Hail — Hall, Nebraska
2024-05-20 · near Grand Is, Hall, Nebraska
Event narrative
Hail up to two inches in diameter was reported across Grand Island.
Wider weather episode
A couple rounds of thunderstorms brings severe hail and wind to portions of south central Nebraska during the evening of May 20th and into the early morning hours of May 21st. The first round of thunderstorms developed between 6-7PM CDT along a retreating warm front that stretched W-E along roughly the I-80 corridor between Grand Island and York. This activity consisted of several semi-discrete supercells with primarily a severe hail threat of 1 to 2 inches in diameter. The greatest concentration of severe hail occurred in Hall County from Wood River to Grand Island. The severe threat with this initial round waned with loss of daytime heating between 8-9PM CDT.
A second round of severe weather, consisting of scattered to widespread convection along the existing W to E warm front, as well as an advancing N-S outflow from the west affected the area after midnight. Severe weather reports were generally limited to low-end severe wind (i.e. measured wind gusts 55-60 MPH), and somewhat hit and miss. The exception to this was along the Hwy 81 corridor in Fillmore and Polk Counties were wind gusts of 65-75 MPH were measured on a couple of mesonet stations. Also, a small (only 75 yds wide), weak tornado (EF-0) was surveyed in extreme NE Polk County where tree, power pole, and pivot damage was noted. The severe threat with this second round shifted east of the GID CWA by around 5AM CDT.
View location on OpenStreetMap → (40.9200, -98.3500)
Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1180020. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.