I did a double-take this morning upon discovering full cross-model agreement (significant models only i.e. ECM, UKMO, GEM and GFS) regarding the positioning of a trough across NW Europe with the UK on the periphery, this then locking into place with little movement for many days.
There's a serious frontal boundary issue that comes with that - somewhere or other is likely to get stuck under persistent rain of substantial magnitude.
These cut-off lows are nearly always overcooked at the 5-6 day range (just look at how things have evolved for later this week compared to what was seen at range!), but GFS shows that even a weak feature could still bring a lot of cloud and spells of rain our way, leaving us in a regime of mild nights (double digits widely) but days in the mid-teens at best under the cloud.
Across the NW, it could be quite fine, under high pressure and reasonably warm air - a taste of summer there perhaps? Or at least late spring... which would be appropriate!
Meanwhile, unless the trough is modelled further south with the high pressure more dominant, the NE may face a lot of onshore wind issues... not great at all.
Over the same period, with upper air temperatures in of 8-12*C being modelled further south, any sunnier regions could see temperatures rise markedly. Given the huge area of clearer skies currently across a large swathe of the UK despite being right under a trough, somewhere in England and Wales could get lucky each day next week... we'll see.
Originally Posted by: Stormchaser