Southern Alberta digs itself out after wallop of snow buries cars, blankets roads

Southern Alberta digs itself out after wallop of snow buries cars, blankets roads

Some people in southern and eastern Alberta are digging out Monday after a wintry wallop dumped as much as a half-metre of snow in some areas, burying vehicles and farm equipment, closing highways and shutting down many schools.

On Sunday, the strong winds and heavy snow prompted storm warnings in parts of the province that included Crowsnest Pass, Lethbridge and Medicine Hat on Sunday, prompting a slew of highway closures.

School classes were cancelled on Monday across Lethbridge, Pincher Creek, Cardston, Medicine Hat, Fort Macleod, Taber and Brooks, while the Grassland Schools Division remained open but announced there would be no bus service.

Submitted by Heather Gast
Submitted by Heather Gast

Heather Gast, who lives south of Lethbridge about five kilometres north of Magrath, said that the snow — which began falling on her dryland grain farm on Saturday — continued until she couldn't believe her eyes.

"It just gradually worsened and worsened over Saturday, and then all day Sunday, it was just blowing and snowing — and it just didn't give up," Gast said.

"The way it came in with so much wind, and the size of drifts, was just — it's nothing like we've ever seen before."

Submitted by Heather Gast
Submitted by Heather Gast

Gast said she feels lucky to have Monday off because the road on her property is covered in 1½ metres of snow.

"We're definitely going to go out on the snowmobile and see what kind of fun we can have out there."

Submitted by Heather Gast
Submitted by Heather Gast

According to Dan Kulak, a meteorologist with Environment Canada, the province's first big winter storm hit areas east of Calgary and toward the Saskatchewan border the hardest — with as much as 50 centimetres.

And those that got it the worst have likely seen the last of warmer temperatures for a while, he said.

Submitted by Lori Emery
Submitted by Lori Emery

"Wherever people got 50 centimetres of snow, or something like that — that's pretty much the beginning of winter," Kulak said.

"[But] if you managed to escape most of it … there's going to be some warmer weather that comes along during the year."

Submitted by Avery Barrus Wynder
Submitted by Avery Barrus Wynder

Kulak said it's too soon to tell whether the snowfall broke any records, particularly because most of it fell in areas without longstanding weather stations.

Submitted by Tim Oczkowski
Submitted by Tim Oczkowski

According to the official weather summary from Environment Canada on Moday morning, Taylorville in Cardston County received the most, with 38 centimetres. However, Environment Canada did note that the weekend snowfall measurements were complicated because of blowing snow.

The cities didn't dodge the flurries, either — as you can see from this photo of a car buried in Lethbridge on Sunday that Rebecca Costello posted.