Nova Scotia·Weather

Storm will bring strong winds, snow and rain to the Maritimes on Wednesday

A low brewing in the southern U.S. will cross North America over the next few days bringing a messy mix of snow, rain, ice and strong winds. The storm will arrive in the Maritimes on Wednesday and looks set to pack a punch.

Meteorologist Ryan Snoddon says the next storm system looks like it could pack a punch

Strong winds expected in Nova Scotia for Wednesday's storm

11 months ago
Duration 2:58
Meteorologist Ryan Snoddon says the wind will be the big concern on Wednesday. He said the storm will start with snow that eventually turns to rain.

A low brewing in the southern U.S. will cross North America over the next few days bringing a messy mix of snow, rain, ice and strong winds.

The storm will arrive in the Maritimes on Wednesday and looks set to pack a punch.

On the leading edge of the storm, we'll see snow moving into the region from west to east throughout Wednesday morning, which may lead to slick travel conditions for most people.

As temperatures rise throughout the day, we'll see the snow mixing and changing to ice pellets and rain across Nova Scotia, P.E.I. and southern New Brunswick. 

Across central and northern New Brunswick, the snow and ice pellets will add up with accumulations of 10 to 30 centimetres looking likely. 

The highest rainfall totals are expected along the Atlantic coastline where 20 to 40 millimetres looks likely.

A map of the maritimes.
(Ryan Snoddon/CBC)
map of maritimes showing snow and rain accumulations
(Ryan Snoddon/CBC)

While the snow, ice and rain will have an impact, the strong winds will likely be the biggest issue.

Widespread southerly wind gusts of 80 to 110 km/h are possible for Nova Scotia and P.E.I. as well as southern New Brunswick and the Acadian Peninsula. Gusts of 60 to 80 km/h are looking more likely across the rest of northern New Brunswick while gusts exceeding 120 km/h are expected in Les Suêtes winds in Cape Breton. 

Thankfully, this is a quick moving storm and so the strongest winds will be limited to a six- to eight-hour period as the storm blows through on Wednesday.

map of the maritimes with wind gust info
(Ryan Snoddon/CBC)
map of maritimes with wind details
(Ryan Snoddon/CBC)

Regardless, winds of this strength are likely to cause some power outages and you should prepare by ensuring all your electronic devices are charged up and your emergency kits are ready to go.

Nova Scotia Power activated its emergency operations centre ahead of Wednesday's storm. In a news release, the company said crews are preparing and will be positioned across the province to respond to outages.

"The number one cause of power outages during storms is trees coming into contact with power lines. Our crews are prepared to safely respond to this type of damage as quickly as possible," Matt Drover, Nova Scotia Power's storm lead, said in a news release.

Environment and Climate Change Canada has also issued special weather statements for the Maritimes ahead of the storm.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ryan Snoddon

Meteorologist

Ryan Snoddon is CBC's meteorologist in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.