


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS North Platte, NE
Issued by NWS North Platte, NE
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595 FXUS63 KLBF 031747 AFDLBF Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service North Platte NE 1247 PM CDT Sun Aug 3 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Scattered thunderstorms including the threat for a few strong to severe storms are possible each day Sunday through Tuesday. - Precipitation chances wane as heat builds by the middle of the week with upper 90s to near triple digits likely for Thursday and Friday. - A frontal boundary will arrive by late week with cooler temperatures and greater chances for rain and thunderstorms. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... Issued at 329 AM CDT Sun Aug 3 2025 This morning...an expansive shield of rain and thunderstorms continues to slowly drift east across central and eastern Nebraska. This activity was being driven by a stout low-level jet (LLJ) nosing into eastern South Dakota. As of 0730z (230am CDT), precipitation had largely cleared our north central Nebraska zones and so will keep only low-end PoPs (< 25%) to account for any additional new development further west. Believe this potential should quickly wane by late morning. This afternoon, a weak warm front stalled north to south across the Nebraska Panhandle will settle east into portions of west central Nebraska. Daytime highs will largely depend on placement of this boundary with warmer values in the upper 80s to the west and upper 70s to lower 80s to the east. A weak circulation will form along this baroclinic zone and lead to increasing low-level convergence during the afternoon. With southerly flow across central Nebraska, expect reinforcing moisture to advect in with dew points expected to reach the middle 60s. Beneath steep mid-level lapse rates, moderate destabilization will occur with MUCAPE values in the 2000-3000 j/kg range. Weak mid-level flow will stunt deep layer shear but given the magnitude of instability, still cannot rule out a few stronger to briefly severe storms this afternoon. Initiation should favor the low-level frontal boundary as convergence increases in the afternoon. Storms should erupt in a southwest to northeast line. Initial updrafts may support isolated severe hail up to 1.50" but as storms collapse believe the threat will transition to damaging winds. HREF probabilities show rapid increase in echo top heights with just as quick a decrease this evening. This suggests a fairly brief window for strong to severe storms. The Storm Prediction Center (SPC) keeps a Marginal Risk (level 1 of 5) in place across the whole of the forecast area. Precipitation should diminish through the evening though isolated activity may persist into early Monday morning. && .LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/... Issued at 329 AM CDT Sun Aug 3 2025 Monday...daily threat for strong to severe thunderstorms continues with moderating daytime temperatures as highs begin their steady increase and rise to the 80s to lower 90s east to west. Southwestern ridging will amplify heading towards the middle of the week. Subsequent mid-level height rises and subsidence aloft should largely quell precipitation chances across the area. The lone exception to this will localized lift off topography that could support at least isolated initiation as forecast soundings show the cap eroding across the Sandhills with daytime heating. Believe southeasterly flow at the surface should be enough to produce a few storms off the higher terrain of the Pine Ridge and/or Black Hills but given isolated nature will keep PoPs capped at Slight Chance (< 25%). As a mid-level disturbance rounds the ridge, flow aloft will increase and coupled with the low-level southerly flow will promote moderate deep-layer shear supportive of supercells. Damaging winds and large hail will be the main concerns with NAM forecast soundings showing numerous significant hail analogs. SPC keeps a Marginal Risk in place stretching along the Nebraska/South Dakota border then turning south to northeast Colorado. Am in general agreement with this outlook for now. Will need to monitor the severe potential closely going forward. Tuesday...weak surface trough will extend south from the Black Hills with strong southerly flow across much of west central Nebraska. This will promote upper 60s to low 70s dew points and coupled with daytime highs climbing into the middle 80s to middle 90s, strong destabilization is likely to develop. Shear again appears supportive of rotating updrafts. Once again believe large hail and damaging wind gusts will be the primary concern, however, given relatively low LCLs and increasing 0-3km SRH in the evening, will have to closely monitor the potential for all hazards being in play. Similar to Monday will be the uncertainty of storm initiation given strengthening mid-level ridging and lack of greater forcing for ascent. Deterministic solutions suggest little to no development during the afternoon and similarly, ensemble guidance keeps low probabilities of seeing > 0.10" for the day. Am in agreement with SPC`s Marginal Risk given the background environment but uncertainty in storm development. Again, will monitor closely going forward. Wednesday and beyond...quieter weather arrives for the late week as mid-level high pressure peaks across the southwest during this time. By Wednesday evening, GEFS suggests h5 heights exceeding 2 standard deviation across the Desert Southwest. Similarly, h7 temperatures will exceed the 99th percentile across the region by Thursday. ECMWF Extreme Forecast Index (EFI) highlights positive anomalies across the Front Range extending east into the Nebraska Panhandle for daytime highs Thursday and Friday. The latest forecast has portions of the area exceeding 100F heat indices. Should this remain unchanged in the coming days, heat headlines will likely be necessary. After dry to mostly dry days Wednesday and Thursday, increased rain and thunderstorm probabilities arrive late Friday as the ridge breaks down and a stronger disturbance tracks out of the Pacific Northwest. This will propel a frontal boundary south into the area and lead to cooler temperatures for the weekend. Whether those cooler temperatures initially arrive Saturday or Sunday remains somewhat in question. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z MONDAY/... Issued at 1244 PM CDT Sun Aug 3 2025 Widely scattered thunderstorms are expected near a stationary front across the Sandhills this afternoon. It appears storms develop by mid-afternoon and then quickly die off this evening. Seeing a signal for stratus and potential IFR conditions across portions of southwest and central Nebraska Monday morning. Otherwise winds will remain generally light, less than 15 kts. Stronger, gusty winds can be expected near any thunderstorm this afternoon into the evening. && .LBF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SHORT TERM...NMJ LONG TERM...NMJ AVIATION...Taylor