Cooler weather conditions set in across UK as heatwave ends

After record -breaking June temperatures and many people in the UK, it seems that there will be no return to heat wave conditions in the near future.
Tuesday was the hottest day of the year – with the temperature of 34.7c (94.4f) recorded in London’s St James’s Park – but the beginning of July is much cooler.
More comfortable temperatures are already more than 10C, as some places are at the beginning of this week.
For the next 10 days, short -lived hot air magic is expected – but for the first half of this month, the heat wave conditions are not estimated.
Wednesday’s temperatures will vary from 16C to 26C to south. Tonight will be cooler, fresh and more comfortable.
For a large part of the next week, temperatures will be in the middle of the 20s in the middle of the 20s in Scotland and Northern Ireland.
However, Friday will be the hottest day we can see 27C or 28C in the distant southeast.
The most dry spring in the recording and especially for many of the UK after a dry start to the summer, there is a expected amount of rainfall in the next five days. The majority will fall to the north -west of the British Islands.
Yorkshire and North-West England are already in drought and the Environmental Agency says that two-thirds of the Britain’s river flow is currently classified as “how normal or less the year is under the year.
Some regions of Eastern Scotland and Wales also see low water levels.
On Thursday and Friday, they will see rain outbreaks, especially in Scotland and Northern Ireland.
During the weekend, temperatures will be more restless throughout England and shower will be unpredictable.
It is likely to reunite the higher pressure until the second week of July, ie the chance of rain will be lower.
This week, the second UK in 2025 marked the heat wave. It took six days for some parts of Yorkshire and Humber, and five days for people in Central and Eastern England.
When the places reach a certain temperature for three consecutive days, an official heat wave is reported.
The thresholds vary between 25C and 28C in different parts of the country.
This was the result of a large high -pressure area “stuck” to Europe called “heat dome” to Europe, and high temperatures in the UK are becoming increasingly widespread.
Scientists emphasized the role of climate change in these sizzling summers and saying that heat waves will become more frequent and warmer in the future.




