That big low pressure system spinning its way slowly down the St. Lawrence Valley early Friday morning, will continue to influence our weather through the upcoming weekend. Unfortunately that means another weekend where we will be dodging frequent showers and thunderstorms.
The system is strong for June, producing very low barometric pressure readings in southern Quebec, strong wind gusts and plenty of rain and thunderstorms. Fortunately for Montreal, the strongest thunderstorms remained over eastern Ontario, southward into Upstate New York and New England. On Thursday, several tornado watches and warnings were issued in Eastern Ontario as well as Vermont. At least one potential tornado occurred near Woodstock, Vermont and there was rotation observed near Alexandria, Ontario. In the Vermont storm, extensive damage and power outages occurred. Vermont power outages reached over 20,000 Thursday afternoon.
In southern Quebec, winds gusted a high as 70km/h, slowing recovery efforts from Wednesday's storms. Power remains out to just over 5500 Hydro-Quebec customers Friday morning.
In Montreal, it was rain and plenty of it. Another 30-60mm fell across the region. I measured a storm total of 33.2mm on Ile Perrot, bringing my monthly total to 105mm. Trudeau Airport sits at 85.4mm for the month. So if you thought it was a wet June, you would be correct.
Friday will be breezy in Montreal once again, up to 50km/h from the west, along with a few breaks in the clouds. A few disturbances will rotating around the main storm located over the Gulf of St. Lawrence, producing scattered showers and afternoon thunderstorms through at least Sunday. High temperatures will remain cooler for late June, near 20C (68F), perhaps warming into the middle 20s Sunday. Overnight lows will be in the middle teens.
Another 10-20mm of rain may fall over the next 48 hours, perhaps more in thunderstorms. No severe weather is expected for our region, but gusty winds may accompany any showers or storms.









