December 14th, 2024

Winter weather persists, cold snap could last through April

By Peggy Revell on April 3, 2018.

Medicine Hat News

It definitely wasn’t an early spring, and the so-called “six more weeks of winter” is getting long in the tooth — the current forecast is a good indicator on how groundhogs aren’t exactly reliable weathermen.

Following the dump of snow over the Easter weekend, a mix of sun and clouds is expected for today and Wednesday with a high of 2C that will feel more like -3C, according to the Weather Network.

Tuesday and Wednesday overnight are expected to dip to -11C, with a chance of flurries overnight Wednesday.

Thursday is expected to be a chilly -4C that feels more like minus-eight, and dropping down to minus-10 overnight.

The below-zero temperatures are expected to continue into Friday, with flurries expected there as well.

Environment Canada is saying Saturday and Sunday also hold the possibilities of snow or rain showers.

The Weather Network pegs the amount of snowfall at just under one centimetre.

Environment Canada’s senior climatologist David Phillips blames a polar vortex for the current spring cold snap, with the wintery weather possibly persisting until the end of the month in the Prairies.

In some parts of Saskatchewan and Manitoba, lows of -27 C with windchill were reached on Monday.

The normal temperatures around this time of year for Medicine Hat are highs of 11 C and lows of minus-3. The record low on April 2 was minus-21.7 set in 1954, while the record high was 24.1 set in 1992.

— with files from The Canadian Press

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