The way it's shaping up next week for the far south, it has the potential to bring good falls of snow... or a lot of frustration as conditions tend toward the wrong side of marginal.
Recent GFS and GFSP runs have been very much hit and miss with the snowfall down here, particularly for the weekend as it looks to come down to weak disturbances with showery activity the main source of precipitation. Can we get enough convection without the disturbance developing to the point that it draws in air from the ocean/seas? GFS/GFSP are rather lacking in precipitation but we know how things can crop up at short notice.
With the flow looking slack, it may come down to where heavier bursts of precipitation occur to get snow to low levels.
A similar situation to last night really - for example, around 7:30 this morning, a heavy snow shower passed just north of here, and heading up the road I saw some cars and even the odd roof sporting a cm or two of snow. By contrast there wasn't a single flake here as far as I could tell (it was rather dark when the only shower of the whole episode moved through, and it didn't drop much of anything really).
It should at least feel seasonal with subzero nights. There could be a risk of a freezing rain event somewhere.
Next week is when things become particularly interesting, as we have a bit of a col situation for a time (between high and low pressure with dead calm air) which could really allow temperatures to plummet Sunday night - don't believe what GFSP and GFS show; late last month they were going for -1*C here under such calm conditions and in reality I was seeing lows of around -7*C. With so little mixing going on, the cold pool could become comparable to a continental one, with low dewpoints and a resilience against being shifted.
We could then see some kind of sliding low running into this low level cold early next week. Of the past few runs, only the GFSP 06z has shown the right sort of thing for a frontal snow event that affects more than a lucky few and isn't transient; the angle of the low is right for drawing in a flow form the SSE rather than S or SW. This mitigates the effect of the warm sector, though it still doesn't quite cut if for Devon and Cornwall.
As noted early this morning, ECM has a similar theme but the low stays out west so the frontal system probably doesn't affect more than areas furthest west in the UK.
UKMO has very different ideas to GFS, GFSP and ECM, in that it brings the 'parent' low down to the UK much faster, rather than having trough disruption with an extension SSE. This is a whole other ball game, in which a warm sector crosses a large portion of the UK, probably bringing a snow to rain event if it moves in fast enough, with the chance of a transition back to snow if the low drops far south enough on day 7.
Day 7 sees ECM doing a similar thing UKMO's day 6 solution, but with even more LP development - a spell of wet, rather than white, weather for much of the UK, leaving us looking for a new import of cold air as the system continues its slide SE.
Day 7 on the GFSP 06z is perhaps the best guidance as to how UKMO's sliding trough would work out, with the NE'rn third fairing best for snow, the SW only seeing rain.
I have done this more detailed summary to help keep expectations suitably low across the SW in particular - changes will need to be seen for better results there, though as usual these could leave eastern parts high and dry... it's rare for everybody to be a winner.
Also worth bearing in mind that the models do have their shortfalls when it comes to capturing cold pool/frontal system interactions, so best not to take the charts themselves too literally.
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T-Max: 30.2°C 9th Sep (...!) | T-Min: -7.1°C 22nd & 23rd Jan | Wettest Day: 25.9mm 2nd Nov | Ice Days: 1 (2nd Dec -1.3°C in freezing fog)
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