Fickle Mother Nature not co-operating for winter sports enthusiasts in northeastern Ontario
CBC
People in northeastern Ontario aren't exactly walking in a winter wonderland as the calendar heads into 2024.
At a time when snowmobile trails are typically opening up and ice fishers are staking their spots, the ground remains bare and ice dangerously thin.
Environment Canada meteorologist Gerald Cheng said a warm air mass has been lingering over the eastern part of the province causing some longstanding temperature records to fall over the holidays.
On Christmas Day, Sault Ste Marie had the highest minimum temp at 4 C, smashing the record of 1.7 C in 1932, said Cheng.
Elsewhere, Kapuskasing's Christmas Day high was 4.5 C beating 3.3 C in 1940, and on Boxing Day, North Bay warmed up to 5.1 C, edging out 4.6 C in 1982.
More seasonal temperatures are on the way.
"In the world of weather, nothing lasts forever," said Cheng.
Highs in the minus seven range are expected by Saturday, Dec. 30, he said.
But Cheng couldn't say when the next weather system would bring snow to the region.
The Ontario Federation of Snowmobile Clubs says 73,000 permits have been sold, but not a single trail in the province is open.
Gerald Sanders is the manager of the Sudbury Trail Plan, where about 6,500 permit holders are stalled for lack of snow.
"It's a waiting game and we're waiting to see what Mother Nature is going to decide for us," said Sanders. "I'm sure it will come at some point. When and where and how, we're not sure. But again, we're patiently waiting just like everybody else."
Sanders reminded those who might be tempted to take out the four-wheelers that snowmobile trails are off-limits to them.
While some ski hills, such as Adanac in Sudbury, are making their own snow and are open, many other outdoor enthusiasts are waiting for the real thing.
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