Winter Storm — Gage, Nebraska
2025-01-05 · Gage, Nebraska
Event narrative
The office received a public report in Beatrice of 5 inches of snow at 11:30 am on the 5th. Snow continued to fall through the afternoon hours and into the evening on the 5th. Though there were no direct snowfall reports from far southern Gage county, given its proximity to surrounding reports and how long snow fell after the initial 5 inch report, it is likely southern parts of the county near the Kansas border saw anywhere from 6 to 8 inches of snow.
Wider weather episode
On January 4th, upper-level analysis showed a potent shortwave trough positioned over the northern Rockies. The night of the 4th and into the 5th, this trough amplified as it dove southeast into the central CONUS. At the surface, a low-pressure developed in the Texas Panhandle around midnight on January 5th. During the day on the 5th and into the 6th, this surface low tracked east along a baroclinic zone across the state of Oklahoma and into the lower-Mississippi River Valley.
A widespread region of blizzard conditions developed across Kansas on the northwest side of this storm system. However, a strong arctic high pressure in the northern Great Plains and the upper Midwest led to strong dry air intrusion into much of the Omaha/Valley National Weather Service forecast area. This resulted in a very sharp cut-off in snowfall amounts across southeast Nebraska. Nonetheless, winter storm conditions were experienced near the Nebraska-Kansas border. The highest snowfall amounts were observed in southeastern Richardson County, where upwards of 16 inches of snow fell.
Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1223432. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.