Currently in Toronto — November 2nd, 2022

The weather, currently.
The sunshine has returned. A ridge of high pressure will settle in and set up a string of very pleasant fall days. Once again, some fog patches will appear as you start your Wednesday. Otherwise, there will be partly cloudy skies. The wake-up temperature will be near 5°C. There will be mild temperatures during the day and plenty of sunshine. The kids will need a zip top underneath the jacket. By afternoon recess, they will likely prefer to leave the jacket hung up in the cubby as they enjoy a forecast high of 14°C. The wind will be from the SE at 15-20km/h and the UV index will be 3 or moderate.
Wednesday night: mainly clear with local fog patches and a low of 8°C.
Side note: New month, new norms. Our daily temperature average in November is 3.7 degrees. We typically see over 2 inches of rain (68mm), and almost 8 cm of snow (7.6cm).
What you need to know, currently.
The National #Hurricane Center is forecasting #Lisa and #Martin to be at hurricane strength at the same time. Two Atlantic hurricane seasons have had simultaneous November hurricanes: 1932 (Cuba Hurricane, Storm 15) and 2001 (Michelle, Noel). pic.twitter.com/T6Mkc8dvqh
— Philip Klotzbach (@philklotzbach) November 1, 2022
As Atlantic hurricane season enters its final month, tropical storm Martin joins Lisa in the basin. The last time there were two, simultaneous hurricanes in November was in 2001.
Lisa, which is in the western Caribbean Sea, could hit Belize as the sixth hurricane of the 2022 season Wednesday night. Martin is also forecast to become a short-lived hurricane Wednesday, according to the National Hurricane Center. A third storm could develop by the weekend as well.
Martin formed from the same system that brought heavy rain and flooding to Puerto Rico and the United States Virgin Islands last week. The storm’s formation was also triggered by unusually warm sea surface temperatures of 25-25.5 degrees C (77-78 degrees F), which are two degrees C (3.6 degrees F) above average.
Martin is expected to transition from a hurricane to a powerful extratropical cyclone with hurricane-force winds on Thursday. However, it’s not a threat to any land areas.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has predicted two to six more hurricanes to form before the season officially ends on Nov. 30. The next named storm to form will be Nicole.
—Aarohi Sheth
