High risk high reward as they say. I would bank the GFS 06z for the south. We stay on the cold side of the jet and slider low should deliver plenty of snow. (apart from Isle of Sheppey - LOL)
Originally Posted by: The Beast from the East
Yeah it's a paint by numbers run for how to get snow from a northerly:-
1) Convection for prone areas, i.e Scotland and windward coasts on both sides of the UK. (Only to 03/01 as it's accumulated but gives the gist).

2) Features developing in the flow, giving more organised precip to certain areas - on the chart below a small disturbance hits NE Scotland:-

3) LPs bumping into the cold air, hopefully in a way that doesn't bring mild air in afterwards, 6z GFS nails this:-

The encroaching LP and small features stuff is clearly not to be taken too seriously at this range but the convective stuff seems highly likely I'd imagine and at least I can look at Scottish web and traffic cams to get a vicarious snow fix if needs be😂
Not shown at present happily but experience suggests when you're looking at LP incursions you need to roll a few sixes in a row to get something like the above chart for the far south and you often see the first low end up in France then the second low approaches on a more NE trajectory and snow is restricted to areas further north (or variations of the law of sod that make it cold rain IMBY).
Still bit daft getting too hung up on that sort of detail at the moment, given the range and uncertainties and not surprisingly the 6z op strongly suggests something interesting this way comes!
Edited by user
29 December 2025 10:47:42
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Reason: Typo
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