Forecasters are expecting a surprise summer heatwave and
bookies have now slashed the odds of temperatures soaring past the 25.6C
March record set 1968 in Mepal, Cambs
Heatwave: Britain basks in record breaking spring sunshine and could be set for the hottest summer EVER claim forecasters
And forecasters are saying this summer could be the UK’s hottest ever because of warmer water as far away as the Pacific.
Thousands flocked to beaches, beer gardens and parks to lap up “exceptionally mild” spring weather caused by a band of high pressure making its way across Britain.
The hottest recorded in Britain yesterday was 19.3C (66F) in London’s St James’s Park.
That
was more than two degrees warmer than in Greece where temperatures
reached 17C and six degrees hotter than Turkey where it was just 13C.
Bookies
have now slashed the odds of temperatures soaring past the 25.6C March
record set 1968 in Mepal, Cambs, after the mercury soared well above the
12C average for this time of year.
Boffins
at Justus Liebig University in Giessen, Germany, say there is a 75 pe
That means waters on the
Pacific equator rise higher than usual, leading to hotter temperatures
here. It is even possible 2003’s record of 38.5C in Faversham, Kent,
may fall.
Met Office forecaster Tom Morgan confirmed: “It was a lovely warm sunny day in the South.”
MeteoGroups’s
Andy Ratcliffe added: “It will be dry across the UK, but there could
more unsettled weather towards the end of the week in the North West.”
And the good news is large parts of the country will still be basking today.
In the South and East of England, temperatures are expected to top 18C.
But in the North West and Scotland, temperatures will be cooler with a chance of rain.
Here's last weekend's sunny spring weather in pictures:
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