It looks like today’s UKMO and ECMWF are showing a cold spell from Wednesday the 31st January 12z Midday to upto Saturday 3rd Feb. With lesser Support from the GEM NAVGEM and GFS, GFS has downgraded it so has GEM and NAVGEM, for 120,168, and 192 hrs.
The ICON drops support of Cold Low Pressure by 168hrs- but has agreement with ECMWF and UKMO for 31 Jan-2 Feb. Respectively, it has the SE Tracking East NE Canada through NW then N Atlantic to UK and North to NE Europe PV Low with cold and wintry weather.
The swap to these today from the others, is plain silly!!.
Cold Waving Short Wave Low’s And Blocking High’s running at their angular direction of movement- High’s building to the West And NE of us, NW SE tracking Low’s across NW Atlantic West Greenland And Central North And NE Canada to UK via N Atlantic and through North to NE and East Europe then north across our North Sea And SE to E of Norwegian Sea is all very well placed for giving us cold and wintry weather.
Western N Central Atlantic and NE to East USA Blocking High’s, Blocking over East and NE of Greenland to Iceland is all set very well indeed. I have just typed this up again, very hard effort indeed.
Widespread cold and wintry weather with frost both early and late from Wednesday 31st to Saturday 3rd Feb, going by today’s UKMO and ECMWF Model consensus.
Todays GEM, NAVGEM and GFS appear to be all over the place, so they need to be fixed methinks!!.
❄️🌨😆😀😉.
Climate is warming up, Scotland and N Ireland and North England still often gets some Winter frost, ice and snow, November to March, but the SE and South UK including S Central England and Wales, together with the West and North through the year, they sometimes get more rain than London and S SE England, where some longer dry fine spells without much heavy rain is seen every year.
The North Atlantic Sea often gets some much Colder Wintry conditions from November to March Months, and Mild SW and South winds tend to be more frequent over the East and SE of North Atlantic Sea, as the Azores High tends to stay in charge.
With this warmth and heat, the Central and South UK has become mostly free of snow and frost.