Unsettled & Uncertain for the Weekend

The weather will take a turn back towards being unsettled this weekend as a weak trough moving through the region brings another round of shower or thunderstorm activity.  For the most part, though, it appears that most of the next few days will be quite pleasant.

Today will be a pleasant early summer day with daytime highs around the 23°C mark throughout the Red River Valley with mixed skies – likely leaning towards the cloudier side. Winds will be relatively light at just 20km/h or so out of the southeast. The RRV will see increasing cloudiness overnight with a low near 14°C and winds out of the southeast at 20–30km/h.

Saturday

Saturday is a day fraught with uncertainty.  Similar to earlier this week, a disturbance tracking across the Northern Plains of the U.S. will spread rain and thunderstorm activity across North Dakota, while significant uncertainty exists to how far north into Manitoba the precipitation will extend.

Overall, it will be a cloudier day with highs around the 20°C mark. There are several possible outcomes to consider for the day:

  1. We see a large area of rain move across Southern Manitoba on Saturday morning that produces a wide swath of 1–2” of rainfall. It moves out on Saturday afternoon and we see a slight chance of some evening convection.
  2. The bulk of the rainfall stays in North Dakota with a disorganized area of showers moving across Southern Manitoba through the day on Saturday.
  3. The bulk of the precipitation moves through North Dakota while precipitation focuses along a surface trough over Western Manitoba that gradually works its way into the Red River Valley later in the day.

It’s really difficult to tell which outcome will be the correct one at this point; models struggle terribly with systems that are driven by the energy release of thunderstorms; it’s not uncommon to have successive model runs wildly alter precipitation location by over 100km, such as what happened with the system that brushed Southern Manitoba earlier this week.[1]

Probability of ≥ 0.5" (13mm) of rain between Friday night and Saturday night.
Probability of ≥ 0.5″ (13mm) of rain between Friday night and Saturday night.

With all the uncertainty regarding what may happen on Saturday, I’d err towards the current HPC 24hr. rainfall probability outlook. This image shows the probability of receiving more than 0.5 inches (13mm) of rain over the 24-hour period. It shows roughly a 20–30% chance for Friday evening through Saturday evening. This would suggest that the heaviest precipitation stays through the Dakotas while further north we see some shower activity with a slight chance of some thunder mixed in. There’s a decent chance of some thunderstorms along the trough line in Western Manitoba in the afternoon, but much of that activity will likely taper off heading towards the Red River Valley.

At this point, though, I wouldn’t rule out all of the precipitation remaining to the west and south of Winnipeg, leaving us with just a cloudy day. We’ll be tracking this system and providing updates in the comments below as things become a little more clear.

Sunday

Sunday will be a fairly nice day with temperatures climbing back into the mid–20’s under mixed skies. There will be a slight chance for some afternoon pop-up shower activity throughout the Red River Valley, but nothing significant is expected. Overall, it looks to be quite a pleasant end to the weekend.

UPDATE: Convective Outlook for Sunday

A risk of thunderstorms exists across much of Manitoba today, including the Red River Valley. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop this afternoon as daytime heating, coupled with ample surface moisture, destabilizes the atmosphere. In general, thunderstorms are expected to be non-severe with no organized severe thunderstorm threat. Isolated, short-lived severe storms may be possible, though, particularly along the trough line extending from the Central Interlake southwards through the Red River Valley to the US border.

Convective Outlook - Day 1 - June 7, 2015
Convective Outlook for June 7, 2015

The overall thunderstorm setup doesn’t look too impressive today. MLCAPE values around 1000-1250 J/kg will have only around 15 kt of 0-6 km bulk shear thanks to a unidirectional northwesterly wind profile with low speed shear through the column. Temperatures are fairly mild through the depth of the column, resulting in skinny CAPE profiles. Moisture is sufficient, with dewpoint values in the 15-17°C range through the Red River Valley. It’s possible that some localized backing of the surface winds may occur near the trough, providing a little more inflow structure to the thunderstorms.

In general, a relatively unimpressive day; with limited energy available and weak focusing, once convection starts, everything will be “fighting for scraps” so to say and it’s quite likely that thunderstorm activity will be very pulse-y: a storm will spike up in intensity for 10-20 minutes then weaken as another one pops up.

With the higher moisture, and slightly more favourable directional profiles along the trough, there’s a small chance for isolated, marginally severe thunderstorms. The main feature of today’s storms will be fairly heavy downpours under them, but the unidirectional shear looks like it will successfully push storms along at a decent clip, so no one location should see a storm for too long, unless it roots on the trough line. For any storm that might become severe, the reason would likely be marginally severe hail at around 20mm (a nickel) diameter.

The weather will calm down this evening and we’ll be heading into a gorgeous summer week!


  1. The NAM forecast model went from forecasting ≥ 50mm of rain for Winnipeg to 0.5mm on the next run of the model.  ↩

Seasonal Warmth Returns

After cooler-than-normal weather set up over Winnipeg & the Red River Valley behind last Thursday’s low pressure system, it looks like more seasonal warmth is poised to return to our region as plenty of sunshine makes a return.

Today will see steady improvement with the gusty northerly winds in place this morning gradually tapering off as the cloud cover moves out of the region. By the afternoon we should see fairly sunny skies with a high near 20°C. Expect mainly clear skies and a low near 8°C.

The RDPS is forecasting high temperatures near 25°C on Thursday across much of Southern Manitoba."
The RDPS is forecasting high temperatures near 25°C on Thursday across much of Southern Manitoba.

The second half of the work week looks great with both Thursday and Friday seeing highs in the mid 20’s and little in the way of significant wind. Thursday looks mainly sunny while a bit more cloud looks possible on Friday as a low pressure system moves north through Western Manitoba. No rain is expected.

Weekend Outlook

The weekend will bring back the chance for some rain with a system moving through on Saturday. Otherwise, the weather seems fairly nice with temperatures in the mid–20’s.

Unsettled Start to the Week

The first part of this week will see unsettled weather as a strong low pressure system passes to our south. This system will likely result in moderate rainfall and a risk of thunderstorms over southern Manitoba on Tuesday.

Monday

Today looks to be mainly cloudy ahead of an approaching low pressure system. There may be a few passing showers throughout the day, but no major precipitation is expected. High temperatures are expected to reach the low twenties with gusty south winds.

Tuesday

Tuesday looks quite unsettled as we sit north of a fairly strong low pressure system over the Dakotas. A warm front will likely be located over northern North Dakota, allowing for warm and potentially stormy weather just to our south. In southern Manitoba, we will remain stuck in a cool easterly flow north of the warm front. As a result of our position relative to the warm front we likely see moderate rainfall during the day with a chance of embedded thunderstorms.

NAM Simulated RADAR Reflectivity
The simulated RADAR reflectivity from the NAM forecast for Tuesday afternoon shows a large area of rainfall moving over Southern Manitoba.

Should the warm front move further north than expected, our risk of thunderstorms will be higher, but at this time that does not look probable. Total rainfall amounts in southern Manitoba could be in the 15-35 mm range, although it is difficult to predict this sort of system ahead of time. Higher rainfall amounts are certainly possible on a localized basis due to isolated thunderstorm activity.

Wednesday

Wednesday looks cool and cloudy as Tuesday’s system departs. We my see a few showers during the day, but in general not much precipitation is expected. The wind will be from the north at around 30 km/h.

Long Range

The long range forecast suggests we’ll see generally normal to above-normal weather through the middle of June. Numerous weak to moderate weather systems are expected to traverse the region over the next while, meaning our weather will continue to feature unsettled patches, before we return to more favourable conditions.

Cool Weekend on Tap

Just when it felt like Winnipeg was out of the woods and summer had arrived, conditions will make it feel like the clock has been turned back to the beginning of the month with temperatures 10°C below normal and a risk of frost returning for the weekend. The cooler weather is courtesy an Arctic airmass that is plunging southwards behind yesterday’s potent system that brought rain & thunderstorms to Saskatchewan & Manitoba.

Today will be a very cool day with brisk northerly winds at 30km/h with some gusts up to around 50km/h.  Today’s high will top out at just 11–12°C through the Red River Valley with mixed-to-cloudy skies until the afternoon when things begin to clear up.  Winds will ease tonight with temperatures plummeting towards the freezing mark. Winnipeg will just be ahead of the main ridge axis, making sub-freezing temperatures quite possible. Areas near the core of the city may escape frost, however anywhere closer to outskirts of the city will have a strong chance of seeing some frost. The low will vary depending where in the city the temperature is measured, but in general I expect it to be around 0°C with temperatures possible 1–2°C colder than than near the outskirts of the city. Rural areas will likely deal with overnight lows of –1 or –2°C.

The remainder of the weekend looks much calmer but still cool. Saturday and Sunday will see high temperatures returning back towards the mid-teens with mainly sunny skies. Some cloud will push through late Saturday through early Sunday which should help keep the overnight lows in the low-to-mid single digits.

A Glance At Next Week

The start of next week will bring a return to more seasonable high temperatures in the 20’s, however alongside the warmer weather comes the potential for more unsettled weather as multiple systems track through the Southern Prairies & Northern Plains.

As such, Southern Manitoba will likely be dealing with a decent chance for showers or rain through the first half of the week. Depending on how things develop, rainfall totals could be anywhere from a trace to over an inch, so we’ll be sure to track things as the weekend progresses. The weather looks to settle down for the second half of the week with daytime highs in the upper teens to lower 20’s.