The Weyburn area saw around 15 centimetres of wet heavy snow come down overnight into this morning.

Meteorologist Terri Lang with Environment Canada says it will keep coming down for a while yet thanks to the Colorado Low.

"There were some winds with that too. Not drastically high, but certainly enough to blow it around into drifts and sort of make for really tricky driving," she noted. 

She said there's another push of snow coming with this system.

"It looks like more towards like this afternoon into the overnight period. Looks like another five centimeters of snow is possible. Winds will be gusting as high as 60 kilometers per hour, so again we're going to have some issues with some blowing and drifting snow, especially out on the highways."

A colder air mass is coming behind this system, she said, called a Mackenzie Screamer.

"We call it a Mackenzie screamer just because it forms up in the Mackenzie Valley and it really rushes down in the jet stream, which is in sort of in a north to south configuration," Lang explained. "This one looks like it's going to move more through Alberta and western Saskatchewan. But you guys will likely get clipped with that, so maybe another couple of centimetres of snow on Sunday and then that push of cold air in behind it, which is very typical of a Mackenzie streamer, so maybe late in the week we might see another weather system move from the south and clip sort of that the southern part of Saskatchewan."

She said the cold air could win out, however, pushing away the warmer air, "so we may not see that next bit later on in the week."

Lang reminds drivers to check the Highway Hotline before heading out onto the highway.

"This Colorado law is still causing some issues, with the snow still in the area. So please check that Highway Hotline before heading out. Make sure you're prepared for winter driving conditions, that your car is ready, you have an emergency kit in the car, you're dressed properly, and if you can, maybe postpone your driving until tomorrow later on in the day, or Saturday when things will look be looking a little bit better." 

Find the full forecast HERE.