


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
Issued by NWS Omaha/Valley, NE
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747 FXUS63 KOAX 291732 AFDOAX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Omaha/Valley NE 1232 PM CDT Sun Jun 29 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Morning thunderstorms will move across much of the area with periods of gusty winds and heavy rain, but the overall severe weather threat is low this morning. - By this afternoon, scattered strong to severe thunderstorm development is likely along a weak front left over from the morning storms. It`s hard to know exactly where this favored area for storms will be, but there is a 40-50% chance for thunderstorms across much of the area this afternoon and evening. - Much of Monday and Tuesday will be dry, with temperatures heating back up by late in the week. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 256 AM CDT Sun Jun 29 2025 At 3 AM Sunday morning, much of the landscape across northern Nebraska, South Dakota, and northwest Iowa featured clusters of convective storms. A 30-40 kt low level jet was feeding into southern Nebraska while an upper trough axis was centered over eastern Montana and a surface trough extended from northeast Colorado into southeast SD. Objective analysis indicates an axis of higher quality sub-850-hPa moisture extending from north central into southeast Nebraska...and into northeast KS. Mid level lapse rates across the region are pretty impressive, lending to rather substantial MUCAPE 3000 J/kg or greater. In analyzing model forecast soundings as well as the radar representation of the cold pool persistently ahead of the deep convection, it is clear that the most unstable parcels are at least somewhat capped, but still able to freely convective given a deep enough cold pool. Despite having a seemingly good grasp of the pre-convective environment, models are having a challenging time in nailing down this forecast, as is often the case in borderline events driven by a shallow, difficult-to- resolve cold pool. The current thought is that the most likely scenario is for the ongoing , largely non-severe bow echo will continue to propagate southeast, and will probably travel across much of the forecast area as the soundings indicate it should actually be easier to lift MU parcels to the LFC with southward extent into greater moisture quality. The limiting factor is that the LLJ is likely to decrease in magnitude and veer a bit over the next few hours so there is yet a chance the the cold pool becomes to shallow to lift parcels to the LFC without the added LLJ convergence. Additional scattered storms may develop along the LLJ convergence region in the better moisture over southeast NE into southwest IA in the next few hours, similar to what is ongoing in northeast KS. Throughout all of this convection this morning, the overall severe threat appears pretty limited. Instability is sufficient but wind profiles just struggle to support severe storms in this environment...and any that become severe would probably be isolated severe events amidst broader sub-severe conditions. Morning storms will greatly influence the late day forecast. Wherever the outflow boundary sets up and stalls, it will cook quite a bit with significant instability developing in the pooling moisture. If the morning storms push that outflow well south, then the local area sets up for a quieter afternoon. But if the outflow holds up, or mixes out before initiation, then expect some rather intense updrafts to develop this afternoon. Effective shear will again be limited, but could be sufficient for storm organization on the north side of the outflow boundary, which would make for a severe weather threat in this zone if it plays out this way. Could also see some heavy rain rates and flash flood potential wherever storms struggle to move off the boundary. This afternoon`s storms will influence overnight storm potential as the upper trough moves through. If the atmosphere has stabilized, it`ll be a quiet night. But otherwise could see a fair amount of storm activity with a low end severe and flash flood potential. After that, look to have a couple of dry days through Tuesday followed by a building ridge and hotter temperatures by late in the week, and additional storm chances for next weekend. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z MONDAY/... Issued at 1226 PM CDT Sun Jun 29 2025 Variable winds are in place across the TAF sites this morning after that morning storm complex, with the anticipation that easterly winds become more widespread going into the afternoon with a cloud layer near the upper-end of MVFR territory at Fl030-050 develops near KLNK and KOMA. The main concern of the forecast is with storm chances that have now shifted overnight, with a 2-3 hour window being most likely for all sites (though KLNK could begin earlier and last longer if more widespread storms develop). At this time, storms do not appear to be very gusty, but trends will be monitored for the need to increase the forecasted TAF winds when they pass through. && .OAX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... NE...None. IA...None. && $$ DISCUSSION...Barjenbruch AVIATION...Petersen