Journal Pioneer

From white to wet

Rain event to follow Tuesday snowstorm; white Christmas in doubt

- BY ERIC MCCARTHY

Even before the wind picked up Tuesday afternoon, Prince District RCMP were advising motorists to stay off Island roads.

“It’s a good idea, if you don’t have to go anywhere to stay home,” Sgt. Darrell Gill told the Journal Pioneer. He noted roads throughout the district were already snow covered with slushy sections. And with the wind forecast to pick up as the day progressed, Gill said conditions would likely get worse.

Schools across P.E.I., including UPEI and Holland College, were closed for the day, and Health P.E.I. advised that several of its services were cancelled, including all primary care appointmen­ts in Rustico, Tyne Valley, O’Leary and Alberton and all Public Health Nursing appointmen­ts provincewi­de.

Saltwire Network meteorolog­ist Cindy Day said close to 22 centimeter­s of snow had fallen in the Charlottet­own area by mid-afternoon Tuesday, and 16 centimeter­s were reported in the Summerside area. She said the increasing wind speed into the evening would likely move the snow around, especially the two to three centimeter­s of dry snow that were still to come.

“I guess what we are advising is, unless it is a dire emergency, stay off the roads,” Sgt. Gill said.

Garth Gallant, dispatcher at the government garage in Summerside, said plows had been on highways and side roads since early morning.

“The wind’s starting to pick up here. The visibility is getting a little bit worse,” Gallant reported late Tuesday afternoon.

For an estimate on when conditions were likely to improve, Gallant responded, “Not for a while yet.”

Snow clearing operators had reported a few vehicles in the ditch, but Gallant said most were subsequent­ly removed.

A tractor-trailer was off the road along Route 225, blocking a portion of the Kinkora Road. The scene was cleared shortly before 1 p.m.

Summerside Police Services deputy chief Sinclair Walker said traffic within the city was running fairly smoothly.

Day was expecting gusts of 70 to 80 kilometers an hour out of the northwest Tuesday evening, and gusts approachin­g 70 kilometres this morning. The temperatur­e for today is forecast to be minus -5C, giving a wind chill value in the minus-15 range.

“I’d be worried about blowing and drifting as the night goes on.”

There is a shift on the way, though. Day said the temperatur­e should climb above freezing on Friday and continue to climb to 10 to 12 degrees on Saturday. She’s expecting that shift to be accompanie­d by more than 30 millimeter­s of rain. The combinatio­n of warmth and rain, she suggested, will make a big dent in winter’s early snows.

The temperatur­e will fall back but remain above freezing on Sunday and then drop just below freezing for the Christmas period. With no big systems showing on the weather map for next Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, she said Christmas travelling conditions should be good. Day refers to the coming weekend’s weather as a “wobble” and said the Jetstream should reposition itself to a more normal position thereafter.

 ?? MILLICENT MCKAY/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Islanders, like this Park Street resident in Summerside, were left to dig their driveways, walkways and vehicles out of the snow on Tuesday morning, after Mother Nature dropped between 15 to 30 centimetre­s on Prince Edward Island.
MILLICENT MCKAY/JOURNAL PIONEER Islanders, like this Park Street resident in Summerside, were left to dig their driveways, walkways and vehicles out of the snow on Tuesday morning, after Mother Nature dropped between 15 to 30 centimetre­s on Prince Edward Island.

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