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

- This evening/tonight bring continued chances for some isolated/scattered sprinkles or light showers, mainly across portions of south central NE. Can't rule out some patchy fog late tonight-Wed AM, at this point not expecting widespread dense fog.

- Precipitation chances for Wed-Wed evening have trended down, forecast currently just has some 20 percent chances across SErn portions of the forecast area. Dry conditions expected through at least the first half of the day on Thursday.

- A stronger upper level system brings increasing chances for rain and thunderstorms to the area late in the day Thursday, continuing on into the evening/overnight hours. There will be the potential for some storms to be strong-severe, with the entire forecast area currently included in the SPC Day 3 Marginal Risk area.

DISCUSSION

Issued at 407 PM CST Tue Mar 3 2026

Currently through tonight...

Been an overall quiet day across the forecast area, with satellite imagery showing very different sky cover from one end to the other...across the west seeing mostly sunny skies, in central and especially eastern areas, socked in with low level stratus. Looking aloft, upper air and satellite data show an area of low pressure gradually working its way across northern CO, with a mid-upper level trough axis extending east-northeast through NE up toward the Great Lakes. At the surface, the forecast area is sitting between broad high pressure spread across portions of the Central Plains up into the Great Lakes region and deepening low pressure over the TX panhandle...bringing more NNErly winds to the forecast area, with speeds have mainly been 10MPH or less. Not surprisingly, the stubborn cloud cover hasn't done any favors to temperatures, keeping those areas mainly in the mid 40s...vs further west in the sun have reach into the 50s and even some low 60s.

The rest of today on into tonight...models are in good agreement showing that CO upper low continuing to slide east, main question will be with whether or not we see any precipitation. Most models backed off on QPF...but a few models, including some hi-res, still show the potential for at least some isolated/scattered sprinkles or showers lingering this evening and tonight. These chances are mainly focused across portions of south central NE...and not expecting any notable amounts out of anything that does fall. Expecting partly to mostly cloudy skies...with a return of light/variable winds as a surface ridge axis pushes south through the area. Not out of the question that some patchy fog could develop later tonight with those light winds, most models currently showing visibilities not dropping as low as this morning.

Mid to late work week...

Looking at Wednesday, overall precipitation chances backed off, with small chances (20 percent) now just confined to SErn portions of the forecast area. Models remain in good agreement showing that upper level disturbance current over CO continuing to slide east right through the heart of the area...but keep the better precip chances to our SSE. Some models suggest the 20 percent chances currently in the forecast are too much...if that trend holds, completely removing PoPs is not out of the question. Winds expected to remain on the lighter side, starting out the day variable, turning more southerly through the afternoon ahead of deepening low pressure across the High Plains. Sky cover is once again expected to diminish from west to east...but similar to today, confidence in the exact timing of the clearing is not high. Highs range from the mid 50s in the east to lower 60s in the west...confidence again lower in the east due to uncertainty with the cloud cover.

Expecting at least the first half of the day on Thursday to be dry, potentially most of the day. Precipitation chances will be on the increase during the afternoon hours, with the overall best chances looking to be after 00Z. Models showing another upper level low pressure system working its way into the Pac NW during the day on Wednesday, digging south with time, ending up in the Desert SW region by the end of the day on Thursday. During the evening/overnight hours, larger scale lift is picking up ahead of this upper level troughing, aided by increasing moisture/warm advection pushing north thanks to a strengthening southerly low- level jet. These are not just better chances for rain, but thunderstorms as well...and with models showing more instability also working its way in from the south and decent deep layer shear, some of these storms being on the strong to severe side are not out of the question. The entire forecast area is included in the SPC Day 3 Marginal Risk area (main concern being hail), but models today have trended that better potential across roughly the SErn half of the forecast area...will see how things trend over the next 2 days. Outside of the rain/storm chances increasing through the day, expecting breezy southerly winds to develop as surface low pressure deepens over eastern CO...with highs climbing into the mid 60s to low 70s.

Precip chances Thursday-Thursday night are tied to lift out ahead of the main upper level system...chances in the forecast for Friday are tied to the passage of that system itself. Confidence in chances through Friday night are not high...as there are some notable differences between models with the strength of the system and exactly where it tracks. Some keep it a more closed system, tracking it a touch further NW and potentially bringing a dry slot to the forecast area, resulting in little precip...others are more open, tracking more over the area and bringing better chances. The accompanying surface cold front is also working its way through the region on Friday, not doing any favors for confidence in high temperatures...current forecast has 50s in the NW to near 70 in the SE.

This weekend and on...

Forecast for this weekend into the start of the new work week is dry, with models showing northwesterly flow aloft in the wake of Friday's system turning more zonal with time. The 'coolest' day of this period is Saturday, with highs mainly in the mid-60s...with forecast highs climbing into the 70s by Monday.

AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z WEDNESDAY/

Issued at 1131 AM CST Tue Mar 3 2026

For KGRI/KEAR Airports:

Satellite imagery showing the back edge of the low level stratus gradually working its way toward the terminal areas, which should bring a break from the MVFR/IFR conditions that have been in place this morning. Unfortunately, any break looks to be a short-lived one, as models/guidance suggest the potential for especially lowering ceilings will return this evening/overnight...also can't rule out some fog in the are. Overall winds remain on the light side, turning more northerly this afternoon, ENE this evening, then becoming more light/variable later tonight into early Wed. morning. Better chances for any precipitation look to remain outside of the terminal areas, so kept that mention out of the forecast for now.

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.