Summer is just around the corner and Ontario residents should expect to see a mix of wet and warm weather in the coming months.
This is the forecast from the US-based Farmers’ Almanac, a publication that publishes annual forecasts based on a formula that is more than 200 years old.
The almanac points out that while Central and Western Canada will experience “screaming summer temperatures” of 30 to 35 degrees Celsius from mid to late July, the forecast for Ontario is “seasonally warm” because of what the publication describes as a “wave of unusually cold.” “. air ”, which will arrive in September.
Parts of western Ontario could experience severe thunderstorms in early July, which the publication warns could bring hail and tornadoes to Canada Day.
The forecast shows that wet weather will “dominate” Ontario and the Great Lakes after mid-August, while rainfall will be below average in Quebec and the Littoral.
Ontario will experience this wet weather next month, according to the Almanac’s long-term forecast for the province.
Rainfall and storms will change between now and April 30. The month of May will begin with clear to partly cloudy skies, before light rains gradually turn into heavy rains and thunderstorms by the 15th.
Almanac editor Peter Geiger spoke to CTV News Toronto in 2021 ahead of last summer’s forecast. He said that while forecasts could not be “100 percent accurate”, the age-old formula provided a plan for what the upcoming season would look like.
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