Additional areas of New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island were placed under heat warnings by Environment Canada on Thursday.
The hot and humid weather will extend through the weekend. Daytime high temperatures for most communities can expect to be in the high 20s and low 30s with the humidex – what it feels like – rising into a range of 35 to 40 degrees. Overnight low temperatures aren’t expected to cool much lower than the high teens, limiting the amount of night time relief. A period of showers and rain during the Monday to Tuesday timeframe of next week is expected to lower temperature and the humidex, breaking the heat across the entirety of the Maritimes.
Between Thursday and then, more moderate temperatures can be found on parts of the coast. There is expected to be a prevailing southwest wind Friday and the weekend, which will keep an onshore wind on coastal areas of the Bay of Fundy coastline and the Atlantic coastline of Nova Scotia. There may be some marine cloud/fog present at times for those areas as well. Northern areas of New Brunswick will have some slightly drier air move, preventing the humidex from rising as high as other parts of the region and are not currently under the heat warning.
Stay hydrated and take breaks to cool down and watch for signs of heat exhaustion and heat stroke. Check in on those who are more vulnerable in these type of conditions and who don’t readily have access to the means to cool down. If in a residence without air conditioning, it is often best to keep windows and blinds closed during the day and then open during the night as temperatures fall. Reducing the use of appliances that generate heat, such as an oven, is also a good idea.
Often with building heat and humidity comes a risk of thunderstorms. The risk of thunderstorms will be highest ahead of a weather front that moves in from Quebec on Thursday and Friday. For Thursday there is a risk of isolated thunderstorms in northern New Brunswick during the afternoon and evening. On Friday, the risk of isolated thunderstorms shifts to southern New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and Nova Scotia. Like with much of the region’s summer time showers and thunderstorms, these are expected to be very hit-and-miss by nature. The most likely hazards with any occurring thunderstorms will be lightning and downpours.
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