
January’s jet stream drama leads to February pattern swap in Canada
Millions of Canadians won't be in the deep freeze to kick off February as a forthcoming pattern change will reconfigure air masses in the country
The Arctic chill draining across the U.S. over the past several weeks will change course as we turn the page into February.
January featured unusual jet stream dynamics across North America, a highly amplified flow funnelling Arctic air into the central and southeastern United States, fuelling a historic winter storm and bitter cold.
DON'T MISS: Winter hasn't been so kind to Ontario's snowbelt regions so far
All that while Canada’s Arctic regions were significantly above normal. But transient blasts of Arctic air reminded Canadians of winter weather, especially over the past week, as much-cooler temperatures seeped into southern Ontario and other parts of Canada.

Western Canada: Mild Pacific air before the deep freeze
Once again, the ridge of high pressure across British Columbia dominates the weather story in the West, and will be the catalyst for mild Pacific air to trek across the country.

By late week, the western ridge flattens while a new ridge blossoms across Alaska. That sets the stage for Arctic air from Alaska to spill into the Yukon and Northwest Territories, and surge southwards. That will lead to some of the winter's coldest temperatures for British Columbia and Alberta.
Cold milestones to watch:
Vancouver’s coldest high this winter has been a mild 4.3°C (Dec. 4)
Kamloops’ coldest high so far was -4.4°C (Jan. 20)

Expect those marks to be challenged as some of the coldest temperatures of the season arrive by the weekend.
Eastern Canada: A gradual shift and brief respite
To those of you in Eastern Canada, the transition will feel much less abrupt.

A lingering, upper trough stalls across northern Quebec, creating volatile weather and cold air to Ontario, Quebec and the Maritimes this week.
However, Pacific will push eastward by early February, bringing a brief reprieve from the deep chill for much of Eastern Canada.
February outlook: Active storms and volatile weather
The flip in temperature anomalies, colder air northwest of the Great Lakes and milder weather across the U.S. Southeast, sets the stage for an active storm track.

While no extended thaw is forecast, no matter what the groundhog predicts, February storms may bring the risk of rain at times as the storm track shifts north, alongside the continued threat of winter weather.
Stay tuned to The Weather Network this week as we are gearing up to release our February outlook on Friday, Jan. 31.
With files from Tyler Hamilton, a meteorologist at The Weather Network.