(KEARNEY HUB) The Kearney Hub reports, "After one of the coldest, stormiest winters in recent history, much of Nebraska is expected to see above-normal temperatures and relatively dry conditions from late spring through the summer.
State climatologist Al Dutcher said Tuesday during a meeting of state weather watchers that above-normal temperatures — normally bad for the farm-focused state — could be a good thing this year by allowing crops planted late to mature before fall freezes. A wet fall and winter saturated soils across the state, and while much of the late spring and summer is expected to be dry, May could be wetter than normal in the east."
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