March snow ‘totally attainable’ and will ‘lower off’ elements of the UK, professional warns

A climate professional has mentioned it is “entirely possible” we see extra snow subsequent month, with some elements of the nation presumably changing into “cut off”.

Jim Dale, Senior Meteorological Consultant at British Weather Services, advised the Daily Star the UK can count on “sedate” climate situations over the subsequent week, typical of what we count on for February.

He mentioned: “That means frost and ice in the morning for many of us, not all of us, but most of the inland areas will start to see ice on windows, that type of thing… Snow showers in Scotland, for the Highlands etc, but it’s not going to go perilously cold.”

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Mr Dale mentioned: “March is not a month where you can say ‘winter is over’.” (inventory)
(Image: PA)

Mr Dale additionally mentioned there can be drier and sunnier spells, “warming as much as a level however nothing distinctive”. This will mark a break from the latest “hostile” climate.

However there was discuss of snow presumably coming subsequent month, and Mr Dale mentioned he cannot rule it out. He mentioned: “It’s entirely possible, make that clear. I’m not going to predict day to day in March, but longer term – yes.

“March shouldn’t be a month the place you possibly can say ‘winter is over’. The season of winter is over, however wintry climate is certainly not. And it’s commonplace, notably for the north of the nation, to see snowy outbreaks, icy situations.



“It happened a few years ago when parts of the north got cut off… that’s not impossible again.” (inventory)
(Image: PA)

“It happened a few years ago when parts of the north got cut off, the Pennine areas, all the villages and towns in and around, [after] two weeks of snow. That’s not impossible again.”

Mr Dale described March as a “month of variables and potential extremes” and defined that whether or not or not we see extra snow will rely upon the “synoptic situation” going ahead.

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