England could experience one final blast of hot weather next week.14 counties in England set to miss out on Indian Summer mini-heatwave next week
The counties set to miss out on an Indian Summer as the UK experiences 26C highs next week have been revealed. After four heatwaves this summer, England could experience one final blast of hot weather next week.
The temperatures are set to be mid-thirties by September 8, according to WX Charts. Maps and charts from WX Charts, based off Met Desk data, have shown the country burning yellow, amber and red.
But counties north of the Midlands look set to miss out, including West Yorkshire, East Riding of Yorkshire, North Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, Cumberland, Westmorland, Durham, Cumbria, Northumberland, Lancashire, Greater Manchester, Cheshire, parts of Lincolsnhire, and Merseyside.
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Jo Farrow, from Netweather TV, said: “After such a lot of dry, sunny and warm to hot weather, the end of August is rather mixed. The air flow feels fresher now.
“However, in any sunshine, there is still a good deal of warmth lifting temperatures into the low 20sC for the middle of the week.
“There will be a scattering of showers from the west and bands of rain bringing heavier falls with darkening skies.
“As one of these passes by, the temperatures will fall. Pinning down the details of these, in terms of timings, remains tricky. It will be worth keeping an eye on the Netweather Radar for the individual showers and the progress of any rainbands as they move eastwards.”
The BBC says Monday 8 to Sunday 21 September will be “p ossibly wetter in the north than the south”, adding: “The middle two weeks of September have lower confidence, with some disagreements between the long-range models.
“However, there are indications that temperatures could rise a little, and are more likely to be a little above normal on average.
“We should see a low pressure track somewhere between Iceland and Scotland with high pressure trying to build to the south and east, inducing some warmer flows at times.
“This would also mean that the wettest and windiest conditions become more focused on northern areas, especially Scotland and Northern Ireland. There will be seasonal amounts of rain elsewhere and it could possibly be drier than average in the south-east.
“By late September, however, those systems could edge further south again, meaning periodic rain for all areas. Temperatures shouldn’t depart too far from normal, and despite some variability they should be near or above seasonal.”