The city enjoyed a second day of record-setting warmth on Tuesday.
The thermometer hit a high of 18.8 C at the airport, setting a new standard not only for the day but for the month since records began to be kept in 1912, Environment Canada forecaster Greg Pearce said.
The old record for November was 17.4 C, reached on Remembrance Day 1981. The previous record high for Nov. 8 was 16.7 C, set in 1930.
On Monday, the high was 13.5 C, eclipsing the old standard for Nov. 7 of 11.7 C set in 1917.
The high for this time of year is typically 3 C, but all bets have been off since the so-called Pineapple Express has been blowing through the Central Interior and Southern B.C. Gusting as high as 60 km/h, it's been delivering warm air from off the coast of California.
"It's a very strong flow from the south," Pearce said.
He said a colder front will pass through overnight and the forecast high for Thursday is 10 C.
"And then towards the end of the week, it'll bounce back up to the low-to-mid teens so it looks like this warm spell is not over yet," Pearce said.
It should be a little cooler during the weekend, reaching 8 C on Saturday, according to Environment Canada.