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Gavin D
10 May 2019 12:17:36

BBC monthly outlook


Summary


Remaining changeable with some fine and dry spells


_________________________________


Wednesday 8 May – Sunday 12 May


Wet and windy at first, but drier this weekend


Wednesday will be an unsettled day as an Atlantic low pressure system moves across the UK. This low will bring showers and longer spells of rain to most parts of the country, the rain accompanied by strong winds in some areas. It will be a cool day, particularly in those parts of the country affected by the most persistent rain. The low pressure system will linger overnight and will only slowly move into the North Sea on Thursday. The unsettled weather will continue, although it should become less windy later on Thursday.


Friday will be a mixed day of sunny spells and showers. Showers could affect any part of the country, and there will be the potential for the odd sharp shower to develop. Saturday should be a dry day for most of the UK, although there will be the chance of a few showers developing, most likely in the east. Saturday night should be dry with light winds, and some mist and fog may develop. High pressure is expected to build in from the south-west on Sunday. As a result, the day should be dry for the bulk of the UK, although a passing frontal system could bring some rain to the north-west of the country during the day or overnight. Temperatures will return to near normal for the time of year.


Monday 13 May – Sunday 19 May


Dry and warm at first, then turning cooler


High pressure should remain close to the UK for much of next week, broadly sitting over the country at first before drifting a little further north or north-west for the second half of the week. This means that the first half of the week will be largely dry with relatively light winds. It should be a little warmer too, with many areas seeing temperatures a degree or more above normal for the time of year. The second half of the week will be more changeable. As high pressure moves away, there will be an increasing chance of cooler north-easterly winds developing, so temperatures are likely to return to near normal in central and eastern parts of the UK.


It should remain relatively dry though, with the high pressure area somewhat limiting the progress of weather systems towards our shores. There is a chance that the high pressure area will move even further north or north-westwards than we expect it to. If this happens, then the chance of cool north to north-easterly winds increases. There would also be the chance of rain moving into southern areas of England and Wales. This alternative scenario has a roughly one in three chance of happening.


Monday 20 May – Sunday 2 June


Remaining changeable despite nearby high pressure


The final third of May and start of June are expected to be rather changeable. High pressure should bring spells of calm and dry weather, but this will be punctuated by spells of unsettled, wet and possibly windy weather as low pressure systems approach the UK. On balance temperatures are expected to be near or a little below normal at first, but lifting above normal in many areas later this month and for the start of June. Rainfall will be near normal in many areas, although there are indications of drier than normal weather in some parts of the country later in the month.


It remains to be seen whether this means that we will have a fine and dry Spring Bank Holiday, and it is worth noting that we have relatively low confidence in the forecast details for the end of May. For example, there is a chance that high pressure remains to the east of the UK, this making it much warmer than normal in most areas but wetter in the west. If the high pressure area sits to the west, then we could see cooler weather in the east and drier weather in the west. The details should become clearer over the coming week or so.


Further ahead


We will take another look at the end of May, including the next Bank Holiday, and the start of June - will dry, warm weather look more or less likely?


https://www.bbc.co.uk/weather/outlook

Gavin D
10 May 2019 12:31:38

Wednesday 15 May - Friday 24 May


After another chilly start, the fine, dry and warm weather will continue on Wednesday, though with more high cloud, particularly over the west. Rain will become increasingly likely in many parts of the UK from Thursday into Friday along with strengthening winds, particularly in the southwest. These winds will lower daytime temperatures below the seasonal average. The weather for next weekend looks likely to continue in the same unsettled vein, with showers or longer spells of rain for many. Daytime temperatures are expected to stay on the cool side in the south and east but frost is not likely here. The warmest and brightest weather is likely in the northwest and these settled conditions may become more widespread during next week.


Saturday 25 May - Saturday 8 June


The weather at the end of May and start of June is likely to include dry and bright spells punctuated by occasional wetter and windier spells. The most prevalent rain and showers will be across southern and central parts, and here winds may be strong at times. It could be rather cool in these unsettled periods and particularly cool near the English east coast. The best of the sunshine and dry weather as well as the highest temperatures will be in the north but prolonged settled and warm conditions will spread further south at times.


https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/forecast

Solar Cycles
10 May 2019 15:27:06
Doesn’t make for pretty reading but one has to rememberer their winter updates to keep things in perspective.
idj20
10 May 2019 15:50:07

Doesn’t make for pretty reading but one has to rememberer their winter updates to keep things in perspective.

Originally Posted by: Solar Cycles 



Does fly in the face of the latest round of  local newspapers clickbait headlines of "sizzling temperatures until June".     


Folkestone Harbour.Β 
Solar Cycles
10 May 2019 16:11:41




Does fly in the face of the latest round of  local newspapers clickbait headlines of "sizzling temperatures until June".     


Originally Posted by: idj20 

πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚

Hippydave
10 May 2019 16:54:16
All sounds pretty average to me. Some rain but equally some dry warm and settled weather too. Useable for most and with enough rain to keep things growing😁
Home: Tunbridge Wells
Work: Tonbridge
Gavin D
11 May 2019 09:42:55

BBC monthly outlook


Summary


Remaining changeable with some fine and dry spells


_________________________________


Saturday 11 May – Sunday 19 May


Largely fine with high pressure


High pressure will become increasingly influential across the UK this weekend, although scattered showers are expected to develop on Saturday, some of which could be heavy during the afternoon with a rumble of thunder possible in the south. It will remain rather chilly in Scotland though, where the showers will be wintry over the hills and mountains. Sunday will be dry and fine with sunny periods for many areas, as high pressure becomes centred over the country, although one or two afternoon showers may develop in southern and eastern Britain. The sunshine may turn rather hazy in Northern Ireland and western Scotland though, with a warm front bringing a few spots of rain to the far north-west and Northern Isles overnight.


High pressure will remain centred just to the east of the UK during the first half of next week, bringing widespread dry, settled weather and sunny periods nationwide. Just a little patchy cloud is likely to develop during the afternoons. The warmest weather is expected in north-west Scotland, where temperatures will rise into the low-20s Celsius, and could reach 24 Celsius by Wednesday, which is likely to be the warmest day of the week. From Thursday onwards, the high will slide slowly north-west, to become centred to the north of Scotland. This should encourage less warm north-easterly winds to move in, keeping it rather cool along eastern coasts of England and Scotland where areas of low cloud could drift onshore at times. By Friday, low pressure will edge towards Britain from the south, bringing more general cloud, outbreaks of rain or showers and somewhat breezier conditions. North-west Scotland is likely to keep the driest and sunniest weather.


Monday 20 May – Sunday 26 May


Slowly turning wetter and more unsettled


Early in the following week, it seems that the high will edge back south across the UK, forcing low pressure south towards central Europe. Although the week may start on an unsettled and breezy note with some showers or outbreaks of rain, it is looking like becoming dry around mid-week, although it may be rather cool with north-easterly winds lingering. Once again, western and north-western Britain may well see the sunniest and warmest weather, while many eastern coasts of England and Scotland will remain chilly with areas of low cloud and one or two showers or spots of rain possible.


Towards the end of the week, the weather looks to become more variable once again, with low pressure areas likely to move closer to the UK from the west or south-west. These will bring bands of rain and occasional showers to western and southern Britain in particular, and the week may end on a rather wet and breezy note here. Rainfall should be lower further north and east, although even these areas may see one or two days with heavy, thundery showers. Temperatures will be around or slightly above average for many areas, with more frequent south or south-easterly winds bringing the highest temperatures to southern and eastern Britain.


Monday 27 May – Sunday 9 June


Higher pressure building more widely over Europe


Towards the end of May, it seems that low pressure areas close to the UK will begin to ease, as we start to see signs of high pressure building north-east from Eastern Europe. Confidence is rather low on exactly when this process will happen and how long it will take, although the most likely outcome is that we will see fronts bringing outbreaks of rain and showers for a few days, before pressure builds nationwide during final days of the month. This will force the typical low pressure track south across southern Europe and the Mediterranean, while it becomes to become drier and calmer across the British Isles through the first part of June. It should become increasingly warm too, with the potential for some very warm weather in the south and south-east.


The southern half of the country will be most at risk of occasional thundery downpours, while Scotland could see essentially dry and calm conditions predominate. However, confidence drops away by this stage, as the jet stream becomes increasingly weak and meandering during the summer months, leading to uncertainty over the potential location of low pressure systems across the North Atlantic, and therefore on how extensive high pressure could be across northern Europe. Indeed, there is a risk that low pressure in the Atlantic continues to dominate our weather into early June, as higher pressure remains well to the east. This could result in some hot plumes of air moving up from the south, but also bring a risk of widespread thunderstorms.


Further ahead


Will central and eastern Britain see any useful rain as we head into June, or will high pressure maintain largely dry weather?


https://www.bbc.co.uk/weather/outlook

Gavin D
12 May 2019 11:11:34

Friday 17 May - Sunday 26 May


On Friday we will see a change to cloudier conditions, with showers increasingly likely across the UK, along with strengthening winds. the showers are most likely to be across central and eastern areas. The winds will lower daytime temperatures below the seasonal average, particularly in the south and east. The weather for next weekend looks likely to continue to be unsettled, with showers or longer spells of rain for many. Daytime temperatures are expected to stay on the cool side in the south and east though frost is not likely here. The warmest and brightest weather is likely in the northwest and these settled conditions may well become more widespread by the end of this period.


Monday 27 May - Monday 10 June


The weather at the end of May and start of June is likely to include dry and bright periods punctuated by occasional wetter and windier spells. The most prevalent rain and showers will be across southern and central parts, and here winds may be strong at times. It could be rather cool in these unsettled periods and particularly cool near the English east coast. The best of the sunshine and dry weather as well as the highest temperatures will be in the north, especially the northwest, but prolonged settled and warm conditions will spread further south at times.


https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/forecast

Gavin D
13 May 2019 10:41:00

Saturday 18 May - Monday 27 May


Daily detail is uncertain but it is most likely to remain changeable into the weekend, with an increasing risk of showers, perhaps with some longer spells of rain spreading to many parts. The showers could become heavy, with a small risk of thunder. There will also be some drier spells, with the driest, brightest weather most likely to be in west and northwest Scotland, where it will also be warmest. Temperatures elsewhere will be close to or rather below average at first, especially in parts of the east, but they will tend to become a little warmer through next week. The changeable conditions are most likely to continue through to the end of the period, with showers at times, but there will also be some drier and brighter interludes.


Tuesday 28 May - Tuesday 11 June


The weather at the end of May and start of June is likely to include dry and bright periods punctuated by occasional wetter and windier spells. The most prevalent rain and showers will be across southern and central parts, and here the wind may be strong at times. It could be rather cool in these unsettled periods and particularly cool near the English east coast. The best of the sunshine and dry weather, as well as the highest temperatures, will be in the north, especially the northwest. However, these prolonged settled and warm conditions will spread further south at times.


https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/forecast

Gavin D
15 May 2019 10:16:43

Sunday 19 May - Thursday 28 May


Changeable weather is likely on Sunday, with a risk of showers, perhaps with some longer spells of rain spreading to many parts. The showers could become heavy, with a small risk of thunder. There will also be some drier spells, most likely to be in central areas before showers develop in the afternoon. Temperatures will be close to or rather below average at first, especially in parts of the east, but they will tend to become a little warmer as we head into next week. The changeable conditions are most likely to continue through to the end of the period, with showers at times, but there will also be some drier and brighter interludes too. The most settled conditions are likely to be across the north.


Wednesday 29 May - Wednesday 12 June


The weather at the end of May and start of June is likely to include dry and bright periods, perhaps punctuated by occasional wetter and windier spells. The most prevalent rain and showers will be across southern and central parts. It could be rather cool in these unsettled periods and particularly cool near the English east coast. The best of the sunshine and dry weather, as well as the highest temperatures, will be in the north, especially the northwest. However, these prolonged settled and warm conditions will spread further south at times.


https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/forecast

Gavin D
15 May 2019 13:29:51

Monday 20 May - Friday 29 May


Changeable weather is likely to continue next week, with a risk of showers for most parts and perhaps some longer spells of rain. The showers could become heavy, with a small risk of thunderstorms, especially across the south of the UK. There will also be some drier spells, with these most likely in the north and northwest of Scotland. Temperatures will be close to or slightly above average for the time of year, with the northwest likely to see the best of these. The changeable conditions are most likely to continue through to the end of the period, with showers at times. There will still be some drier and brighter interludes too, particularly across the north and northwest, with these perhaps becoming longer lasting at the end of May.


Thursday 30 May - Thursday 13 June


The weather at the end of May and start of June is likely to include dry and bright periods, perhaps punctuated by occasional wetter and windier spells. The most prevalent rain and showers will be across southern and central parts. It could be rather cool in these unsettled periods and particularly cool near the English east coast. The best of the sunshine and dry weather, as well as the highest temperatures, will be in the north, especially the northwest. However, these more prolonged settled and warm conditions will spread further south at times.


https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/forecast

Gavin D
16 May 2019 13:01:10

Tuesday 21 May - Saturday 30 May


Early mist and fog patches will clear to sunshine and scattered showers on Tuesday, mainly in central and eastern areas. Sunny spells and showers may continue through the rest of the week, with the best of the dry and sunny weather in the west. However, towards the end of the week more persistent rain and stronger winds may spread into far western areas. Temperatures will be close to or slightly above average for the time of year. The changeable conditions are most likely to continue through to the end of the period, with showers at times. There will still be some drier and brighter interludes too, particularly across the north and northwest, with these perhaps becoming longer lasting at the end of May.


Friday 31 May - Friday 14 June


The weather at the end of May and start of June is likely to include dry and bright periods, perhaps punctuated by occasional wetter and windier spells. The most prevalent rain and showers will be across southern and central parts. It could be rather cool in these unsettled periods and particularly cool near the English east coast. The best of the sunshine and dry weather, as well as the highest temperatures, will be in the north, especially the northwest. However, these more prolonged settled and warm conditions will spread further south at times.


https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/forecast

moomin75
17 May 2019 06:20:09
The brilliant John Hammond has updated his month ahead forecast and has all but written off any hopes of a really good summer and for the first month is predicting a very changeable and quite unsettled June.
Doesn't surprise me in the least.
Witney, Oxfordshire
100m ASL
Gavin D
17 May 2019 08:43:35

BBC monthly outlook


Summary


An unsettled end to May, but calmer in June


_________________________________


Wednesday 15 May – Sunday 19 May


High pressure moving away


High pressure has been located close to the UK during the first half of this week, with most parts of the country seeing a good deal of fine and dry weather, and with temperatures above normal for the time of year in many places. The fine weather is expected to continue on Wednesday, with most places seeing a lot of warm sunshine, although the sunshine will turn hazy as high cloud spreads in from the west during the day. Temperatures are expected to rise above 20 Celsius in many areas, approaching the mid-twenties in the warmest areas, likely to be somewhere in Scotland. Wednesday is likely to be the warmest day of the week. On Thursday, the high pressure area will slide northwards, becoming centred close to northern Scandinavia.


At the same time, a low pressure system over mainland Europe will drift northwards, marking the start of a spell of unsettled weather. The first sign of this will be cooler weather on Thursday, thanks to brisk easterly or north-easterly winds. Friday will see rain affecting England and Wales, perhaps affecting some areas of Scotland and Northern Ireland later. The weekend will see showers and rain affecting most parts of the UK at some point. There will be the chance of some heavy and thundery downpours too, most likely in the south. Temperatures will drop back below normal and it will be much cloudier than earlier in the week.


Monday 20 May – Sunday 26 May


Changeable weather for much of the week


The low pressure system which moves towards the UK at the end of this week should start to move away again at the start of next week. High pressure could briefly build back across the UK, but there is a signal for low pressure systems to pass close to or over the UK at times. All of this means that the start of the week is likely to see showers and rain affecting some parts of the country, but the rest of the week will see a mix of dry and bright spells interspersed with occasional showers and rain. Temperatures are likely to be near or above normal across the UK, with it warmest around the middle of the week.


As well as an increase in daytime temperatures, it should be a little warmer at night too and there is no significant risk of overnight frosts. Most places will be a little drier than normal too, although Scotland and Northern Ireland will see rainfall nearer to normal. Winds will be relatively light in most areas. The most likely alternative to our expected forecast is for high pressure to extend more strongly across the UK and Ireland around the middle of the week. This would bring dry conditions to all areas, including Scotland and Northern Ireland, but could also bring chillier air in from the north or north-east.


Monday 27 May – Sunday 9 June


Higher pressure building more widely over Europe


The last week of May and first few days of June are likely to see a continuation of the changeable weather. We expect to see low pressure systems move eastwards across the UK towards Scandinavia, interspersed with spells of drier and calmer weather. Temperatures will continue around or a little above normal for the time of year, and it will be wettest in the north and west of the country, with the south and east relatively dry - fairly typical for the time of year. The first full week of June should see a slight change to the pattern. We expect to see high pressure extending across more of Northern Europe, including the UK and Ireland.


This should mean that we will see drier and less windy weather across the whole of the country, with temperatures above normal in most areas too. Confidence is growing that we will see this dry and increasingly warm start to June. However, when looking so far ahead there is always a level of uncertainty. This time, the main alternative scenario is that high pressure becomes centred a little further north than we currently expect it too. If this happens then we could see showers or rain, perhaps thundery, affecting the south of the UK. However, even if high pressure is further north, most of the UK would still be relatively calm and warm.


Further ahead


Will the forecast for June still look as summery, or will the changeable May weather linger a little longer?


https://www.bbc.co.uk/weather/outlook

Gavin D
17 May 2019 08:45:30

John Hammond's latest monthly outlook



  • Showery into next week

  • Cool Holiday Weekend

  • Mixed weather in June


Full forecast as ever is here for subscribers* https://weathertrending.com/2019/05/17/john-hammond-month-ahead-summer-2018-unlikely/


*Subscription is free but you must sign up to view

David M Porter
17 May 2019 09:38:26

The brilliant John Hammond has updated his month ahead forecast and has all but written off any hopes of a really good summer and for the first month is predicting a very changeable and quite unsettled June.
Doesn't surprise me in the least.

Originally Posted by: moomin75 


I'd be interested to know if anyone can recollect what John Hammond's thoughts were this time last year wrt the 2018 summer.


Also, I could be wrong here, but last December didn't he predict that we would have a generally much colder second half of the winter just gone? I wonder what happened to that.


Lenzie, Glasgow

"Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us has a monopoly on wisdom, and we must always be ready to listen and respect other points of view."- Queen Elizabeth II 1926-2022
moomin75
17 May 2019 11:29:20


 


I'd be interested to know if anyone can recollect what John Hammond's thoughts were this time last year wrt the 2018 summer.


Also, I could be wrong here, but last December didn't he predict that we would have a generally much colder second half of the winter just gone? I wonder what happened to that.


Originally Posted by: David M Porter 

He was pretty much spot on throughout the summer.


Witney, Oxfordshire
100m ASL
David M Porter
17 May 2019 15:25:53


He was pretty much spot on throughout the summer.


Originally Posted by: moomin75 


True, but his thoughts from last December about the weather about what he thought would happen in the second half of the winter weren't as accurate.


Lenzie, Glasgow

"Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us has a monopoly on wisdom, and we must always be ready to listen and respect other points of view."- Queen Elizabeth II 1926-2022
bledur
17 May 2019 18:03:16

The brilliant John Hammond has updated his month ahead forecast and has all but written off any hopes of a really good summer and for the first month is predicting a very changeable and quite unsettled June.
Doesn't surprise me in the least.

Originally Posted by: moomin75 


 No he has not written off summer. This is what he says


And why should there be? After last year’s ‘freak’ weather, we forget that such conditions are, by definition, unusual. More typically at this time of year, warm sunshine is periodically interrupted as the jet stream delivers occasional cooler and wetter spells from the Atlantic. A healthy blend to swell the early summer fruit.


Northwestern areas of the UK are most likely to feel the brunt of such wet weather systems, whereas the southeast will probably be drier and sunnier.


 He is saying a more typical June and who knows what July and August will bring

Gavin D
18 May 2019 09:36:13

BBC monthly outlook


Summary


Changeable for the rest of May, but fine by June


_________________________________


Saturday 18 May – Sunday 26 May


A mixed bag for mid-May


Saturday will be rather wet and cloudy across Scotland, with outbreaks of rain pushing in from the east. This will keep it rather cool and dull, although England and Wales will see sunny spells and scattered showers develop, some of which will be heavy with the odd rumble of thunder possible. These will slowly ease overnight, leaving clear periods and a few mist or fog patches, although Scotland will continue to see some patchy rain. For many areas, Sunday will be the better day of the weekend, with more widespread sunny spells and temperatures a little higher than on Saturday. The sunshine will trigger some slow moving hit-and-miss showers through the afternoon, although many areas will also remain dry.


Next week will continue where the weekend left off, with light winds, sunny periods and some fair-weather cloud for many on Monday, but a few showers are also likely, some of which could again be heavy. More general rain may edge across Scotland from the east on Monday night and Tuesday, while the rest of the country will continue to see bright or sunny spells with just a few showers. Confidence is unusually low for the middle of next week, although it looks most likely that high pressure will build across the UK from the south or south-west. This will bring a lot of dry and calm weather, and it could become rather warm in the south, with any breezier and wetter weather limited to Scotland and Northern Ireland. However, there is around a 40% risk that low pressure becomes more widespread across the country from the west, bringing wetter and breezier weather for all. Either way, by next weekend, we should see a return to more widespread wet and breezy conditions nationwide.


Monday 27 May – Sunday 2 June


High pressure often to the south-west


Towards the end of May, it looks like high pressure will most often be centred to the west or south-west of the British Isles. This will allow occasional bands of rain and fronts to move south-east across the country, as areas of low pressure track east between Iceland and northern Scotland. All areas are likely to see some rain at times, although the driest and calmest weather is likely in southern and western Britain, where high pressure will most frequently ridge up from the south-west. This could also promote some rather warm weather to develop for a few days across southern Britain - although the warmth will likely be short-lived, as further fronts and Atlantic winds from the west or north-west bring cooler and wetter spells.


There are some indications that high pressure will begin to extend its influence north across Britain by early June, which should allow more widespread dry and calm conditions to develop (and prevent low-pressure areas bringing more widespread rain and winds). However, some uncertainty on the extent of low pressure across the country creeps into the forecast by this stage. This is most likely a consequence of intense thunderstorm activity which is expected across the central USA over the next few days. These thunderstorms can often generate large perturbations in the jet stream, the fast-flowing ribbon of air about 6- miles up in the atmosphere. These can often travel thousands of miles across the Atlantic towards Europe, and can be rather tricky for the computer models to accurately predict.


Monday 3 June – Sunday 16 June


Strong signals for intensifying high pressure


As high pressure continues to build across the UK during early June, there should be a lot of dry and calm weather to start the month, and temperatures should rise above normal for the time of year as warmer southerly or south-westerly airflows develop. In fact, southern parts of the country could see a couple of very warm days. It does look like the first half of June will continue this rather settled theme, with low pressure areas passing well to the north of the British Isles, and high pressure slowly shifting north towards northern Europe and Scandinavia. Many areas will be drier than normal; dry conditions may become widespread across Scotland and Northern Ireland, which are expected to remain closest to the high pressure centre.


It will be warmer than normal for all areas, although at present, it seems like heatwave conditions may struggle to develop. An area of lower pressure looks to develop to the south-west of Britain as we advance further into June. This could allow one or two heavy showers or thunderstorms to break out across southern areas at times, but these won't provide any meaningful rain for the gardens and fields which will no doubt be parched dry by this stage. Indeed, the main uncertainty is with regards to how far north this low pressure ends up; there is around a 30% chance that the low develops closer to southern Britain, bringing breezier and wetter weather to the south.


Further ahead


Will high pressure break to give a much-needed spell of rain to the UK, or will the expected fine start to summer continue?


https://www.bbc.co.uk/weather/outlook

Ally Pally Snowman
18 May 2019 09:49:11

BBC really going for a good start to summer different to others.


 


Bishop's Stortford 85m ASL.
Gavin D
19 May 2019 12:32:19

Friday 24 May - Sunday 2 June


Friday is likely to be a showery day with variable but often large amounts of cloud. Any sunny spells may trigger heavy showers with a risk of thunder and showers may merge to give longer spells of rain across the north and the far south. Temperatures should be near to normal. This changeable weather is expected to continue into the Bank Holiday weekend with strong winds and spells of rain likely, at first, before clearing to a mixture of sunshine and showers. Showers may become heavy and thundery across southern areas with temperatures generally near to or slightly below average. The rest of the period remains rather uncertain, although the weather is expected to become largely settled interrupted by spells of changeable weather.


Monday 3 June - Monday 17 June


Confidence in the forecast is low for the first half of June, but the most likely scenario is for a slowly evolving weather pattern to become established, with Atlantic weather systems struggling to make eastwards progress across the UK. Overall, settled weather is most likely across northern parts of the UK, but these settled spells will extend to all areas at times. These periods of drier and settled weather will occasionally be punctuated by cooler, showery spells as Atlantic weather systems arrive from the west, albeit temporarily. Temperatures are likely to trend mostly close to normal as we move through June.


https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/forecast

Gavin D
20 May 2019 07:36:32

UK weather: Brits to bake in one of 'hottest summer's ever' starting with 30C June


The Met Office has predicted there are likely to be "above average temperatures" from June to August


Britain is set to bask in its hottest summer ever as forecasters predict a three months of sizzling temperatures. By mid-June it is expected the mercury will have soared to 30C - making way for similar highs that we saw last year. The hottest day was in July when temperatures reached 35.3C in Faversham, Kent. The Met Office has predicted there are likely to be "above average temperatures" from June to August, raising hopes that we could see another scorching summer.


Highs of 30C next month amid tropical air were forecast by ex-BBC and Met Office forecaster John Hammond of weathertrending and The Weather Outlook forecaster Brian Gaze.



 

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/uk-weather-brits-bake-one-16168713?_ga=2.247569924.2035330500.1558337646-1108786294.1558337646

moomin75
20 May 2019 07:45:40


UK weather: Brits to bake in one of 'hottest summer's ever' starting with 30C June


The Met Office has predicted there are likely to be "above average temperatures" from June to August


Britain is set to bask in its hottest summer ever as forecasters predict a three months of sizzling temperatures. By mid-June it is expected the mercury will have soared to 30C - making way for similar highs that we saw last year. The hottest day was in July when temperatures reached 35.3C in Faversham, Kent. The Met Office has predicted there are likely to be "above average temperatures" from June to August, raising hopes that we could see another scorching summer.


Highs of 30C next month amid tropical air were forecast by ex-BBC and Met Office forecaster John Hammond of weathertrending and The Weather Outlook forecaster Brian Gaze.



 

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/uk-weather-brits-bake-one-16168713?_ga=2.247569924.2035330500.1558337646-1108786294.1558337646


Originally Posted by: Gavin D 

Well that's definitely put the kibosh on things now. Coldest, wettest summer for 100 years pretty much guaranteed! πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚


Witney, Oxfordshire
100m ASL
David M Porter
20 May 2019 08:18:03

I'm surprised the MetO are making a prediction like this at this time tbh. Have they forgotten what happened in 2009 when they predicted similar weather for that summer?


Lenzie, Glasgow

"Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us has a monopoly on wisdom, and we must always be ready to listen and respect other points of view."- Queen Elizabeth II 1926-2022

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