The News (New Glasgow)

Spring is coming, but winter has ‘a little bit of bite left,’ forecaster says

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Despite unusually warm temperatur­es in parts of the country, a forecaster says bouts of late winter weather are expected for many through March, with more springlike temperatur­es to arrive by May.

Chris Scott says The Weather Network spring forecast calls for Canadians to expect more storms before the wintry weather ends.

Scott, chief meteorolog­ist at The Weather Network, says the clash between warm weather coming up from the south and the fairly typical cold of Northern Canada will cause snow in March and rain in April and May.

In concrete terms, he says that means residents of Western Canada have great conditions for skiing, people who live along Manitoba’s Red River Basin should watch out for flooding and those in southern Ontario should keep their snow tires on.

Residents of Quebec, the Atlantic provinces, Yukon, Northwest Territorie­s and Nunavut can expect near normal temperatur­es and precipitat­ion this spring.

Scott says it’s a continuati­on of one of the strangest Canadian winters on record.

“The weather patterns across Canada are pretty wild,” said Scott.

Some examples, he said, are snowstorms in Atlantic Canada, temperatur­es rising to the teens in southern Ontario and Quebec, and bigger snowbanks in Coquitlam, B.C., than in Toronto in February.

One of the biggest factors affecting the winter weather are the unusually rapid shifts between El Nino, a climate cycle involving warmer-than-average waters in the Pacific Ocean, and La Nina, cooler-than-average waters in the same area.

Even a small change in ocean temperatur­es will affect the amount of moisture in the air, which has an affect on the weather. Because El Nino and La Nina are located over wide swaths of the ocean, they can “change the overall weather patterns around the world,” Scott said.

Last year’s El Nino was one of the strongest in history.

A typical pattern would involve a switch to La Nina within a period of two to seven years. For that switch to occur in a matter of months is unpreceden­ted.

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