Manitoba

Flooding, high water possible due to heavy rain, wind over several days

Manitoba's Hydrologic Forecast Centre is reporting the potential for heavy winds and rains that could lead to flooding and high waters in northern and southeastern Manitoba.

Manitoba's Hydrologic Forecast Centre says areas around Saskatchewan and Churchill rivers most at risk

The Manitoba Legislature seen on May 6, 2020, from the banks of the Red River, which is one of the areas that could be affected by heavy wind and rain that hydrologic forecasters say could fall between Saturday night and Wednesday. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

Manitoba hydrologic forecasters are warning about the possibility of flooding and high waters following rainy and windy conditions that could last several days, starting Saturday night.

In a news release issued Saturday afternoon, the Hydrologic Forecast Centre of Manitoba Infrastructure is reporting the potential for significant precipitation and heavy wind beginning late Saturday and ending early Wednesday morning.

The centre predicts the northern and southeastern regions of the province will be the heaviest hit, with up to 60 mm of precipitation expected to fall in some places.

The release says some areas that are already reporting high base flows and soil moisture and very high water levels are more likely to get 50 to 70 mm. 

These areas include watersheds around the Saskatchewan River, which runs eastward from across the Saskatchewan border into Lake Winnipeg, and the Churchill River, which flows into the Hudson Bay.

Saskatchewan's Water Security Agency warned the Churchill River system — east of Peter Pond Lake — is about two to three times higher than average after a rise in rainfall in the region over the last month, combined with the spring snow melt and high stream and lake levels there.

There is a low risk of overland flooding in Manitoba's southern and southeast basins, which could receive 20 to 40 mm, including in the Whiteshell lakes area, the province's centre reports.

Up to 50 mm could fall in the Red River basin, but the release says there are no high water concerns.