Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS North Platte, NE

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552 FXUS63 KLBF 292336 AFDLBF Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service North Platte NE 636 PM CDT Sat Jun 29 2024 .KEY MESSAGES...
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- Quiet weather expected for the next 12 to 24 hours. - Thunderstorm chances will increase Sunday evening into the overnight hours. - Severe storms are possible Monday with the location of greatest threat uncertain. - The threat for thunderstorms will continue into next week with the greatest threat on Wednesday.
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&& .SYNOPSIS... Issued at 301 PM CDT Sat Jun 29 2024 H5 analysis this morning had high pressure extending from the Carolinas, west into the SW CONUS. North of this feature, broad, low amplitude flow extended from northern California, east to the Mid-Atlantic and New England. Within this flow, four main features were noted. The first was a strong shortwave trough over western portions of Lake Superior. An embedded shortwave was present over western North Dakota. Low amplitude ridging extended from eastern Montana, north into Alberta. Further west, a low was located off the coast of central British Columbia with a trough extending to the south-southeast to off the coast of central California. At the surface, high pressure was located over northeastern Montana. A stationary front extended from Cheyenne, south into northeastern New Mexico, then east northeast into central Missouri. Skies were mostly cloudy across northern Nebraska with clear to partly cloudy skies over southwestern Nebraska. Mainly clear skies were present across the Sandhills. Temperatures as of 2 PM CDT ranged from 69 degrees at Ainsworth and O`Neill to 78 degrees at Imperial. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH SUNDAY NIGHT/... Issued at 301 PM CDT Sat Jun 29 2024 Over the next 12 to 18 hours, the forecast area will be under the influence of surface high pressure, which will track from North Dakota into southern Minnesota. Look for winds to shift to the east this evening, then southerly overnight. At the same time, thunderstorms will develop along the stationary frontal boundary in southeastern Colorado/SW Kansas this evening. With west southwesterly steering winds, this activity will track to the east northeast into western, central and eventually north central Kansas. With a dry airmass in place and little to no forcing aloft across the forecast area, dry conditions are expected into the early overnight hours. However, there may be a small chance for precipitation in the south toward daybreak Sunday (highlighted below). Lows will be chilly with readings ranging from the lower 50s in the north, to the upper 50s in far SW Nebraska. Skies will generally be clear in the north and east with more cloud cover in the south, ie. clouds associated with convection over Kansas. Additionally, late overnight into Sunday morning, there are indications of low level cloudiness development over southern and southeastern portions of the forecast area. This is a result of winds shifting to the southeast and the onset of low level moisture advection across SW Nebraska. By daybreak Sunday morning, there is a minor signal for very light precipitation in the southern and southeastern FA. Again, this seems to be a result of low level moisture advection underneath a much drier mid level. The inherited forecast did have a mention of precipitation Sunday AM in the southern and southeastern FA. Based on the model solns this morning, see no reason to deviate from this forecast. Further north and west, low level southeasterly winds will transport BL moisture north and west late tonight into Sunday morning with a near saturated H85-H900 layer noted at 12z Sunday across the eastern Panhandle and northwestern Sandhills. Once again the inherited forecast had some low pops in these areas. Feel there is still a threat for very light precipitation given the degree of low level moisture transport and weak lift noted in this layer. Conditions should dry out by midday Sunday as temperatures trend upward. However, with expected mid and high level cloudiness and a warm front off to the west, temperatures will struggle to get out of the 70s Sunday. By Sunday night, thunderstorms will develop over the higher terrain of Colorado and eastern Wyoming. This area is located west of the warm front and in an area of decent thetae advection. This activity will transition east into the late evening and overnight hours. ATTM. the main severe threat appears to be off to the west of the area. Activity overnight will eventually lift east given the favorable mid level warm air advection regime. This activity by the time it reaches the forecast area will be elevated in nature as the warm front will remain stationary across the panhandle. && .LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... Issued at 301 PM CDT Sat Jun 29 2024 On Monday, the warm front will transition east, ending up in central Nebraska by Monday afternoon. Further west, a broad surface trough of low pressure will extend from western South Dakota into eastern Colorado. This poses a messy setup for thunderstorms Monday afternoon/evening and makes the areal threat for severe storms unclear right now. There will be residual showers and thunderstorms Monday as activity lifts across western and central Nebraska late Sunday night into Monday morning. In the wake of this convection, the warm front is progged to move east. How far east this feature progresses and the degree of residual storms, will play a major role in the location of severe storms Monday afternoon/evening. The NAM and GFS solns this morning do develop storms off to the west of the forecast area INVOF the surface trough Monday afternoon which is in advance of a strong mid level shortwave trough of low pressure. This activity will eventually move into western portions of the forecast area Monday afternoon then push into central Nebraska Monday evening. Mid level dynamics and shear are favorable for severe storms Monday afternoon/night. However location of these will be highly problematic, with the location of low level features (warm front, dryline, surface trough) uncertain attm. For now, will handle the thunderstorm threat with scattered pops and hit the uncertainty aspect of this setup in the HWO and social media posts. A cold front will push through the area on Monday night with a limited threat for storms/severe weather on Tuesday. By Wednesday, another northern stream, mid-level trough of low pressure will lift across the northern Rockies. This will force a cold front through the forecast area Wednesday night with a decent threat for thunderstorms. Moisture and deep layer shear will be favorable enough for severe storms Wednesday evening. However, attm. location and timing are uncertain. High pressure aloft will build into the southwestern CONUS toward the end of next week. This will place the forecast area in a more northerly flow aloft. This will lead to drier conditions with seasonal to slightly below normal temperatures across the forecast area. && .AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z MONDAY/...
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Issued at 630 PM CDT Sat Jun 29 2024 VFR conditions prevail across western and north central Nebraska through tonight. Southeast winds will set up across the area at 15kts or less before increasing Sunday afternoon, gusting up to 35kts. Ceilings will begin to lower Sunday morning with low-end VFR to MVFR conditions anticipated across southwest and south central Nebraska, continuing through the remainder of the period.
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&& .LBF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SYNOPSIS...Buttler SHORT TERM...Buttler LONG TERM...Buttler AVIATION...Viken