Something akin to what happened in March 2001, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2013 and 2018 wouldn't be sniffed at in these desperate times.
A dead mum, slushy snow (lots of - a true easterly, just too late), rain, rain, slush again (tiny amounts thereof, two times) and a one-day wonder (the bulk of the action having taken place in February).
I'd take the latter, I guess, but the reality is spring snowfall just doesn't satisfy in the same way midwinter snowfall does.
All academic at the moment, anyway. January is going to go out without so much as a sniff of a flake for most of us, leaving the four weeks+1 day of February - and as we all know, by the time you get to the end of February the strength of the sun increases rapidly. (In 2018 I remember seeing the odd sight of a -2C high and a 3 on the UV index on the Met Office forecast. Of course, that was record-breakingly cold air aloft for the time of year!)
Edited by user
23 January 2020 06:22:58
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