133 FXUS63 KOAX 031949 AFDOAXArea Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 249 PM CDT Fri Oct 3 2025
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Windy and dry conditions will lead to very high fire danger near the South Dakota border on Saturday afternoon. Elsewhere, wildfire potential will remain confined to agricultural fields where harvesting is ongoing.
- Chances for showers and storms return to the area Sunday afternoon and continue into Tuesday morning. Additional chances exist Wednesday night into Thursday.
- Temperatures trend cooler early next week, with highs in the 60s on Monday.
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.DISCUSSION... Issued at 248 PM CDT Fri Oct 3 2025
Remainder of this afternoon through Saturday:
Early afternoon water vapor imagery shows an intense mid/upper- level low centered over the Sierra Nevada, with prominent downstream ridging across the central CONUS. The mid-level trough and associated low will shift east into the Great Basin tonight, before deamplifying as an open wave over the High Plains on Saturday. That upper-air pattern evolution will lead to the development of a 40-45 kt low-level jet (LLJ) over the central Plains tonight into Saturday, ahead of a surface cold front settling south through the Dakotas and far western NE.
The ridging aloft coupled with gusty, south winds have yielded another unseasonably warm day, with 2 PM temperatures in the mid 80s to around 90; some 15-20 degrees above normal. Partial downward mixing of the nocturnal LLJ will keep winds and temperatures up overnight, with lows only falling into the low/mid 60s. The warm start will lead to similar highs (to today) on Saturday, with the warmest temperatures (low 90s) expected near the SD border. Winds will be stronger on Saturday, with sustained speeds of 20-25 mph, with gusts of 30-45 mph; the strongest of which are expected near the SD border.
In addition to enhancing wind speeds, the deep, boundary-layer mixing will transport drier air to the surface --especially in northeast NE-- where relative humidity could fall to 25-30% during the mid/late afternoon. The overlap of strong winds and low relative humidity will lead to very high fire danger in Knox and Cedar Counties, where some curing of fuels (outside of agricultural fields) is being observed. Elsewhere across our area, native grasses and trees remain relatively green, limiting any wildfire threat to agricultural fields where harvesting is in full swing.
Saturday night into the middle of next week:
The above-mentioned, mid-level trough will continue northeast through the northern Plains and upper MS Valley, with the strongest forcing for ascent remaining to the north of our area. Meanwhile, the cold front --initially to our north-- will move into our area on Sunday, with the boundary potentially lingering across far southeast NE and southwest IA into Monday. Outside of small (15-20% PoPs) precipitation chances Saturday night into Sunday morning, it appears that the better measurable precipitation potential will hold off until Sunday afternoon, and moreso, Sunday night into Monday when PoPs increase to 40-70%.
The arrival of the front will coincide with gradually strengthening vertical wind shear, which may support a strong storm or two on Sunday afternoon into evening. However, the pre-frontal warm sector is expected to become only marginal unstable, which will limit a more robust severe-weather threat. Some strong-storm potential could linger into Monday afternoon near the KS and MO borders if the front stalls in those areas. Locally heavy rainfall would also be a concern.
Another mid-level disturbance is forecast to move through the area on Wednesday night into Thursday, with the forecast indicating 15-25% PoPs during that timeframe.
Temperatures will trend cooler behind the front early next week, with highs in the 70s and 80s on Sunday cooling into the 60s on Monday. Readings in the 60s and 70s are forecast on Tuesday and Wednesday, with mainly 70s by Thursday.
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.AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z SATURDAY/... Issued at 1151 AM CDT Fri Oct 3 2025
VFR conditions will prevail through the forecast period, with little to no cloud cover. South winds will strengthen to 12-14 kt with gusts of 20-22 kt this afternoon. Winds are expected to diminish some by this evening, with LLWS developing by 04/04z, and continuing to around 04/15z.
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.OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None.
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DISCUSSION...Mead AVIATION...Mead
NWS OAX Office Area Forecast Discussion