Squamish
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- For other uses, see Squamish (disambiguation)}}}.
In the Lower Mainland of British Columbia, where they are mainly referred to as outflow winds, they are noticeable especially in the winter, when a cold arctic air mass holding in the high plateau country of the interior flows down to the sea through the canyons and lower passes piercing the Coast Mountains. The town of Squamish, British Columbia, is named for the wind, and upper Howe Sound, just off the Squamish River estuary, is known widely in the sailboarding world for its excellent, steady winds.
During the Christmas season of 1996, a major blizzard which brought record snowfalls to the Lower Mainland was followed up by hurricane-force winds pouring west through the towns of the Fraser Valley, as the coastal system's strength - which had brought the snow - was forced back by the breaking of the interior's cold air mass. Intense outflow winds are relatively common year-round (during stormy weather, and sometimes fair) in the Upper Fraser Valley, particularly on Sumas Prairie between Abbotsford and Chilliwack, and farther upriver towards the mouth of the Fraser Canyon. Known by different names in each region up the Coast, outflow winds or squamishes are also major maritime threats off the openings of the major fjords and up their narrow, deep lengths. Queen Charlotte Strait in particular is known for heavy winds coming out of the mouth of Knight Inlet, at the upper east end of the strait.
See also
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