Weekend heat wave will make Quebec's moving day... challenging - Action News
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Montreal

Weekend heat wave will make Quebec's moving day... challenging

How hot will it be, you ask? Daytime highs are expected to hit anywhere between 30 to 35 degrees without the humidity factored in.

With July 1 daytime highs expected to hit 30 to 35 C, Canada Day parade organizer says bring water, seek shade

This is a scene from moving day last year. Pants will be a bad idea this year it's going to be a scorcher. (Graham Hughes/Canadian Press)

If you're one of thousands of people who will be moving this weekend, it would be in your best interest to get started as early in the day as possible.

It's going to be sweltering hot over Canada Day weekend in parts of southern Quebec.

While the weather has a tendency to change, Environment Canada seems to think this is the real deal.

"It is already sure that this heat wave will affect activities beginning on Saturday," according to the special weather statement.

So how hot will it be, you ask? Daytime highs are expected to hit anywhere between 30 to 35 degrees without the humidity factored in.

There will be no reprieve at night either. The temperature isn't expected to go below 20 degrees.

Of course, moving day Sunday is supposed to be the hottest day of all, with a high of 35 degrees and a low of 25.

The warmth is expected to stick around into early next week at least.

Canada Day parade concerns?

Nick Cowen, organizer of the Canada Day parade in Montreal, says many of the parade's participants are used to the heat and will bring extra water.

He said he can't control what people wear in the parade, but he is making a recommendation.

"I'm telling everybody not to show up in suits. I'm telling everybody to show up in shorts,"he said, adding that even the politiciansare getting that advice.

A young child had heat stroke last year, he said, but was treated without incident.

The parade begins at 11 a.m., heading east alongSte-Catherine Street from Fort Street and ending in Place du Canada.

Cowen said there are shady areas along the route, and organizers will roam around with golf carts to make sure spectators are OK.

With files from Brian Lapuz