The next two days will be relatively quiet for storms across most of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. After the sun goes down on Wednesday night, everything will begin to change. Hot humid air will take over from the fairly cool weather of the past few days. Storms will erupt in north central Alberta, well east of the foothills and quickly take hold in southern Saskatchewan overnight and into Thursday morning. This will set up a string of several days with great potential for widespread supercell thunderstorms and tornadoes. The main risk areas will be the corridor from Lloydminster to North Battleford, through Saskatoon, Regina and Yorkton with the most significant potential in the Estevan/Brandon/Yorkton triangle of south east Saskatchewan/south west Manitoba. Stay tuned for updates as forecast models often shift and the situation can increase or lessen as the days progress.
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Canadian Prairie Storms Pages
Monday, July 08, 2013
Friday, July 05, 2013
Thursday, July 04, 2013
Rotating Cells in the South West
5:28pm SST
Tornado warned storm followed by a huge hail core north of #claresholm 4pm this afternoon #abstorm pic.twitter.com/COEVvr5qNe
— Richard Gottardo (@RichardGottardo) July 4, 2013
5:10pm SST
@canadogreg @RobDavis_Wx wall cloud? Was funneling I thought. Maple creek sk. #skstorm pic.twitter.com/CyfZkbsuAV
— Derek Bushman (@DerekBushman) July 4, 2013
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