A flood warning is now in impact for New Hamburg, Ayr, and West Montrose resulting from rising river ranges from current rain and melting snow.
Causes Behind the Rising Waters
Saturday introduced rain and delicate temperatures that accelerated snowmelt, pushing up water ranges in native rivers. The Grand River Conservation Authority activated the warning at 3:30 p.m. on Saturday. All the Grand River watershed—from Dundalk within the north to Lake Erie within the south, encompassing Waterloo area, Guelph, and Wellington County—stays beneath a flood watch.
“Air temperatures are anticipated to stay above freezing till Wednesday,” the warning states. The area obtained 15 to 30 mm of rain from Friday by means of Saturday afternoon. “The snowpack within the northern a part of the watershed incorporates a big quantity of water content material. Heat temperatures mixed with rain, which can be heavy at occasions, end in snowmelt and elevated runoff,” officers defined.
Danger Ranges and Potential Escalation
Ayr, New Hamburg, and West Montrose at present face a stage one flood danger. New Hamburg and Ayr might escalate to stage two on Sunday, based on the conservation authority.
Security Considerations from Ice and Flows
Ice persists on a number of rivers, together with the Grand River, elevating the chance of jams. “Excessive flows and unstable ice situations enhance security dangers round rivers and streams all through the watershed. The general public ought to train excessive warning close to native waterways,” the authority urged.
Wilmot Township echoed the warning to New Hamburg residents, advising shut monitoring of situations over the weekend.
Climate Outlook
Atmosphere Canada issued a yellow climate warning for rain throughout Waterloo area, Guelph, and Wellington County a lot of Saturday. Saturday evening forecasts embrace rain and potential thunderstorms, with snow and freezing drizzle doubtless in early Sunday hours.

