Monday, October 27, 2008

Winter Storm Watch

UPDATE 3:50pm: Winter Storm Watch (see below) for Kemptville, Brockville, Leeds & Grenville, Ottawa and the Valley, SD & G and Renfrew.

The National Weather Service in Burlington, Vermont has issued a Winter Storm Watch, the first of the season for the Adirondacks and St. Lawrence Valley. The early season snow is expected to overspread the area on Tuesday and become heavy overnight before tapering off on Wednesday. Right now forecasters are expecting 15-25cm of wet snow, more in the mountains less in the valley's. Low pressure will organize rapidly near Cape Hatteras tonight and race north to near Montreal by Wednesday morning will intensifying. This puts eastern Ontario and northern New York in the focus for the heaviest precipitation and strongest winds.
Most of Quebec meanwhile will be on the slightly warmer side of the storm with more heavy rain forecast for Montreal. Another 25-50mm may fall on top of the 50mm that fell over the area this weekend. Winds will howl out of the northeast at 40-70km/h with this storm.

Be advised travel may become very poor across the entire Montreal, Ottawa, Kingston corridor late Tuesday and overnight.

This was just issued from Environment Canada....

Winter Storm Watch... Merrickville -Wolford - Kemptville 3:50 PM EDT
Monday 27 October 2008 Winter storm watch for Merrickville-Wolford - Kemptville issued

The first Major snow storm of the season likely late Tuesday and Tuesday night.This is an alert to the potential development of dangerous winter weather conditions in these regions. Monitor weather conditions..Listen for updated statements.Humdinger may not be a scientific term but it may very well sum up the weather that mother nature has in store for eastern Ontario. It appears a noreaster will be born just off the North Carolina coast this evening then intensify rapidly tonight and Tuesday before slicing through southwestern Québec Tuesday night.In advance of this system an expanding area of significant rain will blossom across far eastern Ontario on Tuesday before changing to heavy wet snow in many areas by late afternoon or early evening.In a swath from Ottawa through Renfrew to Algonquin significant heavy snow will likely set in late Tuesday and continue into Wednesday morning. Snowfall accumulations in excess of 15 centimetres are likely before it tapers off during the day Wednesday.The rain will linger in the extreme east on Tuesday. From Cornwall to Hawkesbury. Where a rainfall warning is possible once the track of the heaviest rain becomes more certain. The rain will change to snow Tuesday night in this area.

Strong northwest winds of 50 gusting up to 70 km/h Tuesday night in combination with the snow will create hazardous driving conditions due to snow and blowing snow with low visibilities especially when the mercury edges just below the freezing mark. Also any residual leaves left on trees may create additional concerns of snow-laden limbs affecting power lines.

The storm track is still somewhat uncertain. Winter storm warnings and rainfall warnings will be issued as deemed appropriate as the situation unfolds.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hi, former Kemptvillian living in North Carolina. Sorry for sending nasty weather up your way. :( If it makes anyone feel better, it was unseasonably cold here today too.