Weather



Ainsworth, Nebraska

Current Conditions

 
Temp: 43°
Dew Point: 32°
Humidity: 66%
Wind: SSE 7 mph
Visibility: 10.0 miles
Pressure: 29.57 in. 0
Sky: Scattered Clouds
Wind Chill: 39°

 

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Almanac

Average High: 33°

Average Low:

Record high/year: 66° (1958)

Record low/year: -21° (1973)

Sunrise: 8:08 AM

Sunset: 5:24 PM

Detailed History

Sun and Moon

Sunrise: 08:08 AM (CST)

Moon Rise: 02:35 PM (CST) 1 8

Sunset: 05:24 PM (CST)

Moon Set: 05:49 AM (CST) 1 8

Moon Phase

Today
Jan. 10
Jan. 17
Jan. 26
Feb. 02

 

Local Radar

Local Satellite



Next 12 Hours

 
7  pm
10  pm
1  am
4  am
7  am
Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Chance of Snow Chance of Snow
38°
36°
36°
34°
36°

 

Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database


5-Day Forecast

Thursday Partly Cloudy Hi 47° Lo 34° Partly Cloudy
Friday Chance of Snow Hi 36° Lo 7° Chance of Snow
Saturday Partly Cloudy Hi 36° Lo 20° Partly Cloudy
Sunday Partly Cloudy Hi 38° Lo 18° Partly Cloudy
Monday Partly Cloudy Hi 25° Lo 11° Partly Cloudy

 

Forecast for Brown

Updated: 3:04 PM CST on January 8, 2009

Tonight

Not as cold. Partly cloudy this evening and overnight then becoming mostly cloudy. Near steady temperature in the mid 30s. South winds 5 to 10 mph shifting to the west 10 to 15 mph after midnight.

 

Friday

Windy...colder. Mostly cloudy. Slight chance of rain or snow in the morning...then slight chance of snow in the afternoon. Highs in the mid 30s. Northwest winds 15 to 30 mph increasing to 25 to 35 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation 20 percent.

 

Friday Night

Windy. Much colder. Mostly cloudy until midnight then becoming partly cloudy. Scattered flurries until midnight. Lows around 9. Northwest winds 20 to 30 mph decreasing to 15 to 20 mph after midnight.

 

Saturday

Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 30s. West winds 10 to 15 mph.

 

Saturday Night

Mostly cloudy. Lows around 19. West winds 10 to 15 mph.

 

Sunday

Partly sunny with a 20 percent chance of snow. Highs in the upper 30s.

 

Sunday Night

Mostly cloudy. Chance of flurries. Lows around 18.

 

Monday

Breezy...colder. Partly sunny with a 20 percent chance of snow. Highs in the mid 20s.

 

Monday Night

Mostly cloudy. Lows around 9.

 

Tuesday

Breezy. Partly sunny with a 20 percent chance of snow. Highs in the lower 20s.

 

Tuesday Night through Thursday

Partly cloudy. Lows around 5. Highs in the lower 20s.

 

 

Personal Weather Stations

Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]

Location: MOComAgNet Johnstown NE US, Springview, NE

Updated: 6:20 PM CST

Temperature: 42 °F Dew Point: 34 °F Humidity: 73% Wind: North at 2 mph Pressure: 29.61 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Windchill: 42 °F Historical Graphs

NWS Forecaster Discussion




041 
fxus63 klbf 082102 
afdlbf 


Area forecast discussion 
National Weather Service North Platte NE 
302 PM CST Thursday Jan 8 2009 


..forecast challenges are wind potential and temperatures with frontal passage 
tomorrow...then temperatures in the extended and the magnitude of 
the deep freeze next week... 


Discussion... 


Near term...tonight through Sunday night...main forecasting 
challenge over the next 36 hours is the timing of the frontal passage on 
Friday and wind potential behind the front Friday afternoon. The 
front is expected to enter the northern portion of the County Warning Area around 
12z tomorrow morning...exiting the County Warning Area by 15z. The main surge of 
cold air will trail the front some...so have incorporated an 
atypical diurnal temperature curve for tomorrow with morning highs 
in the north and midday highs in the south. As cold advection 
increases tomorrow afternoon...winds will increase accordingly. 
BUFKIT soundings...forecast 850 mb winds and numerical guidance wind 
speeds tomorrow afternoon are borderline for Wind Advisory 
criteria...and will let the night crew take a further look when the 
new model guidance comes in this evening. Not overly impressed in 
wind potential tomorrow afternoon as 850 mb winds are generally 30 to 
40 kts across the County Warning Area. Would like to see these in the 40 to 50 knots 
range before pulling the trigger on a Wind Advisory at this time. 


The Arctic air mass will move quickly east as high pressure builds 
into the Ozarks Saturday. Southwesterly winds will push temperatures into 30s and 
40s for both Saturday and Sunday. Have retained low probability of precipitation in the 
forecast across the northwest for Sunday...as a decent jet streak 
approaches from the northwest. Additional middle level forcing noted 
there along with northwesterly winds off the Black Hills which 
favors precipitation over the far northwestern zones. Not expecting much in 
the way of quantitative precipitation forecast as top down saturation is expected. 


Long term...Monday through Thursday...the models are coming into 
better agreement today...with what appears to be a fairly 
significant Arctic outbreak next week. As mentioned earlier this 
morning by Gid in the chat...temperatures across the alaskan interior were 
running 30 degree below normal this morning with readings of 50 to 60 
below zero. This airmass is expected to modify significantly as it 
heads south early next week. A 1050+ mb high will transport the bulk 
of this Arctic air...at least the portion which stands to impact western 
and northern nebr the greatest...on Thursday. Without snowcover 
present across the area and none expected through this time...a 
conservative estimate is to shave off 20 degrees from climatology for 
highs and lows for Thursday. Since there are still a little 
uncertainty with where the core of this Arctic air tracks across 
the Continental U.S....will start with a 10 degree cut off of climatology. This seems 
to agree with the neighbors at this time. If model trends stay on the same 
track the next several days...we could be looking at highs in the 
single digits and teens late next week and lows at or below zero. 
Thankfully we are lacking snow cover right now...or we would be 
looking at the potential of below zero highs in some locations. 


&& 


Aviation... 
middle and high cloud decks will continue to drift over western and 
north central Nebraska overnight into early Friday leaving VFR 
conditions in place. A front will move quickly southward through the 
day Friday with a secondary shot of cold air coming in the 
afternoon. This should bring in lower cloud deck and chance of very 
light precipitation or flurries. VFR conditions are forecast for 
kvtn/klbf tafs behind the frontal passage though some MVFR conditions may be 
possible across northern Nebraska in the afternoon but confidence 
not high enough to introduce at this time. Winds will be larger concern for 
light aircraft on Friday as north/northwest wind increase to 25 to 
35 miles per hour along and behind the front as cold air spills southward. 


&& 




Lbf watches/warnings/advisories...none 


$$ 


Short and long term...buttler 
aviation...Phillips 


































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