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
- Elevated to near-critical fire weather conditions are possible on Sunday, favoring southwest Nebraska into the southern Panhandle.
- Record high temperatures, very low humidity, and gusty west winds will lead to near critical to critical fire weather concerns Monday.
- A more active storm track could lead to increasing precipitation chances across the area middle to late week, though confidence in this remains low for now.
SHORT TERM /THROUGH MONDAY/
Issued at 322 PM CDT Sat Mar 28 2026
Earlier this afternoon, strong southerly winds played a large role in area-wide critical fire weather conditions. Gusts peaked around midday with speeds around 40-45 mph and slight decreases since then. High temperatures have reached the middle 60s west to upper 50s center and east. These have fallen short of forecasts slightly and as a result humidity values have not fallen as expected. Even so, the strong winds and humidity in the teens have led to expansive critical fire conditions, especially considering the magnitude of wind gusts.
Tonight...winds will diminish this evening as lee troughing and a weak low extends east off the high terrain. This will bring about a wind shift which will nearly clear the area by daybreak on Sunday. The result will be west-northwesterly winds and another mild overnight. Lows will remain above the freezing mark and range from middle 30s north to upper 40s southwest. Winds should remain steady with sustained speeds around 5-10 mph and modest gusts approaching 20 mph behind the wind shift line.
Sunday/Sunday Night...behind the passing trough, west-northwest winds will become breezy during the daytime. A plume of dry mid- level air will cross the central Rockies and within the downslope flow will promote a considerable warm up with dry air. NAEFS guidance suggests h7 and h85 temperatures both exceeding the 99th percentile by early in the day and these warmer mid-level temperatures in a favorable warming setup support boosting afternoon highs. The forecast now calls for upper 80s south to upper 70s north, closer in line with recent MAV guidance. These values will threaten calendar day records. Under sunny to mostly sunny skies, fire weather concerns will once again take center stage. More details pertaining to this can be found below in the Fire Weather section.
LONG TERM /MONDAY NIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY/
Issued at 322 PM CDT Sat Mar 28 2026
Fire weather concerns continue into Monday, with yet another day of likely record highs forecast. In fact, H7-H85 temperatures will again exceed the 99th percentile climo for late March by Monday afternoon. Potential cloud cover remains the biggest uncertainty for now, though increasing westerly downslope flow should allow for ample mixing to tap into the very warm air aloft. Highs are expected to soar into the upper 80s to potentially even the low 90s again across southwest Nebraska Monday. This will also coincide with very low humidity, as the very dry airmass anchored across the area allows for minimum afternoon humidity of 10 to 15 percent. Some threat for even single digit humidity values cannot be ruled out, especially if temperatures trend upwards into the lower 90s across southwest Nebraska. Westerly wind gusts of 25 to 35 miles per hour are also expected, with the strongest winds across western Nebraska. Suspect these will continue to trend upwards, with guidance largely underperforming with gusts near daily in the recent record warm pattern. This combination will likely lead to near critical to critical fire weather concerns, and future fire weather headlines may be needed.
As a surface low ejects east across southern South Dakota/far northern Nebraska Monday night, a cold front will quickly push from north to south across the area. This will lead to a sharp west to north wind shift, along with increasing northerly gusts of 35 to 45 miles per hour as increasing cold advection promotes ample mechanical mixing overnight. The passage of this front also marks the end of the recent very warm stretch, with near to slightly below average highs then expected for middle week and into next weekend. A threat for precipitation may return for western and north central Nebraska by middle to late week as well, though this remains low confidence for now. A look at NBM probabilities shows broad probabilities of >0.10" across the area by late week, though only peaking to ~30-40% for Thursday evening into Friday. This is largely tied to the evolution of synoptic features, which becomes especially true by Friday and into next weekend. Though confidence remains low, trends will continue to be monitored for at least limited drought relief for western and north central Nebraska.
AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z MONDAY/
Issued at 1233 AM CDT Sun Mar 29 2026
VFR will continue to prevail across all of western and north central Nebraska through Sunday evening. Low-level wind shear will be of concern until 10Z across parts of southwest into central Nebraska, including the KLBF terminal. Northwest winds will increase to 10-20 kts from late morning into the afternoon hours Sunday.
LBF WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES
Red Flag Warning from 9 AM to 7 PM MDT Sunday for NEZ204-210.
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