Journal Pioneer

Weather’s never boring in Atlantic Canada

- CINDY DAY Cindy Day is SaltWire Network’s Chief Meteorolog­ist

Well, you certainly can’t say that the weather in Atlantic Canada is boring. Last Wednesday, we experience­d rain, snow, hail, a thundersto­rm and violent wind gusts. Depending on where you were at the time, you may or may not have experience­d any or all of these. There was a lot of talk about the snow, and rightfully so; we don’t often get 5 cm of snow in Bathurst and 33 cm in Gander, N.L. so late in the month of May. Jaw-dropping photos generated a lot of talk on social media on Wednesday and Thursday but the wind was not mentioned very much; it was, however, significan­t and a little unusual. After the storm had passed, Samantha submitted a photo of downed trees on her parents’ property in Fredericto­n. I checked with hourly weather reports and they didn’t seem to support the kind of damage you see in the photo; winds were clocked at 30 km/h with gusts to 45 km/h. It took more wind than that to snap those trees. I went back and had a closer look at the radar charts at the time of the damage. The line of thundersto­rms was intense. The warm air ahead of the front was being driven upward by much colder air behind the system. All indication­s point to a “gust front.” While fairly rare around here, gust fronts are like miniature windstorms that can be a side-effect of a strong thundersto­rm nearby. They can also be a sign that you’re about to get quite wet. During a very heavy rainstorm, the downward force of the falling rain creates a cool, strong, sinking wind. As this rush of air reaches the ground, it races outward ahead of the storm. Some of the strongest storms can create gust fronts with wind speeds of more than 150 km/h. Gust fronts can also spawn a secondary storm near the original thundersto­rm. As the cold air rushes outward, it can force the warm air on the ground to rise up and condense, creating a new thundersto­rm. If you’re standing ahead of a storm and you feel a blast of cool air . . . that’s the gust front! The gust front travels quickly and changes appearance very quickly. Another good reason to keep an eye on the sky! Thanks for the photo, Samantha.

 ??  ?? This photo was taken by Samantha A. Wednesday afternoon in Fredericto­n, N.B. Severe wind gusts brought down six trees on her parents’ property.
This photo was taken by Samantha A. Wednesday afternoon in Fredericto­n, N.B. Severe wind gusts brought down six trees on her parents’ property.

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