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
- After a pleasant start to the weekend, dry conditions will continue on into the day on Sunday...with a small bump up in highs, most spots looking to reach into the 70s.
- A more active pattern brings precipitation chances for the first half of the new work week...mainly focused on late day Monday-Monday night, then again Wednesday. The latter portion of the work week looks to dry back out.
- A frontal boundary sinking south through the area ushers in highs in the 50s for Tue-Wed, following the 70s-low 80s on Mon. Highs back in the 70s are expected by Friday.
DISCUSSION
Issued at 347 PM CDT Sat May 2 2026
Currently through Sunday...
Quiet conditions continue to reign across the Central Plains this afternoon...with the entire day having sunny skies. Looking in the upper levels, solidly northwesterly flow remains in place across the region...set up between deep troughing working its way toward the East Coast and high pressure/ridging extending northward from the Desert SW. At the surface, high pressure has been gradually sinking south with time today. This brought light/variable winds to start the day...which have turned more southwesterly with time. Speeds across southern areas remain light as they sit closer to that sfc high...the stronger speeds are across northern areas, with gusts at times around 20-25 MPH. Temperatures have worked out fairly well, with obs at 3PM sitting in the mid 60s to near 70.
Overall, no notable changes were made to the forecast through this short term period through the end of the weekend...which remains largely dry. Models are in good agreement showing continued generally northwesterly flow across the region...though becoming less amplified with time as another system is working its way south into central Canada/near the US border. The only mention of precip during this time frame is Sunday evening-night...with models showing the potential for a weak shortwave sparking off activity near the western NE/SD border late in the day. Question is its evolution and whether it is maintained long enough to impact our forecast area...some models say it wanes before then. Not a ton of confidence in those chances at this point.
After seeing plenty of sun today, there is good agreement with increased mid-upper level cloud cover as we get into Sunday...not totally overcast, but looking to be generally partly cloudy, mostly cloudy at times in spots. As far as winds go, late tonight-Sun AM, a weak upper level disturbance crossing to our NE will push a surface frontal boundary south through the region...ushering in a switch to more northerly winds. Not expecting a notable increase in speeds...it's not a strong frontal boundary...and through the day on Sunday, winds lighten a bit, turning more easterly with time. Expecting a slight bump up in temps, with more of the area in the low-mid 70s (vs the upper 60s-low 70s by the end of today).
New work week...
The next best chances for precipitation look to arrive late in the day Monday into the evening-overnight hours. Though the forecast has chances early-mid afternoon...there are at least a handful of models showing that for most, that 18-21Z period is likely dry. These precipitation chances are being driven by a southward push of upper level energy out of central Canada and the Nrn Plains. Activity late in the day is expected to develop in proximity to the accompanying surface cold front...with some lingering uncertainties/differences between models with just exactly where the front ends up. Some models show by 00Z the boundary is near/south of the NE-KS state line...a few are a touch slower/further north. Though winds turn back to the south early in the day Monday...not expecting a notable push of better moisture north before that front arrives...current forecast afternoon dewpoints are only in the 30s to mid 40s (better chance for 50s+ dewpoints currently over eastern KS and far SE Neb.). Expecting another bump up in highs for Monday, reaching into the mid 70s-low 80s, but models have better instability focusing just off to our SE...thus SPC has kept the Day 3 Marginal Risk area over that same area. We'll see how things trend in upcoming model runs.
Between the upper level system near the US/Can border and another shifting east from the West Coast, eventually becoming more phased in with that central CONUS troughing...additional disturbances bring additional precipitation chances through mid- week. Currently, the best chances are focused mainly across the southern half of the forecast area...but have plenty of details to iron out in the coming days. This Tuesday-Wednesday period is also the coolest of this 7-day period...with highs both days mainly in the 50s.
The latter portion of the new week dries back out...with current forecast highs back in the 70s by Friday.
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z MONDAY/
Issued at 657 PM CDT Sat May 2 2026
For KGRI/KEAR Airports:
The wind has begun to die down and will generally remain around 10 kts out of the southwest most of the night. We expect strong low level wind shear late tonight, mainly after midnight with winds at 1-2k ft agl around 47 kts while surface winds are around 10 kts. A weak frontal passage around 5-7 AM will turn the surface winds to a more northwesterly and even northerly direction and bring an end to the strong low level wind shear. VFR conditions are expected to prevail throughout the TAF valid period.
GID WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
NE...None. KS...None.
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