Rainy April puts Waterloo region on par with Vancouver - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 10:36 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Kitchener-Waterloo

Rainy April puts Waterloo region on par with Vancouver

Waterloo region saw so much rain in April that it almost matched notoriously rainy Vancouver. Now, May is shaping up to be just as rainy, with a significant rainfall to start the month.

Waterloo Region almost as rainy as Vancouver in April

A wet windshield and windshield wipers are seen from within a vehicle.
Cars should watch out for hydroplaning due to steady rainfall. (iStock)

Rain, rain go away, come again another day, goes the nursery rhyme.

But the weather in Waterloo region is paying no heed the rain keeps coming back, day after day after day.

In fact, the region saw so much rain in April, 124.2 millimetres in all, that it almost matched notoriously rainy Vancouver, which saw 134 millimetres of rain last month.

"It was definitely not an average April," said FrankSeglenieks, the coordinator of the University of Waterloo Weather Station in an interview with CBCK-W'sThe Morning Edition HostCraig Norris on Friday.

"Itwas about one and half times more precipitation than we'd see in April and it wasn't even, like, big storms. There were a couple of big storms, but it was spread out relatively evenly."

A look at the average monthly precipitation, both rain and snow, in Waterloo Region. (CBC/Environment Canada/UWaterloo Weather Station)

The rain has caused water levels in the area to riseand the Grand River Conservation Authority issued a flood watch on Wednesday, which will be reassessed on Friday at noon.

"There were, like, fivedays that were over 10millimetres. So, it wasn't like there was one big shot of rain, it was pretty much throughout the whole month and that has really kept the ground saturated," Seglenieks said.

"The ground hasn't really had a chance to drain to recover, if you want to say it that way.It's just been constant. It's getting wet, it starts to dry out, and then, boom! more rain. Starts to dry out, boom! more rain."

Seglenieks saidthe jet stream is hanging low over Ontario and storms are being pulled into that warm current of air, which is why the region is seeing so much rain. He also saidthe jet stream is pulling moisture from the Gulf of Mexico.

Data from Environment Canada's normals for Waterloo Airport, from 1981-2010, and from the University of Waterloo's Weather Station, show just how wet the spring of 2017 has been so far. (CBC/Environment Canada/UW Weather Station)

As for how this spring will stack up against others, Segelenieks says that while 2010 was also rainy, he figures we'll surpass those records.

"This is probably going to at least be in the top five of all-time springs," he said, in terms of precipitation.

On average, the region gets aboutabout 220 mm of precipitation in the spring,andSegeleniekssaid that as of Friday morning around 7:00 a.m., that total was hoveringat 190 mm.

"We're about halfway through spring, the astronomical spring," Segelenieks said. "We've almost had the full amount for the whole spring in this first half of spring."

Temperatures are also lower than normal for this time of year. Usually, the daytime high is about 17, but there are single-digit temperaturesin the weekend forecast, and a chance of snow, too.

Seglenieks saidit looks like for the next week or so it will continue to becooler than normal.