UK weather maps turn dark red as 33C scorcher set to hit England in days | Weather | News

The British is preparing another scorch for a few more days, as forecasts estimate that 33C heat will return at the beginning of next month. On Sunday, August 3, the UK will reach 33C, according to WXCharts’ air maps in the UK and Midlands regions.
Temperatures will also be on the summit on Tuesday, August 5 and will be estimated to be maximum 31C near Bath and Peterborough. On Sunday, the hottest day, temperatures will largely sit in Northern Midlands, including Norfolk, Suffolk, London, Leicester, Nottingham and Derby between 30C and 31C in southeast of England. London will be the hottest place on August 3, and the temperature estimate will reach 33C at 18:00.
It can be an uneasy night for those in the hottest areas, temperatures are expected to remain high, reached 29C at midnight Saturday and remained around 30C until midnight on Sunday.
It starts to fall under the 30c north of Nottingham, and the west of England will be much more cool. Manchester is expected to reach 24C, while Cornwall’s tip can be 22C and will be around 21C in Newcastle.
On Tuesday, a group of warmer temperatures between 30C and 31C will sweep from Northeast Cotswolds to Nottingham at 18:00.
Most of the UK was estimated from London to Yorkshire, but when you reach Newcastle and Cumbria, it begins to significantly fall, which reaches Newcastle and Cumbria, which was estimated in the 20s in the 20s.
In both days, the wines will be in the 20s in their 20s, while North Ireland will be much cooler with the same temperatures as Scotland.
Although the hottest districts will still be just below 30C, Saturday, August 2, will not be as hot as Sunday. On Monday, August 4, the UK will reach the highest level of 26C.
Met Office long -range estimation estimates that hot spells are “a small chance” in late July and early August.
He said: “In the period, if the southwest settled air can develop there if there is a high pressure.
“The temperatures are likely to be close to the average for the time of the year, there is only a small chance of a small hot spell in late July and early August.”




