Temperatures forecast to top 20C in mild, wet week
Temperatures could top 20C in parts this week, as the UK looks set to enjoy some autumnal warmth.
After a cold and blustery weekend, the weather is expected to turn milder and wetter in the coming days.
Parts of the country could see a 10C bump in temperatures in the short period of fine weather, forecast to arrive in midweek.
But Met Office meteorologist Tom Morgan dampened hopes of an Indian summer over the next seven days, predicting that the better weather would be replaced by wet and windy conditions by next weekend.
BBC Weatherâs Louise Lear said the week would start off with some wet weather âin the south west to begin with, then the rain will gradually spread its way steadily north, so as we go through the week ahead, some areas along west-facing coasts could see as much as 50-70mm of rainfallâ.
She warned some thunderstorms may arrive on Tuesday, âwhen there will be sharp showers, with top temperatures of around 17Câ.
But on Wednesday, East Anglia and the home counties are predicted to see warmth of up to 22C, according to the Met Office.
The organisationâs Mr Morgan explained: âTemperatures are going to rise gradually, peaking probably on Wednesday in eastern areas, and we might well see in some spots 20C, and 22C is not out of question, probably in eastern England â so East Anglia down towards the south east.
âItâs possible we could exceed 20C in London but the peak temperatures might well be up towards the home counties and up to Cambridgeshire.â
Mr Morgan said there would be a âstark contrastâ between Wednesdayâs warmth and this past weekendâs more wintry feel â which even saw some frost.
âSome places will be 10C warmer because today (Sunday) is a very chilly day for early October, so the main theme for this week that itâs turning much milder for all,â he added.
Yet in the west and in Wales, midweek could bring rain, forecasters say.
âVery heavy rainâ
BBC Weatherâs Ms Lear added that the winds âwill strengthen further and itâs Wednesday when we really could see some very heavy rainâ.
Where exactly that rain will fall remains unclear, she said, âbut at the moment, the heaviest looks likely across west-facing coasts, drifting their way steadily north, with Gale-force gusts⊠across the far north of Scotlandâ.
âBut there is the potential that East Anglia and south east England will escape the rain during the day and see some sunshine,â she continued.
âIf that happens, we could get temperatures peaking at 21C⊠way above where they should be for this stage of October.â
Thursday is not looking âtoo bad a dayâ, she added â suggesting it was likely to be dry with some sunny spells and a few scattered showers in the west.
The rest of the country is expected to see strong winds and a band of heavy rain pushing eastwards on Friday.
Next weekend is âlooking pretty unsettledâ, according to Mr Morgan, with the north west, including Scotland and Northern Ireland, being wet and windy, but possibly less so in the south east.