All the parts of England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland set for snow this week mapped
by James Rodger, https://www.facebook.com/jamesrodgerjournalist · Birmingham LiveALL the parts of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland set for a dumping of snow this week have been revealed in fresh weather maps. The Met Office has issued a yellow weather alert for the country, and fresh maps and charts from WX Charts show where exactly, and when, the mercury will drop below zero.
Weather maps show temperatures in Scotland dropping to -2C on Monday morning at around 6am, while temperatures in the North West of England will shiver in -3C. On Wednesday, the coldest temperatures are forecast to be -4C, with temperatures dropping once again on Thursday to -5C.
The Scottish Highlands will see he coldest temperatures on Saturday, November 23, with -9C being forecast in some areas. James Madden, from Exacta Weather, explained: "Imminent and widespread snow showers are on the way from the upcoming and expected wintry period, matching our stand-alone earlier forecast for this upcoming period of November.
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"Also, prepare and be aware of what is in store for this winter for further ahead, including several expected high-confidence snow dates between December and February within our final 5-page weather report for just 6.00 for this weekend only!"
"New North Atlantic low pressure systems could move across with their fronts until the end of next week, albeit with a gradually milder and brisk west to south-westerly flow. However, confidence is still low at present," the BBC team said.
It added: "Over the weekend and next week unsettled and increasingly windy conditions are likely. Temperatures will drop well below average for a while, with a wintry touch across much of the UK. There is an ongoing risk of disruptive weather at times. After that it could turn milder from the south-west."
It continued: "The next outlook on Tuesday should answer the question of whether the meteorological winter will start out rather wintry or whether milder conditions could set in."