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Polar Vortex Grips Southern Ontario

We always question people who move here from warmer climates, what were you thinking?

Photographer: Alexa Portoraro

The sky over Toronto has shifted to a heavy, bruised leaden hue.

Can you feel the pressure change?

A clipper is racing in from the Prairies, and the urgency is palpable. By mid-morning, the first flakes will begin to dance, quickly escalating into a blinding white veil that threatens to swallow the afternoon commute. The data warns of a general 5-10 cm of snowfall, but the real danger lies in the speed: visibility will be suddenly reduced to near zero. Roads and walkways, once familiar, will become treacherous, navigating them a test of nerves as tires hiss against slick, accumulating slush.

This is the opening act of a structural atmospheric shift.  The maps tell a story of a stratospheric polar vortex that is off-kilter and unusually weak. When this vortex weakens, lobes of brutally cold Arctic air detach and plunge southward. We are witnessing a wildly meridional jet stream (a meteorological term for a wavy, chaotic path) characterized by deep troughs and powerful ridges.

Combined with major blocking patterns over Alaska and Greenland, the cold is being locked in place and forced directly onto us. The Arctic air risk for Ontario is now officially HIGH.

Slow down for a moment and consider the weight of Friday night. The frantic pace of the midweek snow will give way to a haunting, crystalline stillness. The wind, however, will not be quiet. Wind gusts of 50-60 km/h will whistle through the skeletons of trees, creating a mournful sound that rattles the very glass in our windowpanes. This is the double dose of trouble: frigid air meeting multiple rounds of snow.

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By Friday evening, the cold will flood the south, and the temperature will plummet. We are looking at southern Ontario falling into the -20s, while areas like Algonquin and those east of Georgian Bay will likely see -30°C. The texture of the air will change; it will feel thick, biting into any exposed skin with the needle-like sting of wind chills in the -30s.

Saturday’s highs could be among the coldest this century. In Toronto, we are forecasting a high of -16°C, making it the coldest day since early 2018. In Ottawa, the projected low of -21°C could mark the city’s coldest day in an entire decade. 

This is a moment to retreat, to bundle in heavy wools, and to respect the raw power of a planet in flux. The lobes of the Arctic are here, and they bring a bone-deep chill that reminds us exactly how small we are in the face of the vortex.

We always question people who move here from warmer climates, what were you thinking?

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