As promised it has been an active weather week across southern Quebec. Since Sunday, close to 10cm of new snow has fallen in and around the city. The snow has mostly been of the nuisance variety, requiring more salt than plowing. Roads have been sloppy and with the warming temperatures, potholes are everywhere, some big enough to swallow your tires.
Thursday managed a warm high of 3C (38F) for Montreal despite the cloud cover and misty conditions. Friday will be warm as well, along with increasing southwest winds, that may reach 70km/h by the supper hour. Low pressure travelling well north of Montreal, will allow for highs to reach 7C to as warm as 10C (45 to 50F) across southern Quebec by late Friday. With temperatures well above freezing, we can expect rain to develop around midday along a frontal boundary. The rain will taper to showers in the evening. Gusty southwest and eventually west winds will reach between 30-50km/h increasing up to 70km/h late Friday.
Enough colder air returns for temperatures to drop to the freezing point overnight into Saturday morning. This will set the stage for the next system that will have a more wintry edge to it. Low pressure will move across the Great Lakes and begin to weaken Saturday night, as a secondary low develops over southern New England. That low will reestablish enough cold air here in the St. Lawrence Valley allowing all precipitation to fall mainly as snow, with perhaps some rain or freezing rain mixing in near the international border.
The snow should start Saturday evening tapering off late Sunday. At this time, some models are showing a good 10cm for the Montreal region, but that could easily reach 15cm for some locations.
Conditions should improve for Monday along with slightly colder temperatures and highs near -2C (29F0. More unsettled weather and snow returns by Tuesday.













