textproduct: Hastings
This forecast discussion was created in the public domain by the National Weather Service. It can be found in its original form here.
KEY MESSAGES
- A few isolated storms (20-30% chance) could develop this afternoon and tonight. Any storm that develops may have the potential to become severe. Hail up to the size of ping pong balls will be the primary concern.
- Another chance of scattered thunderstorms (a few potentially severe) returns Sunday for a few southeastern portions of the area.
- High temperatures will range the mid 70s and 80s Sunday through Thursday.
- Scattered shower and storm chances (20-40%) return Tuesday afternoon through Wednesday as well as Friday night.
- A end of the week cold frontal passage Friday may drop temperatures a few degrees over next weekend (back to the 50/60s).
DISCUSSION
Issued at 308 PM CDT Sat Apr 11 2026
Today...
Following the scattered storms from last night across much of our central to south and eastern portions of the area, lingering cloud coverage has followed us into today. Despite these clouds, breezy southerly warm air advecting winds have helped push temperatures up into the upper 60s and 70s. The breezy southerly winds gusting as high as 25-35MPH will be expected to remain somewhat steady overnight (gusts 15-30MPH) as a surface low continue to strengthening over eastern Montana. The main question today will be if and where afternoon to nighttime thunderstorms develop.
With temperatures rising this afternoon, instability has also increase. SBCAPE values will peak between 1,000-2,500 J/KG with 6-8 C/KM low-to-mid level lapse rates. Though an isolated tornado can't be ruled out (20-30kts of 0-1km shear), the primarly hazard tonight would be hail up to the size of ping pong balls. As result, the SPC has upgraded central, eastern and southern portions of the are into a slight risk of severe weather (level 2 of 5 for mainly locations near, east and south of the Tri-Cities) as well as a Marginal risk (level 1 of 5) across the remainder of the forecast area for today.
The big question tonight will be IF storms develop outside of a few isolated places given weak synoptic forcing. The upper-level shortwave trough will not arrive until the overnight hours. as result, activity before midnight may be fairly isolated to a few locations that are able to break through the low-level inversional CAP. Storms that develop across the overnight hours may have less energy to feed off from, thus the severe potential is expected to wane through the overnight hours.
Sunday...
Temperatures will continue to rise Sunday as clouds clear partially with the continuation of the southerly to southwesterly winds (directions veering as the surface low moves across the Dakotas). Highs for Sunday are currently forecast to reach the upper 70s to mid 80s. Wind speeds will be at their strongest point early in the day (10-20MPH and gusting up to 30MPH) later lightening to only 5-10MPH and gusting up to 20MPH by the later afternoon and evening hours.
A limited east to southeastern portion of the area could see a storm or two in the evening. Any storm that does develop will once again have the chance to become severe due to sufficient shear and instability east of a passing dryline. Confidence remains somewhat limited (20-30% chance) as storms that do fire, may do so after the dryline has completely exited the area to the east. The SPC has included areas southeast of a line from Rooks county Kansas to Polk county Nebraska underneath a Marginal risk.
Monday and Beyond...
Troughing across the Western U.S. during the first half of the week will set up southwest upper-level flow across the Central Plains. A few embedded shortwave disturbances will likely emerge out of this flow, each bringing along at least a small chance for precipitation. The next chance for precip (20-40%) will come Tuesday afternoon through Wednesday as a surface low deepens across the area. Confidence remains somewhat limited as both the GFS and ECMWF global deterministic models keep most of the shower and storm activity east of the local area. A similar story as Sunday may play out where the key forcing mechanism (cold front) may pass through earlier in the day, minimizing the afternoon to evening storm potential.
Beyond the mid-week precipitation chances, temperatures will likely peak in the mid 70s and 80s through Thursday with winds (outside of Tuesday night) maintaining a southerly to westerly orientation. The warmer temperatures with occasional periods of gusty winds will bring back near-critical fire weather conditions to at least a potion of the area each day Monday through the end of next week. Brief critical fire weather conditions from time to time can't be ruled out across a few southwest locations mainly on Tuesday afternoon.
The next feature to note will be the passage of a cold front later in the week that will knock highs down some heading into next weekend (back to the 50s and 60s). Another precipitation chance may trail behind the front Friday night into Saturday as another and likely more amplified trough approaches the area.
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z MONDAY/
Issued at 637 PM CDT Sat Apr 11 2026
For KGRI/KEAR Airports:
Outside of a small chance for isolated storms early this evening, have dry/VFR conditions for this TAF period. Have a PROB30 mention for the first couple of hours, considered leaving precip mention out altogether...confidence is not high. Expecting gusty southerly winds to continue through the overnight hours...with models continuing to show the potential for LLWS even with those gusty winds in place. Some models time heights showing the potential for the development of lower clouds, so do have a FEW010 mention at both sites, just not enough confidence at this point to make it a ceiling...will be watching trends closely.
GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
NE...None. KS...None.
IMPORTANT This is an independent project and has no affiliation with the National Weather Service or any other agency. Do not rely on this website for emergency or critical information: please visit weather.gov for the most accurate and up-to-date information available.
textproduct.us is built and maintained by Joshua Thayer.