing arrives from the southwest, and the low level jet (evident at 850 millibars) begins to ramp up. Closely leaning on higher-res models such as HRRR, a series of individual storms (possibly supercellular) along with clusters and perhaps broken, mainly west east oriented lines of convection will traverse our area overnight, with a sharp south edge likely somewhere between Highway 6 and the KS border (very little activity expected in KS). The later storms form, there is some question as to how truly surface- based they might be, but at the very least the environment is primed for a large hail and/or damaging wind threat, given mixed-layer CAPE at least 1500-2500 J/kg and deep layer shear 40-50 KT. This is a somewhat concerning environment as it is, and if any storms are able to remain at least semi- discrete/supercellular and tap into increasing low-level shear mainly near/after sunset, then at least a brief/transient tornado threat could be on the table as well, not to mention some hydro concerns (see separate section below). - TUESDAY DAYTIME: Following what could be a relative lull in activity around sunrise, the main upper wave and associated surface cold front will cross overhead by late-morning/early afternoon. As this occurs, one final round of more north-south oriented strong to severe storms is expected to cross much of our mainly Nebraska CWA from west to east between 9 AM-1 PM, perhaps offering up more potential for large hail/damaging winds and localized flooding. Once this activity clears, our severe storm and flooding threat should end, as the severe threat focuses farther east of our CWA through the afternoon and evening. Behind the front, it will be very breezy/somewhat windy on Tuesday, with northwest winds sustained 15-25 MPH/gusts 25-35 MPH. High temps will depend on "exact" frontal timing, cloud cover etc. but we are calling for roughly a 15-degree gradient from mid 60s far north/west to upper 70s far southeast. - TUESDAY EVENING-OVERNIGHT: Most areas will likely remain dry, but isolated to scattered showers and maybe a few WEAK storms could affect some counties mainly south of I-80 into KS through the night. Winds will die down, and this will be one of the cooler nights coming up with lows mainly 44-51 most places. - WED DAYTIME-THURS DAYTIME: This is mainly a DRY/storm-free period in between upper disturbances. High temps low-mid 70s Wed and upper 70s-low 80s Thurs as south winds increase. - THURS NIGHT-SATURDAY: Intermittent shower/thunderstorm chances return as various upper waves move through again. We`ll have to watch Thursday evening/overnight for MAYBE our next, at least limited severe storm chance. -SUNDAY-MONDAY (Memorial Day): The parade of low-confidence rain chances/PoPs continue as both the ECMWF/GFS bring another disturbance somewhere across the Northern/Central Plains. Although still several days out, at least an early glance suggests instability levels fairly muted by late-May standards and thus a lower severe threat. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z WEDNESDAY/... Issued at 1234 AM CDT Tue May 21 2024 Showers and thunderstorms are expected to be in the vicinity of and impact the terminals overnight. Low ceilings are expected to continue through the overnight period and into the morning hours. Ceilings will improve some by 18z and will either be low end VFR or high end MVFR for the early afternoon hours. VFR conditions are expected by 00z Wednesday. Winds will be somewhat variable, especially in and near convection, but are expected to become elevated and gusty out of the north to northwest around 15z. && .GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...Flood Watch through this afternoon for NEZ039>041-046>049- 060>064-072>077-082>084. KS...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Pfannkuch AVIATION...Schuldt