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Blast of winter weather: Nearly a metre of snow covers parts of Ontario, thousands without power

Vinson

Well-known member
Nov 24, 2023
1,497
1,208
113
We had a decent winter last year, I hope this year is not going to be crazy.




A blast of winter weather delivered a “rude awakening” to parts of Ontario, an Environment Canada meteorologist said, as some communities dug out from nearly a metre of snow on Saturday with more to come.

Snow blowing off the Great Lakes closed a stretch of the Trans-Canada Highway in northern Ontario, knocked out power to more than 30,000 customers and buried some communities under piles of heavy snow.

The snowfall and hazardous road conditions were “a very rude awakening” after Ontario’s mild autumn, said operational meteorologist Brent Linington.

“It’s a pretty big flip of the switch to go from the nice fall that we had to see the snowfall that we’re getting now,” he said in an interview.
Communities on the shores of lakes Superior and Huron felt the brunt of the storm and remained under a snow squall warning Saturday. Areas around Niagara Falls and Kingston were also under lake-effect snow squall watches.

Bracebridge and Sault Ste. Marie, two of the hardest hit areas, were digging out from around 89 and 80 centimetres, respectively, Linington said. Both areas were bracing for another 40 to 50 centimetres of snow on Saturday.

Sault Ste. Marie resumed transit and community centre operations Saturday after shuttering them Friday because of the storm, an update on the city’s website said.

Hydro One, the provincial utility, said its crews were working to restore power to more than 30,000 customers, mostly in hard-hit central Ontario, around Bracebridge and Parry Sound.

“Our crews are working as quickly as possible to restore power,” said Pooja Dawani, a Hydro One spokesperson.

The disruptions extended to some of the province’s major roadways. Ontario Provincial Police say Highway 17, also known as the Trans-Canada, was closed between Wawa and Sault Ste. Marie due to whiteout conditions.

A bulletin from Environment Canada said the Kingston area could see between 20 and 30 centimetres of snow through Sunday night. Niagara Falls, meanwhile, could get upwards of 15 centimetres.

While the storm is expected to taper off across Ontario by Sunday night, more winter weather is on the way.

Linington, the Environment Canada meteorologist, said a broad brush of snow is forecasted for mid-week before another potential blast of lake-effect snow next weekend.

 
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Reactions: K Douglas

K Douglas

Half Man Half Amazing
Jan 5, 2005
27,303
7,983
113
Room 112
I read there are some places in western N.Y. that received over 40 inches of snow since Thursday. That's over 100 cm. Crazy.
 

Twister

Well-known member
Aug 24, 2002
4,659
423
83
GTA
We had a decent winter last year, I hope this year is not going to be crazy.




A blast of winter weather delivered a “rude awakening” to parts of Ontario, an Environment Canada meteorologist said, as some communities dug out from nearly a metre of snow on Saturday with more to come.

Snow blowing off the Great Lakes closed a stretch of the Trans-Canada Highway in northern Ontario, knocked out power to more than 30,000 customers and buried some communities under piles of heavy snow.

The snowfall and hazardous road conditions were “a very rude awakening” after Ontario’s mild autumn, said operational meteorologist Brent Linington.

“It’s a pretty big flip of the switch to go from the nice fall that we had to see the snowfall that we’re getting now,” he said in an interview.
Communities on the shores of lakes Superior and Huron felt the brunt of the storm and remained under a snow squall warning Saturday. Areas around Niagara Falls and Kingston were also under lake-effect snow squall watches.

Bracebridge and Sault Ste. Marie, two of the hardest hit areas, were digging out from around 89 and 80 centimetres, respectively, Linington said. Both areas were bracing for another 40 to 50 centimetres of snow on Saturday.

Sault Ste. Marie resumed transit and community centre operations Saturday after shuttering them Friday because of the storm, an update on the city’s website said.

Hydro One, the provincial utility, said its crews were working to restore power to more than 30,000 customers, mostly in hard-hit central Ontario, around Bracebridge and Parry Sound.

“Our crews are working as quickly as possible to restore power,” said Pooja Dawani, a Hydro One spokesperson.

The disruptions extended to some of the province’s major roadways. Ontario Provincial Police say Highway 17, also known as the Trans-Canada, was closed between Wawa and Sault Ste. Marie due to whiteout conditions.

A bulletin from Environment Canada said the Kingston area could see between 20 and 30 centimetres of snow through Sunday night. Niagara Falls, meanwhile, could get upwards of 15 centimetres.

While the storm is expected to taper off across Ontario by Sunday night, more winter weather is on the way.

Linington, the Environment Canada meteorologist, said a broad brush of snow is forecasted for mid-week before another potential blast of lake-effect snow next weekend.

No ! i don't want to see. 😁 It was cold this morning, I guess I'm not used to it.
 

that6969

Member
Nov 18, 2024
88
98
18
I'm in north Muskoka and our area didn't get hit as hard as down south. Schools even up here are cancelled tmrw. They are still trying to get vehicles off the hwy that have been stuck there since early morning Sat. Plus there's still accidents happening between Hwy 11 & 169 and such so they keep having to close the hwy. Luckily most people around here tend to be helpful since it's small towns. Between Orillia and Bracebridge lots of sections are still closed off going both directions.
 

Primetime21

Well-known member
Nov 27, 2001
729
1,253
93
internet
And very thankfully it missed the Niagara region in Canada. I didn't want to spend the day shoveling/snow blowing snow. :eek:
Now back to watching NFL games. :)

LTO_3
I didn't have to shovel once last winter. I know i won't get that lucky this winter.
 

shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
51,719
10,111
113
Toronto
WoW!!!!! 😲
But still happier it's there and not where I am.
When the natives settled here thousands of years ago, they must have known something. Once you drive about 100km north, east or west from Toronto, it becomes a snow belt. Toronto is in some kind of sheltered little pocket.
 

that6969

Member
Nov 18, 2024
88
98
18
I moved up here over a decade ago from the GTA and I knew what snow I was going to deal with and the snow didn't bother me. Most of these new city folks who moved up here in the past 4 or 5 year still don't have snow tires or are unprepared to drive on the hwy during the winter without an emergency kit in their vehicles like extra blankets, snacks, etc. And if the weather is calling for a storm between Barrie to South River I wouldn't even drive. I've done white knuckle driving twice along with being stuck in the hwy once for a few hours compared to this and it's not worth it. And these people who bought property up here should save up their money and even buy small generators because if you don't live directly in town then good chance you could be out of power for longer or even a few days. Most people up here are use to dealing with this stuff. It's the dumbass city folks who are clueless. And if you don't live directly in town then drive with a saw or gas powered saw cause you'll encounter big branches and stuff blocking a road and people deal with it themself than wait around. And unfortunately most of these truckers work for companies don't provide snow tires for the trucks. It's also annoying when it's white knuckle driving and some young buck alpha male type zooms by with his pickup then later is in the ditch cause he thought people driving extremely slow with their 4 ways on were pussies.
 
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