logo
Heat, smoke and tropical storm updates

Heat, smoke and tropical storm updates

CTV News5 days ago
A hot and sunny forecast for the Maritimes then the latest developments when it comes to Atlantic tropical storms.
A high-pressure system keeps the Maritimes hot and dry through the end of this week. Thursday sees little wildfire haze but may return Friday and Saturday. Tropical Storm Dexter continues to move northeast towards the northern Atlantic while two other areas are being watched for storm development over the next several days.
Hot and dry
Unless there is a substantial chance in the general weather pattern over North America there is unlikely to be any significant rain in the Maritimes for at least the next several days.
High pressure keeps conditions mainly sunny through Saturday. Temperatures are also set to rise through that period.
High temperatures in the mid-to-high 20's can be expected Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Coastal areas will be in the low-to-mid 20's where sea breezes are present.
Fire danger
Current fire danger ratings in the Maritimes from Natural Resources Canada. (CTV Atlantic/ Kalin Mitchell)
The fire danger rating is assessed as high-to-extreme across most of the region. The exception being a moderate rating in the northwestern area of New Brunswick. Fire bans, activity restrictions and mandatory/voluntary water usage restrictions have been issued.
Wildfire smoke
The high-pressure system that has moved in from Quebec has bottled up, for the time being, wildfire smoke in southern Ontario and New England preventing it from moving over the Maritimes.
Smoke forecast
High pressure has cleared the Maritimes of smoky haze on Wednesday. High and faint smoke may return aloft over parts of the region late this week and weekend. (CTV Atlantic/ Kalin Mitchell)
Modelling for the movement of the smoke indicates that those areas as well as parts of Saskatchewan, Manitoba and northern Ontario will be most impacted through Friday. The same modelling then shows that a faint, high haze of the smoke could move over northern New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and eastern Nova Scotia on Thursday. More high haze possible over the Maritimes late Friday into Saturday.
It is very likely that in the case of the Maritimes the haze will be high enough not to impact air quality.
Tropical Storm Dexter and areas being monitored for development
Tropical Storm Dexter strengthened overnight as it continues to move northeast with the maximum sustained winds coming up to 85 km/h near the centre of the storm. Dexter is forecast to become a post-tropical storm and move into the north Atlantic by this weekend with no impact to weather in the Maritimes.
Tropical storm Dexter
Tropical Storm Dexter will continue to move northeast, and away, from the Maritimes. (CTV Atlantic/ Kalin Mitchell)
Two separate areas are being monitored for possible tropical storm development. One over the eastern tropical Atlantic is being given a 60 per cent chance of development over the next seven days. The path of that system is likely to move it towards a position east of Bermuda before starting a turn to the north.
The second area off the US southeastern seaboard. That area being given a 40 per cent chance of development over the next seven days. Some long range computer guidance has suggested that if a system does form there it could move to a position south of the Maritimes by Sunday. The same scenario then moves the possible storm east of the Maritimes without coming directly through.
Weather outlook
Two other areas in the Atlantic are being monitored for possible tropical storm development over the next seven days. (CTV Atlantic/ Kalin Mitchell)
Neither area poses a direct risk of inclement weather to the Maritimes as of Wednesday. Both areas will be monitored in the event there is change in that outlook.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Exceptions, rules and looking at the big picture
Exceptions, rules and looking at the big picture

Winnipeg Free Press

time32 minutes ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Exceptions, rules and looking at the big picture

Opinion 'But we've always had smoky days…' We certainly have. But this year has been the smokiest year since smoke records for Winnipeg started being kept and we've still got to the end of October to see those smoke numbers rise even higher. That doesn't seem to be an anomaly, either. Russell Wangersky/Free Press Forest fire smoke over Winnipeg, July 11 Four of the five smokiest years in Winnipeg have been in the last five years: 2021, 2023, 2024 and 2025. More smoke, because there are more large wildland fires. 'But we've always had forest fires…' Yes. We're in early August, not even nearly at the end of the forest fire season. As of July 30th in Canada, there have been 3,582 forest fires, which puts us slightly below the 10-year average (to date) of 3,931 fires — across the country, that number puts this year at about 91 per cent of the 10-year average. But consider the amount of land burned — as of July 30, 6,260,975 hectares, compared to the 10-year average of 2,704,359 hectares. In other words, 232 per cent more land burned, according to Natural Resources Canada's National Wildland Fire Situation Report. There were also big fire years nationally in 2014, 2017, 2018, 2021 and 2023. Why? Not because fire crews aren't doing the work. It's primarily because we're building closer and closer into the area between urban and forest land and primarily because it's hotter and drier. 'But it's been hot and dry before…' The global average temperature for July was the third-highest on record. The second-highest was July 2023, the highest, July 2024. The ten most recent years are the warmest years on record. And with that hotter comes dryer — and most of Canada is abnormally dry. Here's how it looked on Agriculture Canada's Canadian Drought Monitor, as of the end of June: 'Precipitation was below normal for much of British Columbia, northwestern and southeastern Alberta, southern and eastern Saskatchewan, all of Manitoba, southeastern Ontario and much of Atlantic Canada. Drought conditions expanded across British Columbia, the southern Prairies, southeastern Ontario and the Atlantic Region. … At the end of the month, 62 per cent of the country was classified as Abnormally Dry or Moderate to Extreme Drought, including 66 per cent of the country's agricultural landscape.' Look, if you don't want to believe unusual things are happening with the climate, you don't have to — but picking a single example at random to try and support your case is a mug's game. For years, everyone had at least one friend who hated seatbelts and would spout that they had heard some apocryphal tale about a driver who rolled their car and 'would have been strangled' if they'd been wearing a seatbelt. Could that happen? Theoretically, yes. Weekday Evenings Today's must-read stories and a roundup of the day's headlines, delivered every evening. Never mind that the science is abundantly clear that you're far safer wearing a seatbelt in a crash, especially from the often-fatal result of being ejected from the car during the crash. There are true stories about babies surviving being snatched into the air by tornadoes — but that doesn't mean you should feel perfectly safe standing in the middle of a Manitoba farmer's field as the funnel cloud approaches, chewing up the turf as it gets ever-closer. Or being told 'you can die of electrocution if a plugged-in hair dryer falls into a full bathtub with you already in the tub,' and you answering 'But hair dryers have fallen into full bathtubs for years, and some people have been just fine…' You don't want to be saying that as the hair dryer slips out of your hands. The results tend to be more decisive and not in a good way.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store