The 76 record will stand then which shows how hot it managed to get back then with a 1.5 degree lower baseline and cooler oceans than at present .
If the June 76 heatwave happened now i am not sure what colour the BBC charts would be as 25 seems to qualify for quite a dark red and the hyperbole in the news is deeply disturbing but not for the fact that there will be a short heatwave
Originally Posted by: bledur
FWIW in this part of Kent June will have been overwall warmer than the same month in 1976. I'm glad I wasn't alive then to experience the rest of that summer!
As for what 35 would look like on the BBC charts, well, we know that from a couple of years ago.
https://ukwct.org.uk/weather/2022.jpg

They've always had red on the colour chart, but it used to only appear for 40C or higher - so was never seen in the vicinity of the UK. They apparently moved the "red range" back to increase contrast from the yellows and oranges previously used, but as I'm not partially sighted I can't comment on how effective that is. Here's a screengrab from August 1990 - I had a wistful sigh watching it again, as Michael Fish described 27C in London in August as being "hot". Ahh... these days of course it'd just be "warm", not even "very warm"!

EDIT: Here's the full "hot" scale in the old days, courtesy of our own Kevin Bradshaw! The deep reds are 40+:
https://ukwct.org.uk/weather/2000.jpg

Second EDIT: The GFS is up to its usual tricks. 34s here for Monday and Tuesday, but then a deluge afterwards. I've never seen so much rain forecast on an op run away from the mountains, here's the view from xcweather:
https://ukwct.org.uk/weather/xc.jpg

I don't know what's less likely to happen... two inches of rain in the afternoon/evening, or a solar noon temperature of just 17C. I'd suspect neither will happen in the end!
Edited by user
27 June 2025 17:16:34
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Reason: Not specified