Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Cold warnings cover much of the West, chilling even the sturdiest Canadians

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Jan, 2024 04:56 PM
  • Cold warnings cover much of the West, chilling even the sturdiest Canadians

Ski resorts are closed because of extreme cold, teachers are impressing students by instantly freezing boiling water, and it's even too cold for a zoo penguin walk.

Extreme cold has moved over Western Canada from the Arctic, bringing wind chill values approaching -50 to some areas, surprising even residents who know how to deal with cold winters. 

Ben DeKleine, owner of Magel's Cafe in Prince George, B.C., said freezing temperatures there have put his truck, which is usually ready for Canadian winters, out of commission.

"You called me as I'm looking through my F-150's owner's manual, because my truck won't start this morning because it didn't appreciate the cold snap," said DeKleine, who has lived in Prince George for more than a decade.

"I didn't have it plugged in because it just hasn't been cold enough, and now it won't start," he said. "I think it blew a fuse."

Environment Canada said temperatures in Prince George dipped to -29 C Thursday and may drop to as low as -36 C Friday just a week after hovering around the freezing mark.

The forecaster has posted extreme cold or arctic outflow warnings for parts of Yukon and the Northwest Territories, most of B.C. and Saskatchewan and all of Alberta. 

Temperatures in Calgary and Edmonton dipped to -30 C and -31 C respectively Thursday and lows of -38 C are possible there Friday.

The Calgary Zoo said it has cancelled a preview of its outdoor penguin walk due to safety concerns for staff and visitors, and several ski hills have also been disrupted.

Nakiska Ski Area, which is in Kananaskis Country about an hour drive west of Calgary, said on its website that it will be closed Thursday and Friday.

In Banff National Park, where wind chill values were expected to be close to -40, the Banff Sunshine ski resort closed Thursday. Two others, Lake Louise Ski Resort and Mount Norquay, said they are open but operations are reduced.

In Watson Lake, Yukon, where daytime temperatures of -46 C made it the coldest place in Canada on Thursday morning, school principal Ryan Hewgill said he also ran into car trouble.

"I will be honest, my truck did start this morning, but the first time it seemed like it might not,” said Hewgill, principal at Watson Lake Secondary School.

He said other staff members ran into similar issues with their vehicles. 

Yukon residents are more acclimated to cold weather than most, and Thursday was mostly another normal school day in Watson Lake, he said. 

Teachers especially love the cold weather because it allows for classes to conduct boiling-water experiments, where the water is thrown in the air outside and freezes instantaneously, Hewgill said. 

“We acknowledge the cold, but nobody like really focusing on it too much," Hewgill said. "It’s just part of Yukon winter.” 

In Manitoba, some areas are expected to receive up to 20 centimetres of snow Thursday, and roughly a dozen rural school divisions closed schools due to extreme weather and hazardous driving conditions

School was also cancelled Thursday in Hope, B.C., due to "whiteout conditions beyond the scales" according to the district.

Environment Canada's warnings extend into the normally temperate Metro Vancouver and Greater Victoria regions. 

It said the combination of gusts reaching 60 kilometres an hour and cold temperatures will push wind chill values in Metro Vancouver and Greater Victoria to near -20.

The agency warned that temperatures that cold can bring frostbite, and hypothermia can occur within minutes if precautions are not taken when outdoors.

Meteorologist Armel Castellan said he expects some daily temperature records may be broken on the West Coast, but the more concerning issue is the cold snap coming on the heels of an abnormally warm December.

"The fact of the matter is, people and pets and even the ecology out there haven't had time to adapt to the cold," Castellan said.

"So, there's a really strong case to be made about how cold injuries — frostnip, frostbite, potentially hypothermia and even death — are really front of mind when we think about the public through the next few days."

Castellan said in an interview on Thursday that the cold temperatures are "locked in" for the next three to four days, but the weather models have not been conclusive about what follows.

"They don't all agree on how early next week is going to play out, and so those details are just going to have to come in a little bit later."

B.C.'s Ministry of Emergency Management and Climate Readiness said in a statement that all of the province's extreme-weather response shelters are now open. It said more than 5,500 shelter spaces, including permanent, temporary and extreme-weather shelters, are open.

Back in Prince George, DeKleine said he is just happy he is now running a restaurant instead of working in his previous job as a telecommunications technician.

"I've been at the top of the telephone pole with -25 C," he said. "The hardest part of that job was that you can't do most of what we do with gloves on. You have to take those gloves off, and even for five seconds at a time on a pole, you risk frostbite."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Avian flu at Chilliwack poultry farm

Avian flu at Chilliwack poultry farm
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says it has detected the presence of Avian influenza at a Chilliwack commercial poultry operation. It is now the 50th B-C location where the contagious viral infection has been detected at commercial or backyard bird operations since October.

Avian flu at Chilliwack poultry farm

Man with ties to Vancouver, Edmonton and Halifax killed in Calgary drive-by shooting

Man with ties to Vancouver, Edmonton and Halifax killed in Calgary drive-by shooting
Police say a man with ties to Vancouver, Edmonton and Halifax has been killed in a drive-by shooting in Calgary. Officers responded to reports of gunshots in the Beltline neighbourhood, south of downtown, just after 9 p.m. Thursday. Police say they found the 40-year-old man with apparent gunshot wounds.

Man with ties to Vancouver, Edmonton and Halifax killed in Calgary drive-by shooting

RCMP issue warning about deadly toxic drugs circulating in Surrey

RCMP issue warning about deadly toxic drugs circulating in Surrey
RCMP have issued a warning about high-potency drugs circulating in Surrey, B.C., saying police have responded to five suspected overdose deaths in seven days. The statement says Mounties in the city east of Vancouver are aware of a mixture of the powerful opioid fentanyl and benzodiazepines, a class of depressant drugs. 

RCMP issue warning about deadly toxic drugs circulating in Surrey

CSIS to probe B.C. office after allegations of rape, harassment and toxic workplace

CSIS to probe B.C. office after allegations of rape, harassment and toxic workplace
The Canadian Security Intelligence Service says the officer who was "implicated" in the allegations — made public in an investigation by The Canadian Press this week — was removed from the workplace. One officer says she was raped nine times in 2019 and 2020 by a senior colleague while in surveillance vehicles, and a second officer says she was later sexually assaulted by the same man despite bosses being warned not to pair him with young women.

CSIS to probe B.C. office after allegations of rape, harassment and toxic workplace

B.C. launching four-year study on how e-scooters fit into transport system

B.C. launching four-year study on how e-scooters fit into transport system
Transportation Minister Rob Fleming says the scooters are part of an ongoing shift toward electric personal mobility that is cutting emissions. He says the review will make it easier for local governments to test the e-scooters on their own roads.   

B.C. launching four-year study on how e-scooters fit into transport system

Investigators called to Richmond after two people found dead, says police

Investigators called to Richmond after two people found dead, says police
Mounties in Richmond say they are investigating a homicide after discovering two bodies inside a home on Thursday. RCMP say officers were called to the home after receiving a report of a "suspicious circumstance." Police say they found two people dead inside.   

Investigators called to Richmond after two people found dead, says police