Snowfall Warning posted for metro Montreal
A snowfall warning has been issued by Environment Canada for most of southwestern Quebec including metro Montreal. This is a rather complex system, and the bust potential is higher than I like. Two areas of low pressure are moving towards the region. There remains plenty of mild air in place, and that will likely lead to several precipitation types occurring over the Montreal region.
The good news is this is a fast moving system and the bulk of the precipitation should occur overnight, ending early Sunday.
Low pressure over Minnesota will move across the Great Lakes and close to Montreal on Sunday. Meanwhile a second area of low pressure will develop and move along the Atlantic coast towards New England.
The snow should start early this evening and could be heavy at times. Expect a wet snow for most regions. The snow will likely mix with rain and even some pockets of freezing rain along and south of the St. Lawrence River. At this time, accumulations should settle into the 10-15cm range for Montreal, 5-10cm south of the city and close to 20cm across the Laurentians and North Shore.
Temperatures are rather mild Saturday around 1C (34F), but should drop below freezing early this evening as the snow starts. Warmer air will work in from the south overnight, with temperatures rising back above freezing to 2C (36F) by morning. On Sunday expect flurries as the storms pull to our east and a cold front slides across the region. Winds will also become gusty, in the 30-60km/h range along with falling temperatures back below freeing to -2C (29F) by late afternoon.
The week ahead looks quite unsettled once again, with a mixed precipitation and eventually much colder temperatures by the end of the week.
On Friday, Montreal managed a high of 9C (49F) late in the evening, shy of the record of 11.3C (53F) set back in 2008. It was a wet and windy day, with gusts to 75km/h at Trudeau Airport, along with 15.5mm of rain. I measured 16.5mm here on Ile Perrot.













