Thunderstorm Outlook

Valid: Sunday, July 19, 2020

Forecaster: Brennen Perry

Issued: Sunday, July 19, 2020 - 1:30AM

Thunderstorm outlook mapMOBILE TIP: YOU CAN ZOOM INTO THE MAP BY CLICKING ON IT. THE MAP WILL OPEN IN A NEW TAB THAT IS EASILY ZOOMABLE.

Thunderstorm outlook map

MOBILE TIP: YOU CAN ZOOM INTO THE MAP BY CLICKING ON IT. THE MAP WILL OPEN IN A NEW TAB THAT IS EASILY ZOOMABLE.

NOTE: The tornado risk zone outlines the region with the highest probability of tornadoes, but tornadoes may occur outside of the zone.


Timing

Southwestern: 9AM - 7PM
Golden Horseshoe: 4PM - 9PM
Central: 9AM - 8PM
Eastern: 4PM - 11PM
Northeastern: 7AM - 3PM

Not sure what region you are in? Click here for a map showing the regions across Southern Ontario. Northeastern Ontario is north of North Bay (not shown on map).


Thunderstorm Threatcast


Thunderstorm Confidence

Very High (90%)


Severe Confidence

High (75%)


Tornadoes

Several


Max Wind Gusts

110+ kmh | 68+ mph


Max Hail Size

Golf Ball
~4.5cm | ~1.75"


Max 24-hr Rainfall

~75 mm | ~3"


Forecast Discussion

A very complex day with several rounds of severe storms is expected across Southern Ontario on Sunday. It will all start early Sunday morning as a line of storms with the potential to produce widespread wind gusts will develop during the overnight hours through Michigan and crossing over Lake Huron/Georgian Bay by mid to late morning. This will bring mainly a wind risk to parts of Southwestern and Central Ontario. There is also a pretty substantial tornado risk with this line and it could easily put down a few tornadoes. The first round should stay to the north of the GTA with a focus on cottage country.

We expected the second round of storms to bubble up towards the late afternoon somewhere just east of Lake Huron and extending up through Central Ontario and along the Quebec border. These storms will be more discrete and could see all modes of severe weather including very large hail up to golf ball size, 110km/h wind gusts and tornadoes. We're closely watching the corridor from Midland through Lake Simcoe and up into Bancroft where the highest threat for severe weather exists. The risk will come to an end during the evening as the storms weaken and track towards Eastern Ontario. Now this second round is highly dependant on the timing of the morning storms. If the morning storms show up much more later than expected than it would reduce the timeframe for daylight heating to build up the instability and could cause the second round to be much weaker or just not happen.

We’ll continue to monitor the latest data and issue an updated forecast later in the morning if changes need to be made to the map.


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