Gibbon Weather Advisories
DENSE FOG ADVISORY IN EFFECT UNTIL 11 AM CST WEDNESDAY
WHAT
Visibility as low as one-half to one-quarter mile in dense fog. WHERE
In Kansas, Phillips and Rooks Counties. In Nebraska, Sherman, Valley, Buffalo, Dawson, Furnas, Gosper, Harlan, and Phelps Counties. WHEN
Until 11 AM CST Wednesday. IMPACTS
Low visibility could make driving conditions hazardous. ADDITIONAL DETAILS
Visibility could vary considerably within the Advisory area, with some areas likely seeing dense fog begin and end before other areas. It is also possible that parts of the Advisory area never see truly dense fog, with visibility instead holding up closer to 1 mile or higher.
PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS
If driving, slow down, use your headlights, and leave plenty of distance ahead of you. &&
This Hazardous Weather Outlook is for south central Nebraska and portions of north central Kansas.
DAY ONE
Overnight. Overnight, at least patchy light fog could develop almost anywhere in our forecast area, with more concentrated areas of fog most favored to develop within roughly the western one-fourth of our area
or mainly west of a line from Ord, to Kearney, to Alma Nebraska, to Plainville Kansas. Especially within these areas, visibility could easily drop below 1 mile, and at least localized dense fog reducing visibility to 1/4 mile or less cannot be ruled out.
DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN
Wednesday through Monday. Through 9 or 10 AM Wednesday morning, at least patchy light fog could continue almost anywhere in our forecast area, with more concentrated areas of fog most favored to focus within roughly the western one-fourth of our area
or mainly west of a line from Ord, to Kearney, to Alma Nebraska, to Plainville Kansas. Especially within these areas, visibility could easily prevail less than 1 mile, and at least localized dense fog reducing visibility to 1/4 mile or less cannot be ruled out. Late Wednesday night into Thursday morning, areas of fog could again develop across much of our forecast area, with at least localized dense fog possible that could reduce visibility to 1/4 mile or less. Late Thursday night into Friday morning, thunderstorms will be possible almost anywhere in our forecast area. A few strong to severe storms cannot be ruled out, with the main hazard being hail to at least the size of quarters, and a lesser threat of wind gusts up to around 60 MPH. On Friday afternoon, another small chance for thunderstorms could clip mainly the far eastern and southeastern fringes of our forecast area. However, much higher chances for thunderstorms and possible severe weather currently appear to focus slightly east and south of our forecast area altogether. && More information may be obtained at the following web page: https://www.weather.gov/hastings
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