Fog, rime ice dominate stagnant Prairie weather pattern - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Fog, rime ice dominate stagnant Prairie weather pattern

We've seen day after day of this dreary weather. So what's causing it?

Change in pattern expected in near future

Trees have been coated with several layers of rime ice these past few weeks as a stagnant weather pattern takes hold.
Rime ice has built up on trees across the province these last few weeks, including this one near Asquith, Sask. (Submitted by Sarah Johannson)

Saskatchewan is caught in a rinse-and-repeat weather pattern.

Day after day there has been cloud cover, fog and rime ice on trees.

For some, it's a beautiful winter paradise. For other, the days are gloomy and drab.

Here's what's causingthis pattern.

The upper atmosphere is controlled by the jet stream, a narrow band of fast-moving air that is wrapped around Earth. It generally separates warm air to the south from colder air to the north.

Zonal flow in the jet stream (marked by arrows) has made for unremarkable weather across parts of Canada these past few weeks.
The jet stream (marked by arrows) has been far south of Canada and in a fairly straight line these last few weeks. (WSI/CBC)

Usually, the jet stream bevels and bends as it makesits way around the world, but it has been unusually straight this past while. This straightness also known as zonalflow prevents warm air frombeing pulled north and arcticair from being dragged south.

With the overall flow of the atmosphere nearlystalling as a result,temperatures have stayedrelatively consistent day after day.

The jet stream has also placed itself south of Canada, which has allowed consecutive storm systems to ride itand slam into states like California and Nevada.

A highway in California is flooded with chocolate-brown muddy water in January of 2023
Water floods part of a road by the San Ysidro creek on Jameson Lane near the closed Highway 101 in Montecito, Calif., on Jan. 10. (Ringo H.W. Chiu/The Associated Press)

The surface of the atmosphere has also been eerily quiet. This time of year low pressure systems usually pass by, bringing snow and wind. But with a lack of those systems, there's been nothing to "mix up" the atmosphere.

Foggy days and nights

This stationary pattern has allowed a temperature inversion to form.

"Generally, when you go up through the atmosphere from the surface the temperature cools," said Terri Lang, a meteorologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada.

"In the case of an inversion, the temperature actually warms up [as you go higher]."

Regina is cloaked in a layer of fog on Jan. 19. A temperature inversion in the atmosphere has allowed it to develop over the last few weeks.
A temperature inversion in the atmosphere has allowed fog to settle over a good portion of the Prairies, including Regina, over the last while. (Ethan Williams/CBC )

The inversion creates a sort of cap on the atmosphere near the surface, trapping everything inside.

"All the moisture, be it from open lakes or open rivers we've [also] got sources of heat and moisture from industries and cars that all gets trapped under the inversion," Lang said.

The moisture causes the fog that has blanketed the Prairies.

It's been so dense and lasted so longthat parts of Saskatchewan have smashed average January visibility readings, including Kindersley, which has hit more than 120 hours of visibility less than one kilometre so far this month.

TheJanuary average there is 31 hours.

Beauty and danger in rime ice

Rime ice forms when fog occursbelow freezing. The water droplets in the fog freeze, and if they freeze on things like tree branches, they create rime ice.

With temperatures below freezing, rime ice has built up on trees in many areas.
Rime ice has formed on many outdoor surfaces, the result of water droplets in fog interacting with temperatures below freezing. (Trent Watts)

It can create beautiful scenes, but italso causesproblems.

SaskPower spokesperson Joel Cherry told CBC that about 2,600 customers were impacted by outages caused by rime ice in parts of southern Saskatchewan Thursday morning.

Thousands of others have been impacted by similar outages this month alone.

Cherry noted lines can be damaged by trees weighed down by the icelanding on lines, or the lines themselves sagging because of ice buildup.

Rime ice can cause power lines to break, like these ones in Saskatchewan did in December 2018. (SaskPower/Supplied)

Power can sometimes be restoredif the line hasn't been brokenby reactivating it remotely. Crews can also attempt to knock the ice off of the lines to prevent outages in the first place.

"But right now it's a pretty widespread issue in the province and a lot of our lines have ice on them," said Cherry.

Pollutants from larger centres have also become trapped under the capping layer in the atmosphere. Thatdrastically increased the Air Quality Health Index to a reading of eight out of 10 in Edmonton earlier this month meaning people with health issueswere advised to avoid outdoor activities.

Levels havealso been slightly elevated in Saskatchewan and Manitoba.

Pattern change ahead

While much of Alberta appears to have broken free of the cloud and fog, Saskatchewan and southern Manitoba will have to wait until the weekend to see widespread clearing.

A ridge building in the jet stream will help keep temperatures warm, and a more westerly flow in the atmosphere will usher in drier air, eliminating the fog.

Wind is expected to make a return across the Prairies in the week ahead, with temperatures staying above average through much of the week.