Conditions specified in the above-posting remain largely applicable. As such, presented here is the overall pattern for the greater Montreal area for Wednesday, July 20th.
Temperature/Humidity
With an amplified circulation of very warm to hot and increasingly humid air in this region, a maximum temperature of 31 C is favorable, creating what may very well become at least a near-official heat wave over the July 19th-July 23rd period. Very high humidity would likely send the maximum humidex to 40 C to potentially 41 C by mid-afternoon. By late-evening, including display time temperatures drop only slightly, to 29 C to possibly even 30 C, with a humidex of 38-39 C. If convective rainfall occurs, the temperature would cool slightly more, to 25 C (humidex of 34 C).
Precipitation
Lift remains fairly modest throughout the day to take significant advantage of the large amount of instability that would be available. However, it would be suitable for a partly cloudy sky that would be governed by gradually large clusters of defined/towering cumulus and some high-level cirrus by late-morning through to the evening. That said, for the mid-afternoon through to more so evening, the magnitude of lift has recently shown more indications of appreciable improvement. This would begin encouraging sparsely-distributed to gradually scattered convective rainfall and thunderstorms (some strong) during this time. For this reason, a 30% probability of precipitation is favored for the mid-afternoon to early-evening period, followed by a 40% for late-evening, and then a slightly greater risk thereafter, near midnight and during predawn. Rainfall from the families of convective systems would be locally quite torrential, even if not accompanied by thunder/lightning, though note that the lightning can be intense with the strongest thunderstorms.
The latest thinking is that display time would be unaffected by the convective rainfall/thunderstorms, with lightning from initial thunderstorms potentially being seen illuminating the sky in the distance to the NW/West prior to and during the display, as mentioned in the above posting. This would then be followed by rainfall and/or thunderstorms shortly after the display and beyond.
Wind
Winds continue to be in the form of SW to eventually SSW during the day (8-11 km/h), with a transition to SSE tendencies by late-afternoon to evening. Speeds would be a touch breezier during the afternoon, at 14-18 km/h. This would allow the smoke, from all altitudes, to gently move clear to the right of and slightly away from the on-site audience, with slightly faster displacement at the highest altitudes. Large smoke accumulation would still be favorable deeper into the Italian display, but focused to La Ronde’s far right. This would sometimes cause the display to appear somewhat hazy/murky at its extreme right-hand portions. However, should convective rainfall or thunderstorms occur during display time, the rapidly accumulating smoke would suddenly turn towards the La Ronde audience.
Another follow-up concerning the thunderstorm situation would come this mid-afternoon (July 20th).
Trav.
