The fog advisory continues for Moose Jaw and southern Saskatchewan, and so does the low visibility in Moose Jaw and on the highways.

Terri Lang is a warning preparedness meteorologist with Environment Canada. She said there is more than just the reduced visibility to worry about.

“It tends to get better during the day, and then at night as things cool off the fog thickens again and we tend to get that freezing drizzle in the overnight period,” Lang explained.

When a freezing fog like what we have been seeing develops, Lang said it coats everything.

“Particles that you see are actually liquid particles creating the fog, and they’ll freeze to anything that is below freezing, which are road surfaces, cars sidewalks, that kind of thing.”

The fog has been lingering around due to a lack of another system pushing into the region, Lang added. A high-pressure system with a layer of warmer air above it is what is creating the foggy conditions.

While the road conditions aren't terrible on the highways, caution is still advised if you're heading out.

"The best advice is to drive with your headlights on," shared Tyler McMurchy with SGI. "Your low beams, especially if you're driving in the city. You'll see best with those low beams on. Don't rely on your daytime running lights because they might not always activate your taillights. You want to be seen from the back as well as be able to see and be seen from the front."

He said the law requires the use of headlights, not only when it's dark but anytime conditions are poor.

McMurchy suggested drivers adjust their speed to the number of seconds they can see ahead of them on the road.

"If you can't see 12 seconds ahead you should slow down until you can. And if you've slowed down quite a bit and you still can't see 12 seconds ahead you'll probably want to pull over and wait until conditions clear up."

Fog should be dissipating by Saturday though, so we should be able to see more than 50 meters again soon.