


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS North Platte, NE
Issued by NWS North Platte, NE
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260 FXUS63 KLBF 041150 AFDLBF Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service North Platte NE 650 AM CDT Mon Aug 4 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - A Slight Risk (level 2 of 5) of severe weather is in place for much of western and central Nebraska with scattered severe thunderstorms possible this afternoon and evening. - Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible again Tuesday afternoon and evening mainly for the Sandhills into north central Nebraska. - Temperatures climb to well above normal values for the latter half of the week with forecast highs in the triple digits and heat indices approaching Heat Advisory criteria (100F) for portions of central Nebraska. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/... Issued at 401 AM CDT Mon Aug 4 2025 This morning, remnant rain and embedded thunderstorms from Sunday afternoon has cleared the area to the east leaving dry conditions in its wake. A surface boundary has settled east near an Ainsworth to Imperial line. To the east, southerly flow was helping usher moisture into the area allowing expansive low-level stratus and fog to develop. Can`t rule out some patchy fog working into central Nebraska and the eastern Sandhills but current expectations are for visibility restrictions to fall short of reaching Dense Fog Advisory criteria (< 1/4SM). Will continue to monitor closely. Later this afternoon/early evening...a highly conditional severe weather setup is likely for much of the region today. The Storm Prediction Center (SPC) has opted to introduce a Slight Risk (level 2) severe weather outlook for the area. Given the uncertainty but magnitude of severe weather potential, am in agreement with this decision. Shortwave ridging will nose in from the southwest leading to expansive mid-level height rises. At the same time, troughing will move onshore the Pacific Northwest and lift north and east into the northern Rockies. In response to this, a deepening low pressure will form over central Wyoming. Low-level flow will increase across the High Plains as a result with strengthening southerly flow. This flow will promote warming temperatures and modest moisture advection. As a result, dew points will climb into the middle to upper 60s with afternoon highs ranging in the upper 70s over central Nebraska to upper 80s across the Panhandle. Capping does not appear likely to fully erode and with the lack of greater synoptic forcing, believe storm coverage will be fairly limited. That said, the southeasterly moist flow should interact with terrain enhancement around the Pine Ridge and the Black Hills to yield at least isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms. The background environment is more than supportive for severe thunderstorms...beneath a strong EML with mid-level lapse rates around 8C/km, moderate instability will develop with forecast soundings depicting 2500-3500 j/kg MLCAPE. Beneath a belt of enhanced h5 northwesterly flow, surface southeasterly flow will enhance deep-layer shear with magnitudes of 40-50 knots 0-6km BWD. Based on HREF probabilities, believe storms will likely initiate around 4-6pm CDT and quickly become supercellular given ample instability and shear. The greatest uncertainty is should storms actual initiate. Upstream RAOBs from Sunday evening show ample low-level moisture and anomalous precipitable water values. Given steady advection of this richer moisture, believe storms should initiate with the assistance of orographic lift. Supercells capable of large to very large (2"+ diameter) and damaging wind gusts will be possible. Believe a very limited tornado threat exists but will likely favor the evening hours as a strong LLJ develops and hodographs rapidly enlarge while LCLs decrease. NAM forecast sounding analogs highlight copious significant hail events lending credibility to the threat. Heavy rainfall with rain rates exceeding 1"/hour will also be possible leading to a localized flooding concern as Bunkers right storm motions appears likely to remain below 20 mph. Late tonight...the strong LLJ developing tonight will help usher in rich theta-e air into any southeast moving thunderstorm. Given the fetch of unstable air and merging of cold pools that support upscale growth, believe a southeast diving complex should maintain itself beyond Midnight into early Tuesday morning. This is advertised well with the 18z and 00z extended runs of the HRRR. The NAM Nest highlights a similar outcome but is quicker to carry thunderstorms out of the area. Believe this all suggests a fairly longer duration severe weather threat persisting into the overnight hours. Did opt to boost PoPs across our southwest zones as a result but for now have kept things limited to Slight Chance (< 25%) for now. Event total rainfall will likely total 1.0-1.5" in the heavier locations. Given the expected cloud cover and precipitation, believe Monday night lows will remain on the mild side with values only reaching the middle 60s. && .LONG TERM /TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... Issued at 401 AM CDT Mon Aug 4 2025 Tuesday...another conditional threat for strong to severe thunderstorms will set up across western Nebraska. As the low pressure system lifts north and east out of central Wyoming, a warm front will lift up through the area. High temperatures will quickly climb into middle 80s to middle 90s east to west. Similar to Monday, beneath strong capping and the lack of any appreciable forcing questions remain on whether storms can develop. A sharp dryline will settle into far western Nebraska with strong instability to the east across a broad warm sector. Forecast sounding ahead of this dryline show very strong capping and though the dryline circulation may be deep, MLCIN values nearing -100 j/kg should effectively quell any and all potential attempts at initiation. Further north in closer proximity to the departing low-pressure, scattered convection should initiate along the warm front in South Dakota. Though the majority of this should remain north of the local area, will maintain the low- end PoPs inherited by the NBM into the Sandhills. Strong instability of 3500-4500 j/kg MLCAPE and 0-6km BWD would again support supercells as hodographs show long/straight shear profiles. Strong theta-e advection off the surface should once again support sustained convection well into the evening and overnight hours and so have kept PoPs through daybreak on Wednesday as a result. Wednesday and beyond...Precipitation chances should wane for the late half of the week as ridging aloft appears to peak across the Desert Southwest. This will bolster geopotential heights to the 90th percentile or higher at h5 and h7. Similarly, h7 temperatures will climb to around the 99th percentile across portions of Nebraska by late Wednesday, all according to NAEFS guidance. ECMWF Extreme Forecast Index (EFI) continues to highlight localized positive anomalies of 0.5-0.7 with non-zero Shift of Tails each day Wednesday through Friday. The going forecast calls for daytime highs in the low 90s east to low 100s west and southwest. Specific values at LBF/VTN exceed the 90th percentile in their respective climatology`s and climb to within a few degrees of record values. This expected heat in addition to low-level mugginess will promote heat indices nearing Heat Advisory criteria (100F+). Should the current forecast hold, heat headlines will be necessary for portions of the local area Thursday and Friday. Will forego issuing anything at this time until confidence increases. Day-to-day precipitation chances appear quite limited, particularly as temperatures off the surface maximize and capping strengthens as a result. Have kept low-end PoPs from the NBM solution but EPS/GEFS show fairly good agreement in a lengthy window of little to no QPF Wednesday through Friday. As ridge breakdown begins this weekend, a frontal boundary will slide south into western Nebraska. The result will be cooler temperatures arriving by Sunday with increased rain and thunderstorm potential continuing into early next week. && .AVIATION /12Z TAFS THROUGH 12Z TUESDAY/... Issued at 647 AM CDT Mon Aug 4 2025 After morning fog and low stratus dissipates, VFR conditions are expected through the forecast period. Main aviation concern beyond this morning will be the threat for rain and thunderstorms later today. Confidence in storm development is limited but areas favored should generally keep any activity out of both LBF/VTN airspace`s. The exception to this could be LBF where southeastward diving storms may move in this evening. For now, confidence in this occurring is too low to include mention at this time. Will closely monitor trends going forward. && .LBF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... None. && $$ SHORT TERM...NMJ LONG TERM...NMJ AVIATION...NMJ