textproduct: North Platte
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
- Critical fire weather conditions continue through this evening with gusty winds and low humidity.
- Much cooler but mostly dry conditions are expected for the weekend with the lone exception of a few thunderstorms over central Nebraska Saturday morning.
- The extended forecast favors largely dry conditions with a return to near or above normal temperatures by the middle of next week.
SHORT TERM /THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHT/
Issued at 145 PM CDT Fri Jun 12 2026
Early today, nary in the sky. Departing high pressure will leading to prevailing southerly winds across the area. Speeds were on the increase quick, with 25+ mph gusts apparent for area west of Highway 83. Midday temperatures were already in the upper 70s to lower 80s with a few more hours of heating to go and little to stymie the warm up. The warmth, dry air, and gusty winds will promote critical fire weather conditions and as such will keep the Red Flag Warning for Fire Weather Zone 204 going through the bulk of the day.
Late this afternoon/Tonight...a dryline will move off the higher terrain and drift into our western zones this afternoon. It's with this boundary that the driest air will arrive, with a sharp gradient of upper 40s dew points to the east decreasing to middle and upper 20s to the west. This feature will retreat tonight as developing surface low to the southwest weakens and the inverted surface trough fills in. Winds will increase out of the north and east behind an approaching cool front which will settle across the central Panhandle up through far north central Nebraska. Further south and east, a strengthening LLJ will nose into this boundary with isolated to widely scattered showers and general thunderstorms possible for central Nebraska early Saturday morning. Activity should develop towards daybreak invof a warm front within a strongly sheared environment with moderate instability. Forecast soundings show MU parcels rooted around h8 with some capping to overcome. Forcing should overcome this and many CAMs echo this thought. Development will likely occur right on the border of our forecast area with strong steering flow ushering activity east. This keeps the time frame of local concern brief with dry conditions quickly resuming. Lows tonight will vary as the cool front bisects the area: lower 50s in the northwest to near 60F in the south and east. Rain potential with overnight activity is limited with a few locations potentially exceeding 0.10" but most failing to see more than a few hundredths at best.
Saturday/Saturday Night...cool front will sag south through the area early in the day, bringing an appreciable cooldown to much of the area. NWP guidance spread remains limited, but sided with cooler solutions like the MET given persistent CAA through the day. Forecast highs range from middle 60s near the Pine Ridge to upper 70s in portions of central Nebraska. High pressure will settle south along the Northern Rockies and lead to increasing rain potential to our northwest. High pressure will weaken as it nears western Nebraska, resulting in weaker convergence on the forward edge and decreasing precipitation potential for the local area. This favors a continued dry forecast. Northerly winds will be gusty with peak speeds around 30 mph. Lows will certainly be cooler with the influx of cooler air and approach of surface high pressure. Forecast lows have fallen to the middle and lower 40s for much of the Sandhills. These are nearly 10F below normal for mid-June.
LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/
Issued at 145 PM CDT Fri Jun 12 2026
Broad troughing will remain anchored over the Hudson Bay region with northwesterly flow across the central and northern High Plains. A subtle shortwave will dive southeast along the lee of the northern Rockies and cross central Nebraska sometime late Sunday. NBM output highlights a modest increase in QPF potential favoring southwest Nebraska. This is likely tied to afternoon development near the Front Range approaching our southwest zones. This activity will certainly struggle and various deterministic solutions keep the area dry. Because of this, PoPs were capped at 24% (Slight Chance mention) for our far southwest. With a frontal boundary south of the area, temperatures will certainly take a turn for cooler values. Forecast highs on Sunday will range from upper 60s in the west to lower 70s in the east. These values will near 10-20F below normal for middle June but this cooldown will be short lived. Northwesterly flow will continue through the middle of next week and with modest ridging across the western CONUS with increasing local influence from this. NBM mid-range median temperatures show fairly steady climbs through Wednesday when a return to above normal values appears probable. Inner-quartile spread remains fairly large for Wednesday, nearing 15F for KLBF, so confidence in precise magnitude of warmup remains uncertain. Beyond that, temperatures appear to hold steady with upper 80s to lower 90s favored. Precipitation potential remains limited. Both EPS/GEFS output suggests 90% or greater potential for much of western Nebraska to see less than 0.10" total rain through the forecast period. With the return to seasonable and then unseasonable warmth to go with the dry weather, believe fire weather concerns will again be on the increase towards the middle and latter half of next week.
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z SUNDAY/
Issued at 615 PM CDT Fri Jun 12 2026
VFR conditions are expected to prevail through the next 24 hours. Breezy winds will continue for the next couple of hours, with south winds of 15 to 20 knots and gusts up to 25 knots across central and southwest Nebraska, while northwesterly winds of 10 to 15 knots with gusts to around 20 knots persist across the northern Sandhills. Mid- level cloud cover remains across portions of north-central Nebraska but will continue to move east of the region through the evening. Overnight, low-level wind shear is expected to develop across portions of central and southwest Nebraska, including the KLBF terminal. Isolated to widely scattered strong thunderstorms may develop early Saturday morning, mainly for portions of central Nebraska, though they should remain east of both terminals. Winds will become northeasterly across the area and will continue to increase throughout the day on Saturday. Sustained winds of 15 to 25 knots with gusts to 35 knots are possible by late in the TAF period. In addition, some low to mid-level clouds may also begin to develop across north-central Nebraska.
LBF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
Red Flag Warning until 6 PM MDT this evening for NEZ204.
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