Weather Forecasts, Facts and News for Winnipeg & Southern Manitoba
Author: Brad
Brad lives in Winnipeg with his wife and two children and is the founder of A Weather Moment. He has loved weather from a very young age and has followed that passion through his life so far. He received a B.Sc. in Earth Sciences with Specialization in Atmospheric Sciences and is currently employed in the field of meteorology. You can find the author as WeatherInThePeg on Mastodon.
Temperatures will remain seasonably cool in Winnipeg through the weekend with several chances for rain as a slow-moving low pressure system moves through the region.
Winnipeg will see mainly cloudy skies today with a breezy easterly wind keeping temperatures seasonably cool with a high near 17°C. There will also be on-and-off chances for rain today as the city remains along the eastern flank of an area of showers and thunderstorms moving through western Manitoba and the western Red River Valley. By mid-afternoon the showers should push north of the city, leaving Winnipeg with cloudy skies for the remainder of the day.
Winnipeg finds itself along the eastern edge of a band of showers streching across the western Red River Valley this morning
Overnight, the city will see a chance of more showers or thunderstorms as the slow-moving low crosses the Red River Valley. The best chance for any precipitation will be after midnight. The breezy winds will continue out of the east near 30 km/h with temperatures dipping to a low near 13°C.
Saturday will bring more cloud and a chance of some light showers to the city. It will be another cool day with a high of just 16°C. Southeasterly winds near 30 km/h in the morning will shift to westerly at 10 to 20 km/h in the afternoon. The cloud will begin to break up Saturday night as winds pick up out of the northwest to 30 km/h. Temperatures will dip to a low near 7°C.
Much of Manitoba will see rain and/or showers on Saturday
Sunday will finally bring the sun back to the region as the clouds clear out. Winds will remain out of the northwest at 20 to 30 km/h and temperatures will reach a high near 19°C. Winnipeg will see a few clouds Sunday night with a low near 8°C.
Long Range Outlook
Next week will bring temperatures closer to seasonal values. Tuesday into Wednesday look to bring a slight chance of some showers or thunderstorms, otherwise conditions look quite pleasant.
Winnipeg’s seasonal daytime high is currently 22°C while the seasonal overnight low is 9°C.
Winnipeg will see significantly cooler temperatures through the remainder of the week as mostly cloudy skies bring more chances for rain.
A low pressure system passing through North Dakota will bring substantially cooler conditions than seen over the past few days. As it tracks eastwards, northerly winds of 20 to 30 km/h will develop in Winnipeg, ushering in cooler temperatures from the north and limiting the daytime high to about 22°C. Skies will remain cloudy with showers and thunderstorms developing midday through the afternoon. Much of the precipitation will end up to the south and east of Winnipeg, leaving the city with just a chance of showers or thunderstorms.
Winnipeg is forecast to be on the northwestern edge of today’s showers and thunderstorms
The northerly wind will continue at 10 to 20 km/h through the night. Temperatures will dip to a low near 14°C under cloudy skies.
Thursday will bring a lull in the scattered precipitation to the Red River Valley. A flat pressure pattern over the region will bring northerly winds of 10 to 20 km/h to Winnipeg and a high again near 22°C. Winds will shift easterly overnight as the next low approaches the region. Lows should reach around 12°C on Thursday night.
Friday will bring showers back to the region as a low pressure system lifts northeastwards out of the Dakotas. High temperatures will reach around 20°C, kept lower by easterly winds sourced from a high pressure system over Hudson Bay. As the low lifts north through the day, showers or thunderstorms will develop over southern Manitoba. This system then looks likely to support an area of showers and thunderstorms through Friday night.
Several forecast models are showing a high likelihood of showers and thunderstorms developing over the Red River Valley on Friday night
A warm front lifting northwards will keep temperatures warmer on Friday night. Winnipeg should see a low near 15°C with southeasterly winds of 20 to 30 km/h.
Long Range Outlook
The showers are forecast to taper off Saturday morning, then clearing will work into the Red River Valley. The remainder of the weekend looks pleasant with partly cloudy skies and slightly cooler than seasonal highs near 20°C.
Winnipeg’s seasonal daytime high is currently 22°C while the seasonal overnight low is 8°C.
There is growing confidence that the heat and humidity expected to move into southern Manitoba on Tuesday will bring severe weather to the region. Most areas in the south will need to keep their eyes to the sky and stay alert for any watches or warnings issued by ECCC, particularly for the afternoon into the evening.
Although conditions are fairly dry now, a strong low-level jet will advect significant amounts of Gulf moisture northwards into the region overnight. This will mix down fairly quickly in the morning, resulting in a rather startling transition from yesterday’s comfortable humidity to very muggy conditions. The heat and humidity will set the stage for some explosive thunderstorm potential on Tuesday afternoon.
ECCC is forecasting a severe weather threat for southern Manitoba on Tuesday
The focus for thunderstorm development will be a warm front that should lie close to the Trans-Canada Highway corridor by Tuesday afternoon. Storm development is a bit sensitive; in order for the storms to form, cloud cover from any overnight convection will have to clear out enough to allow temperatures to warm into the mid-twenties. Too much cloud cover or more nocturnal convection than expected? The warm front could shift south, daytime heating could be limited, or — if the nocturnal convection was vigorous enough — much of the existing mid-level instability could be consumed.
That said, guidance suggests that much of the Red River Valley and areas east should see enough sunshine to warm things up so we’re going to go ahead and assume that’s correct.
Starting with the foundations and looking at the MIST principles:
Moisture: Significant moisture with deep-layer dew point values climbing to nearly 20°C. A well-organized southeasterly flow within the warm sector will sustain and replenish low-level moisture through the day.
Instability: 850-500 mb lapse rates between 7 and 8°C will combine with the high dew points and temperatures in the 26-28°C range to produce 1500-2000 J/kg of MLCAPE. Lifted index values near -9 reflect the significant instability associated with this system. Capping should not be too much of an issue with a 30-40 J inversion forecast to erode in the afternoon.
Shear: Perhaps the weakest looking aspect of the day; while the column shows favourable veering with slightly looping low-level hodographs, inflow winds will be weak. Some decent winds in the low- and upper-levels, but mid-level winds are also lacking a bit. All in all, probably enough shear to organize things, but linear shear looks stronger than the twisting, so thunderstorms will likely line out fairly quickly.
Trigger: A prominent warm front draped across the region will provide the focus for convective initiation.
The next 24 hours looks to generally play out something like this for the Red River Valley: first, a few elevated non-severe thunderstorms will develop tonight ahead of the warm front as it lifts northwards and move through the region early Tuesday morning. They’ll clear out by mid-morning, leaving behind mixed skies. The heat and humidity will quickly build, and new thunderstorms will develop along the warm front mid-afternoon. These thunderstorms will initially develop as discrete supercells or multicellular clusters, then grow upscale into some sort of QLCS1. The primary threats from these thunderstorms will be large hail and damaging winds. Of particular concern will be the potential for a bow echo to form on the northern edge of the warm front and track eastwards along the frontal boundary, producing an extended swath of strong to severe winds.
This simulated RADAR forecast for Tuesday evening shows what we expect: active across southern Manitoba with the potential for severe thunderstorms
While the possibility of a tornado cannot be completely ruled out, the relatively weak inflow winds limit it to an unlikely and isolated threat.
The thunderstorms will push northeast of the Winnipeg and the Red River Valley in the evening. The severe weather threat will likely be over by 9 or 10 PM.
Although I haven’t gone into it too much, it’s worth noting that this severe thunderstorm threat continues westwards into southwestern Manitoba. In addition to the severe weather threat, the region also faces greater risk of significant rainfall as moisture lifted up into the atmosphere by the thunderstorms runs into this system’s deformation zone, likely creating a slow-moving southwest-northeast band of showers and/or thunderstorms through the Parkland and Interlake capable of producing substantial mounts of rainfall.
This is, of course, just the best forecast we can provide at the current time. A lot of this hinges on thunderstorms developing overnight in the expected way and that can be a precarious thing to depend on. That said, it’s definitely worth keeping an eye on things tomorrow and keeping aware of any watches or warnings issued by Environment Canada.
QLCS stand for quasi-linear convective system and denotes the general family of thunderstorms that develop along lines such as squall lines and bow echoes. ↩
Winnipeg will see another beautiful, warm start to the week, but another low pressure system pushing northwards out of the United States will bring showers and thunderstorms back to the region for Tuesday and Wednesday.
Under the influence of a broad area of high pressure, Winnipeg will see beautiful conditions today with plenty of sunshine and a high temperature near 28°C. Winds will be light and humidity will be comfortable, leaving little to complain about! Later in the afternoon, a bit of cloud will begin spreading into the Red River Valley as a low pressure system begins moving into North Dakota.
Temperatures will remain mild tonight as warmer, humid air begins building into the province as the North Dakota low continues to approach. Temperatures in Winnipeg will drop to around 17°C with winds picking up out of the south to around 30 km/h. A few showers or thunderstorms may develop and move through the region overnight.
Winnipeg will see humidity levels increase on Tuesday as dew points climb into the upper teens; combined with a high near 29°C, humidex values are forecast to reach into the mid-thirties. The morning will bring mixed to cloudy skies as any nocturnal convection finishes moving through, then Winnipeg and the Red River Valley will see a few sunny breaks through the early afternoon.
Humid conditions will return to Winnipeg and the Red River Valley on Tuesday
As the heat and humidity builds, showers and thunderstorms will likely develop across much of southern Manitoba in the afternoon. Triggered by the incoming disturbance from North Dakota, the showers and thunderstorms will spread northeastwards through the night. There is a small chance some of these thunderstorms could be severe with large hail being the primary threat. There are indications that a few areas may see some training thunderstorms with local rainfall accumulations of 25-50 mm.
Wednesday will be a much cooler day in Winnipeg with high temperatures only near 22°C. While this is significantly cooler than the city has seen over the past while, it’s in fact near-seasonal for this time of year. Skies will remain mostly cloudy with a good chance of showers as the low centre itself moves through the region. Some breezy northwesterly winds will move in through the afternoon, picking up to around 30 km/h.
Skies will remain mostly cloudy on Wednesday evening with northwest winds near 20 km/h and a low near 14°C.
Long Range Outlook
Winnipeg will see a break from the heat through the remainder of the week with near-seasonal temperatures forecast. Skies look cloudier than not, with generally unsettled weather returning for the end of the week into the weekend.
Winnipeg’s seasonal daytime high is currently 22°C while the seasonal overnight low is 8°C.