June 29, 2026

Midwest Storm Chasers

Live Weather Coverage & Severe Storm Reporting

⚠️ Red Flag Warning – Lower North Platte River Basin/Scottsbluff National Monument; Lodgepole Creek/Southern Nebraska Panhandle; Niobrara/Lower Elevations of Converse/Thunder Basin National Grassland; Middle North Platte River Basin/Niobrara and Converse High Plains; North Laramie Range and Adjacent High Plains; Laramie Foothills and High Plains; Laramie East High Plains; Bordeaux/Chugwater/Wheatland; Goshen/Middle-Lower North Platte River Basin – Monday, June 29, 2026

Event Red Flag Warning
Severity Severe
Urgency Expected
Certainty Likely
Area Lower North Platte River Basin/Scottsbluff National Monument; Lodgepole Creek/Southern Nebraska Panhandle; Niobrara/Lower Elevations of Converse/Thunder Basin National Grassland; Middle North Platte River Basin/Niobrara and Converse High Plains; North Laramie Range and Adjacent High Plains; Laramie Foothills and High Plains; Laramie East High Plains; Bordeaux/Chugwater/Wheatland; Goshen/Middle-Lower North Platte River Basin
Effective 6/29/2026, 4:22:00 AM CDT
Expires 6/29/2026, 6:00:00 PM CDT

Red Flag Warning issued June 29 at 3:22AM MDT until June 29 at 9:00PM MDT by NWS Cheyenne WY

Details

The National Weather Service in Cheyenne has issued a Red Flag
Warning, which is in effect from 10 AM this morning to 9 PM MDT
this evening. The Fire Weather Watch is no longer in effect.

* AFFECTED AREA…Fire weather zones 417, 418, 419, 430, 431, 432,
433, 436, and 437.

* WIND…Southwest winds 20 to 30 mph with gusts up to 50 mph.
Localized gusts up to 60 mph are possible. Winds will become
more westerly in the late afternoon and evening hours as they
gradually weaken.

* HUMIDITY…Between 10 and 20 percent. The lowest humidity is
expected south of the North Platte River.

* IMPACTS…any fires that develop will likely spread rapidly.
Outdoor burning is not recommended.

Instructions

A Red Flag Warning means that critical fire weather conditions
are either occurring now, or will shortly. A combination of
strong winds, low relative humidity, and warm temperatures can
contribute to extreme fire behavior.


This alert was automatically posted by SkyGuard, MWSC’s severe weather alerting system. Source: National Weather Service.