#7 - The 4 major snowstorms & blizzards of early 2013
The first 3 months of 2013 featured 4 major snowstorms and blizzards. Coincidentally, all but one occurred on a Monday!
A Colorado Low January 11-12 brought the first blizzard in the RRV since March 2011. Winds of 50-60 km/h and gusts over 70 km/h combined with abundant fresh snow. 10-15 cm fell in Winnipeg while 15-25 cm fell to the southeast, including about 20 cm in Steinbach. Roadways were extremely trecherous, visibilities were near-zero for several hours and snow drifts approached a metre deep in some areas. Visibility at Winnipeg airport was 1 km or less for 27 consecutive hours.
By @annhoogie;Wpg Beach Feb 18 |
A Montana Low March 17-18 gave the RRV its third blizzard of the winter. The worst conditions were south of Winnipeg where winds of 50-60 km/h gusted to 70 km/h. Generally, 10-17 cm of snow fell across southern Manitoba. Whiteout conditions prompted the closure of highway 75, as well as Fermor Avenue east of Lagimodière Boulevard in Winnipeg. Visibility was so bad that snow plow operations were halted in the Morris area. After the storm, snow depth sat around 50-80 cm across southern Manitoba. A depth of 58 cm in Winnipeg was the deepest in March since 1966.
#6 - A week of drenching thunderstorms
The June 20 to 26 period was the highlight of flash flooding this year in southern Manitoba.
Storm south of Wpg before it entered the city |
Two rounds of widespread thunderstorms early June 22 and 23 in southwestern Manitoba dumped biblical rainfall. In total, both events dumped 80-150 mm of rain from Melita to Brandon to Dauphin, creating severe overland flooding. The town of Reston was hit hard with over 140 mm of rain. Floodwaters were so deep that part of the town had to be evacuated. Winnipegosis and Pipestone were also hard hit. In Brandon, 90-120 mm of rain caused street and basement flooding.
Also on June 22, a line of very slow moving storm cells northwest and southwest of Portage la Prairie in the afternoon and evening dumped unimaginable rainfall. Radar estimates pointed to 150 + mm of rain in just a few hours northwest of Portage.
Lastly, severe thunderstorms June 25 dumped more heavy rains in southwestern Manitoba. Unfortunately, Reston was once again hit hard, receiving 104 mm of rain! Storms in the area then merged into a squall line which raced through the RRV at night. Frequent lightning, strong winds and torrential rains occurred. As much as 30 mm fell in southern parts of Winnipeg. A home was struck by lightning in northeast Winnipeg, igniting a fire, but no one was injured. In addition, winds up to 100 km/h caused power outages in southwestern Manitoba.
Radar imagery from the NWS of the squall line as it began racing across southern Manitoba |
#5 - January in November
Winter began with a fury this year with frequent blasts of unseasonably cold air in late November. The cold conditions were especially prevelent in the last 10 days of the month when temperatures dropped well into the minus teens and twenties at night. At times daytime highs were in the minus teens, some 10 degrees below normal.
Most impressive was on November 23 as a very strong arctic high pressure system moved into southern Manitoba. With a morning low of -26.8°C at Winnipeg airport, it was the coldest November night since November 26, 1996 when we dipped to -27.9°C. Temperatures were much colder out west, dipping to the -30's in Saskatchewan and parts of western Manitoba.
However, the biggest story was the high pressure. Winnipeg reached its highest pressure reading ever recorded in November since these records began in 1953. Standardized sea-level pressure topped out at 104.86 kPa (or station-level pressure of 101.64 kPa). This beat the previous station level pressure record of 101.53 kPa on November 20, 1978.
Top 7 highest station-level pressure readings in November in Winnipeg since 1953
Rank
|
Date
|
Max
station-level pressure
|
1
|
Nov 23, 2013
|
101.64 kPa
|
2
|
Nov 20, 1978
|
101.53 kPa
|
3
|
Nov 19, 1978
|
101.50 kPa
|
4
|
Nov 22, 2013
|
101.48 kPa
|
5
|
Nov 20, 2008
|
101.45 kPa
|
6
|
Nov 29, 1964
|
101.33 kPa
|
7
|
Nov 13, 1996
|
101.30 kPa
|