Thursday, September 29, 2011

Week ahead: Hot into the weekend - Cooler next week, Sep 30 - 06:14

More unsettled for a time We keep the high temperatures and the summery weather into the weekend across England and Wales but things gradually deteriorate as we lose high pressure in favour of low pressure moving north of Scotland. Fronts though will be weak affairs as they move south with very light totals of rain expected. Temperatures will drop off next week closer to normal levels. Later in the forecast high pressure is expected to build back in as it turns fine and dry again. For the weather for the next few days click here Monday 03/10/11 Some patchy light rain is expected across Wales, south west England and parts of the Midlands today with rain spilling into Northern Ireland and west Scotland in the afternoon. More cloudy across the rest of Britain with some brighter spells. Highs of 15 to 20C.

Tuesday 04/10/11 Very windy today, especially across the north with sunshine and showers and gales. Rather cloudy across England and Wales with some patchy bits of light rain here and there. Highs of 11 to 19C.

Wednesday 05/10/11 Much cooler and quite windy today with sporadic outbreaks of light rain across parts of England and Wales while showers persist across Scotland and Northern Ireland. Expect highs of 12 to 14C.

Thursday 06/10/11 Still windy across Scotland with outbreaks of rain. Any patchy rain across England and Wales in the morning fizzles out as it becomes dry and sunnier. Expect highs of 12 to 17C.

Friday 07/10/11 A fine, dry day for much of the United Kingdom with a risk of some dense morning fog across England and Wales, otherwise good spells of sunshine to come for most areas. Expect highs of 12 to 16C. Saturday 08/10/11 Some rain in the far north of Scotland otherwise we end the forecast dry with sunny spells once morning fog patches disperse. Again these may be quite dense in the south. Expect highs of 14 to 17C.


Source: http://feeds.weatheronline.co.uk/~r/weatheronline/~3/NDnku-2ahLk/reports

Lee Carsley Radio industry Bank of England Argentina Dmitry Medvedev Alex Reid

No comments:

Post a Comment