UK weather: 'messy mix' of wintry conditions expected

  • 1/30/2021
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Parts of England and Wales are braced for more wintry conditions, as a “messy mix” of weather warnings for snow, ice and rain remain in force. The cold conditions will move further north into next week, with the potential for 20cm of snow in places before midweek, a Met Office forecaster has said. Simon Partridge, a meteorologist, said: “We’ve got this band of rain sleet and snow that’s moving across much of England and Wales through today, that is a real messy mix.” The picture varies across the country on Saturday, with much of Devon and Cornwall under a yellow warning for rain, with predictions that as much as 25mm could fall by the end of the day. Temperatures will drop as low as minus 6C overnight in England, and the potential for the mercury to fall to between minus 10C and minus 15C in parts of Scotland. Other southern areas will also be wet but, further north sleet, rain and hill snow have triggered a further yellow weather warning. Pictures from Gloucestershire on Saturday morning showed a children’s playground partly submerged in Tewkesbury and vehicles driving through rising flood waters in Lower Applerley. There were similar scenes in Henley-on-Thames in Oxfordshire, where water rose on to the towpath, surrounding benches and approaching riverside homes. On Saturday evening there were 82 flood warnings in place across England, mainly in the Midlands, with a further 251 less serious flood alerts also active across the country. As the rain and sleet moves away overnight, the risk of ice persists, with central England and Wales faced with a further yellow weather warning on Sunday. Partridge predicted a “much heavier” band of rain arriving overnight on Monday into Tuesday, which will “quickly turn to snow as it bumps up against cold air” and has triggered further yellow weather warnings for snow and ice. Northern England and parts of Wales could see snow “pretty much anywhere” with 1cm to 5cm likely at lower levels and 5cm to 10cm possible in the hills. The highest areas could get “up to 20cm or so though the course of the day” and Partridge predicted that Transpennine routes in particular could have some issues on Tuesday. The same band of wintry weather will move northwards towards Wednesday and take the weather warnings for snow with it, with the central belt of Scotland most likely to see disruption.

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