British Columbia

Rainfall warning lifted for Metro Vancouver, Vancouver Island

Incessant rain that has deluged B.C.'s south coast since Sunday night should begin to relent over the next 24 hours, although Environment Canada says another 40 millimetres of precipitation is expected across parts of the region by Wednesday.

But Environment Canada says another 40 mm of rain still expected by Wednesday

There's still more rain to come for Vancouver and many other parts of the South Coast this week, according to Environment Canada, although some weather warnings were lifted Tuesday morning. (Tina Lovgreen/CBC)

Drenching rain that has deluged B.C.'s south coast since Sunday night should begin to relent over the next 24 hours, although Environment Canada says another 40 millimetres of precipitation is expected across parts of the region by Wednesday.

Rainfall warnings were lifted for Metro Vancouver and Vancouver Island Tuesday morning, but the advisories remain in place all the way east to the Fraser Canyon as well as in Whistler and Howe Sound.

Wind warnings in the region were dropped Monday night.

The weather agency says as many as 120 millimetres of rain were recorded Monday along Vancouver's North Shore mountains, washing away the season's first dump of snow which arrived over the weekend.

Flood watches and high streamflow advisories for numerous waterways on Vancouver Island and the south coast remain in effect, but the River Forecast Centre estimates flows on affected rivers and streams will peak as the current storm tapers off.

Elsewhere, the Boundary and Kootenay regions of southern B.C. are enduring what Environment Canada calls "a long period of snowfall,'' with accumulations of up to 30 centimetres on higher elevations of Highway 3.

Light snow is also forecast along the Coquihalla Connector to the Okanagan, but the main stretch of Highway 5 from Hope to Kamloops has dodged the latest round of white stuff.