Times Colonist

Al fresco dining in Toronto as West shivers

- MAAN ALHMIDI

March weather was both lion and lamb in Canada on Monday, with Toronto residents dining al fresco in sun-splashed parks while Saskatoon residents carved paths through snow drifts deep enough to swamp automobile­s.

Environmen­t Canada said the temperatur­e in Toronto hit 14 C by the afternoon, surpassing the highest temperatur­e on record for the city on a March 4, which was 13.3 C in 1974.

Many were seen enjoying the afternoon weather in Toronto, with some taking their lunch outdoors to enjoy the unseasonab­le warmth.

Sarah Nasan said she decided to enjoy the outside instead of eating in her office.

“It’s great to be able enjoy warm sun,” she said. “It feels like spring … I like having my lunch in the park.”

Environmen­t Canada meteorolog­ist Geoff Coulson said temperatur­es in Toronto were expected to climb even higher Tuesday.

“The overall weather pattern for Toronto and actually all of southern and central Ontario is (due to) a flow from the south * bringing in warm, very warm (temperatur­es) and recordbrea­king warmth,” he said in a phone interview.

“We’re forecastin­g a high of 16 degrees on Tuesday. The current record for March 5 right now is 18.5 degrees set back in 2004, so that record may be safe.”

Coulson said other cities in Ontario were also seeing nearrecord or record-breaking temperatur­es Monday.

“We could be looking at many locations across southern and central Ontario breaking records,” he said.

“In the southwest, we’re looking at places like Windsor and London, Sarnia, Kitchener, and then east of Toronto: Peterborou­gh, Ottawa, Sudbury in central Ontario. All of these places right now have records that are at risk.”

Heading West, Mother Nature went from sunny to snarly as residents dug out from a weekend storm and Environmen­t Canada issued a snowfall warning for parts of northern Saskatchew­an and northern Manitoba.

Up to 20 centimetre­s of the white stuff was expected in some regions before tapering off Monday evening.

In Saskatoon, residents took to social media to thank volunteer “snow angels” for tackling the drifts, snowblowin­g paths for neighbours to get out of their homes or to their cars.

Many vehicles parked on streets were nearly buried under tall peaks of show sculpted by roaring icy winds.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK, CP ?? A person bundled up for the cold walks through blowing snow in Regina on Sunday.
DARRYL DYCK, CP A person bundled up for the cold walks through blowing snow in Regina on Sunday.

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