Saturday, April 16, 2022, 9:25 PM – We are looking at some chances of snow over the next few days for people in parts of Ontario and Quebec.
People in Ontario and Quebec are enjoying a well-deserved quiet weekend after the wild winds that hit central Canada on Friday night. Scattered snow with the effect of the lake will form in some areas from Saturday night to Sunday, which will serve as a preview of a much larger storm arriving for the two provinces on Monday and Tuesday. More on what to expect in the coming days, below.
DON’T MISS: A recurring typhoon brings cold air and storm threat to central Canada next week
SATURDAY EVENING AND SUNDAY: POSSIBLE SNOW WITH LAKE EFFECT
On Saturday, there is some much-needed calm in parts of Ontario and Quebec after the evil winds that flooded central Canada on Friday.
Hundreds of thousands of customers between the two provinces lost electricity during strong winds, which in some places on Friday night were gusts well above 100 km / h.
We will see erratic weather in southern Ontario on Saturday night as cool northwest winds blow over Lake Huron, Georgian Bay and eastern Lake Ontario. Strips of light snow can develop across their respective shores, potentially lingering until Sunday morning.
Temperatures will remain low as northern winds spread across the region, with single-digit high temperatures expected again on Sunday.
FROM MONDAY TO TUESDAY: EASTERN CANADA APPROACHES STORM
We don’t have to wait long for the next potentially influential system to approach Ontario and Quebec.
This comprehensive, moisture-rich system will approach Ontario and Quebec from the south from Monday and continue through Tuesday. Although it is still too early for details, forecasters can see that two scenarios are unfolding, one of which could bring significant snowfall in eastern Ontario and southern Quebec.
The more snowy scenario will see cold air trapped on the surface in eastern Ontario and southern Quebec, forcing much of the rainfall to fall like snow.
A warmer scenario is also possible, which would make this mostly rainy event for the National Capital Region and Montreal, moving the snow higher up St. Lawrence.
Looking ahead, another system could hit the region from Wednesday night to Thursday, before temperatures drop by the end of the week.
We are seeing the potential for a few days of warmer weather in the last few days of April, but a cooler model is expected in early May as the blocking model is expected to recover.
Stay tuned to The Weather Network for the latest weather updates in Central Canada.
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