UK weather: bank holiday sun forecast for most with highs of 30C in places | UK weather

Bank holiday temperatures, hurricane hurricane residues are expected to approach 30C (86F) in the regions of England on Monday before bringing wind and rain.
Maximum temperatures will be about 26C or 27C on Sunday, and then he said he could wait for most of the participants of the Notting Hill Carnival in London to reach 28C or 29C with widespread sunlight.
However, Met Office Meteorologist Craig Snell is expected to cool down late on Monday, as the ruins of the Hurricane Hurricane of Erin will continue during the week.
For the rest of the week, temperatures will be closer to the average – high young people in the south and the north of the north.
Snell said: “Today and tomorrow, today, apart from the rainy rain in Scotland, it will be largely dry in England. There will be increasing amounts of sunlight and temperatures that continue to climb.
“On Monday, there will be a very warm and sunny picture for most. It will begin to go downhill and the rainy will begin to move for Northern Ireland in the afternoon.”
It is recommended to go to the beaches on Monday or Tuesday to those who plan to go to the beaches, to those with lifeguards because large waves are expected.
As of Tuesday, the rain spell will move all over the country and will be wet in the West.
He despised the potential impact of the Hurricane of Erin on the coast of England, which is now a category of 2 storms that move to the east throughout the North Atlantic.
“In the West, it will be heavy from time to time, but we don’t expect much effect right now, and it can be welcomed for farmers or anyone who needs rain,” he added.
On Wednesday, a rain group will move all over the country, and with more rain spells, there will be low pressure until the end of the week.
Last week, Erin, a hurrish, lost some power while moving on the eastern coast of North America, which was previously classified as a Category 5 Storm, but still caused more than 2,000 people to be released in North Carolina and to be rescued from Rip Furrents on the southern coast of the state on the southern coast of the state.


