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Blowing snow hazard on the Prairies, and a severe cold to follow

Published on Jan. 20, 2026, 1:34 PM

Updated on Jan. 20, 2026, 10:34 PM

A cold front is set to bring blowing snow, squalls, and strong wind gusts to parts of the Prairies through Wednesday, creating hazardous travel conditions. Following the snowfall, Arctic air will move in, causing temperatures to drop sharply

Parts of the Prairies are set to experience snowfall into Wednesday. Widespread, windy conditions will follow, bringing blowing snow across the southern Prairies. Sudden near-zero visibility may create difficult travel conditions, particularly in southwestern Saskatchewan.

DON’T MISS: Extreme cold targets Canada as the polar vortex buckles

Later this week, a surge of frigid Arctic air will bring widespread extreme cold, with temperatures plunging across the region. Residents are urged to prepare for the cold and monitor for any weather advisories.

Two fast-moving northern Canada storms to impact the Prairies

The second system, arriving into Wednesday morning, will strengthen with a powerful Arctic cold front. Snowfall in intense frontal bands is expected, particularly in southwestern Saskatchewan.

Strong wind gusts between 50-80 km/h will accompany the second system, causing blowing snow and sudden near-zero visibility in parts of southwestern Alberta and, more significantly, southeastern Saskatchewan from Tuesday night through Wednesday morning.

Wind gusts of 40-60 km/h will continue through Wednesday afternoon, as snowfall tapers off, but blowing snow lingers, impacting travel in affected regions.

Polar vortex brings intense cold to eastern Prairies

The polar vortex is set to bring extreme cold to the eastern Prairies following an Arctic cold front. Wind chills in Saskatchewan and Manitoba are expected to range from -30 to -40 by the weekend.

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