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
- Dry conditions are expected for the start of next week with warming temperatures.
- A few passing disturbances will bring slightly cooler temperatures and precipitation chances around the middle of the week.
- Temperatures next week will largely favor above normal and with breezy conditions could promote increased fire weather concerns.
SHORT TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/
Issued at 320 PM CST Sat Feb 21 2026
Earlier today, light snow was observed across mainly southwest Nebraska. Accumulations remained minimal, at or below a few tenths of an inch, before activity shifted east. Snow cover from Thursday lingers across much of the Platte Valley north into the Sandhills and east through central Nebraska. This has helped to hold temperatures back locally with highs only reaching the upper 20s to middle 30s as of ~2pm CST. Increasing mid-level cloudiness was moving in from southwest South Dakota. This was associated with a weak mid-level PV anomaly and is not expected to bring any changes to the sensible weather outside of mostly cloudy skies across the northern half of the forecast area.
For tonight, surface heights will increase as high pressure settles south into the Northern Plains. This will force a backdoor cool front with reinforcing cold air in from the northeast. Sub-zero lows may return in the far western Sandhills as a result but with no winds, cold weather headlines are not expected. Elsewhere, lows will range from 0-10F which is nearly 10-20F below normal for late February. While the setup is usually supportive of fog, winds off the surface remain elevated and so will keep any mention out of the forecast for now. Recent runs of high resolution guidance supports this idea with little to no signal.
LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/
Issued at 320 PM CST Sat Feb 21 2026
Sunday...High temperatures will likely be similar to Saturday's values, even with the frontal boundary straddling the area. Temperatures at h85 actually show a slight increase day-over-day though lingering snowpack should still help to hold us back. Leaned on NBM/MAV blend as the latter seems to handle observed snow depth a little better. Recent MET guidance has trended more in line with the early MAV output, increasing confidence in the going forecast. Winds remain variable across the area but speeds should remain at or below 20 mph with the strongest east of Highway 183.
Monday/Tuesday...upper ridging builds across the Desert Southwest with the Central High Plains on the northeast periphery. This promotes general west-northwesterly downsloping flow. This type of setup usually leads to overachieving temperatures with persistent upward trends in subsequent forecasts. The current forecast high for both Monday and Tuesday are around the median value in the NBM forecast envelope. Higher forecast percentile output is approximately 5F warmer with outlier members exceeding the forecast by 7-10F. Will continue to highlight increased fire concerns with elevated conditions appearing a safe minimum.
Wednesday...temperatures will be knocked down a bit following a passing cool front that could bring some light precipitation. NBM probabilities don't highlight any noteworthy QPF potential with around 10-20% chances of exceeding 0.10" anywhere in the local area. EPS/GEFS solutions are even more pessimistic with < 10% output. The deterministic GFS suggests a greater potential for wetting moisture with a more pronounced h5 shortwave and surface low crossing the area. At this time, this appears to be an outlier with ECWMF closer in line with the ensemble guidance. The current forecast calls for PoPs nearing 40-50% during the afternoon and evening. Believe we'll see these decrease in the coming days. Nevertheless, a slight cooldown is likely as highs fall to the 50s for most with middle 60s holding in our southwest.
Thursday/Friday..surface high pressure following the cool front will settle south with westerly downsloping flow returning to the area. As heights aloft rebound behind the passing shortwave trough, h85 temperatures climb to the teens degC. H7 trajectories draw in dry air from the Great Basin and this should support renewed fire weather concerns as they push downslope from the Front Range. Folks should continue to monitor later forecasts as highs returning to the 50s/60s with gusty west winds will renew greater fire weather concerns again. The current forecast has some critical conditions in our far southwest Thursday with more expansive coverage on Friday. A lot can change between now and then but given the overall pattern, believe some magnitude of fire weather concerns is a given.
Saturday and beyond...greater uncertainty arrives for next weekend. Large scale troughing sets up over central Canada with modest west- northwesterly flow aloft persisting. While the brunt of any upper- level dynamics remains well north and east of the local area, a passing frontal boundary/surface trough may be enough to promote some light precipitation potential and cooler temperatures. Certainty in the NBM solution is nearly non-existent as inner- quartile temperature ranges exceed 30F. Cold air will infiltrate the Northern Plains into upper Mississippi Valley but the question is how quick and far west this Arctic airmass makes it. The going forecast splits the difference with a closer hedge to the slower arriving cold air solution. This paints highs in the 40s to middle 50s across the area for Saturday but just know in the coming days that this will likely adjust, perhaps considerably, as NWP guidance hones in on a more precise solution.
AVIATION /00Z TAFS THROUGH 00Z MONDAY/
Issued at 1121 PM CST Sat Feb 21 2026
Winds will remain light from the west or northwest overnight with clear skies expected across western and north central Nebraska. Winds will shift to the north midday, then northeast toward evening. Some scattered high cloudiness will drift into the area this afternoon and will persist through 06z Sunday. Ceilings will be around 25000 FT AGL.
LBF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
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.