The country faces a staggering 735-mile blizzard as far south as Brighton on February 1, according to WX Charts maps and charts.
Next UK snow bomb will hit everywhere in England – except two counties(Image: )
All the parts of England set to be SPARED the next UK snow bomb have been revealed. The country faces a staggering 735-mile blizzard as far south as Brighton on February 1, according to WX Charts maps and charts.
The snow is scheduled to hit Wales, Northern Ireland, Scotland and the majority of England. In England, the areas set to be spared any flurries are just Cornwall and other pockets of the south coast.
The maps are covered white with everywhere in Scotland covered, and staggering -9C conditions likely. The majority of the south of England will receive less than 3cm of snow, according to the maps.
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Wales is set to be hardest hit along the north coast, with 12cm of snow forecast. Counties affected in England include Somerset, the West Midlands, Yorkshire, Sussex, Somerset, Cambridgeshire, Kent, Durham, Cumbria, Northumberland, Cheshire, Essex, and Bedfordshire.
Hertfordshire, Wiltshire, Norfolk, Essex, Hampshire, Suffolk, Warwickshire, Herefordshire, Berkshire, Worcestershire and Gloucestershire will also be covered.
Greater Manchester, Shropshire, Lincolnshire, Rutland, Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire, Northants, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, Derbyshire and Lancashire are also at risk.
Other areas spared alongside Cornwall include Dorset. In Scotland, it is forecast to be -5C, while the mercury will hover between -2C and -1C in the North East and North West.
In North and Mid Wales, it will be -2C, and in Yorkshire and the Humber. Elsewhere, in South Wales, it will be bone-chilling -1C. A BBC Weather forecast for January 26 to February 1 states: “Uncertainty continues through the end of January, but a cold scenario remains more probable than a mild one.
“Current indications suggest high pressure becoming established to the northeast and north of the UK, driving cold easterly winds across the country.
“If this pattern develops, temperatures are likely to fall further below normal, and with occasionally stiff winds there could be sharp wind chill, especially along eastern coasts.
“Penetrating frosts would be a risk, with hit-and-miss snow showers and some more organised bands of snow bringing accumulations to some areas.
“That said, the forecast remains finely balanced. There is still a possibility that high pressure may build less strongly at higher latitudes, allowing Atlantic weather systems to edge farther east.
“The key uncertainty is how far these systems might penetrate into northwest Europe; if they advance more decisively, a milder regime would return.”