Regina Leader-Post

White Christmas doubtful for Regina

- DAVE DEIBERT

SASKATOON The children are on school break. You’ve got a few days off from work. So what better time to head to a toboggan hill or an outdoor skating rink? But will the weather co-operate? Here are five things to know about this week’s weather forecast ...

1.Saskatoon and area can expect above-average temperatur­es on Christmas Day and beyond. The forecasted high on Christmas Eve is -6C — and it should be even warmer on Dec. 25, with a predicted high of -4C. Boxing Day is expected to hit -9C, right around the historical average daily high of -9.9C, with temperatur­es in the weekend hovering around -3C.

2.Regina and area’s forecasted high is also expected to be warmer than the historical daily averages. On Christmas Eve, the forecasted high is -5C before dropping slightly to -6C on Christmas Day and Boxing Day. (The historical average for Christmas Day in the Queen City: -8.6C.)

From there, nothing but sun is expected, with highs during the weekend between -4C on Friday and -1C on Sunday.

3.Saskatoon and area can plan for a white Christmas. Regina ... not so much. Environmen­t Canada on Dec. 18 noted that “a blanket of snow covers much of Saskatchew­an, some places thicker than others.”

Based on its Global Ensemble Prediction System last week, along with a light dusting of snow on Monday, Saskatoon had a 100 per cent chance of what Environmen­t Canada classifies as a white Christmas — defined as two centimetre­s of snow on the ground at 7 a.m. on Christmas Day. Regina, on Dec. 18 and with no snow in the forecast, was at only a 30 per cent chance of a white Christmas.

4.If Regina does not experience a snow-filled Dec. 25, it would be a historical outlier. According to historical data compiled by Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada looking at Christmas Days from 1955 to 2017, Regina has a 90-per-cent annual chance of a white Christmas. Over the 63year period analyzed, the Queen City saw 38 instances of what the weather service defines as a “perfect Christmas,” where at least two centimetre­s of snow is already on the ground on the morning of Dec. 25 and more snow falls during the day. In Saskatoon, the data shows a 94-per-cent annual chance of a white Christmas and 22 out of 63 years having a perfect Christmas.

5.This week’s above-average temperatur­es around virtually the entire province — from Prince Albert to Key Lake in the north, and from Moose Jaw to Estevan in the south — are welcome by most. For Saskatoon and Regina, it’s certainly shaping up to be more comfortabl­e than 1933, which is the coldest Christmas Day on record for both cities. In Saskatoon, the temperatur­e that Dec. 25 dropped to -38.9C, while in Regina it reached -39.4C.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada