A 742-mile rain bomb could blast the UK as the latest weather maps have turned colourful, indicating unsettled and stormy conditions for the entire country. Maps from WXCharts show that whole of Britain is likely to experience wet conditions on December 6.
According to the weather maps, the rain bomb will swirl over the country at around 12noon on December, bringing chaos till 6pm.
WXCharts maps have turned a mix of bright orange, green, yellow and blue indicating the intensity of rain in every area.
The worst affected northern areas as per the charts are Dundee, Glasgow, Newcastle, Carlisle, Wick, Fort William, Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Inverness.
Around 3.5-4mm of rain per hour is likely to fall on these areas.
On the other hands, areas such as Cardiff, Southampton, Plymouth and Liverpool are likely to experience the heaviest rainfall in the southern regions, the maps suggest.
The wet condition comee days after Storm Bert wreaked havoc across many parts of the UK causing widespread disruptions.
The Met Office’s long-range forecast between December 1 and 10 reads: “Starting mainly unsettled, with showers or longer spells of rain for many parts of the UK.
“It will also be quite windy, especially towards the north and west. It will be mild, although the strong winds will make it feel rather cold.
“High pressure then looks like building close to or over the UK through early December. This will result in drier but also probably generally slightly cooler conditions, and increase the risk of overnight frost and fog.
“The largely dry, settled theme is likely to be punctuated by brief unsettled and milder spells though, with areas of low pressure crossing the UK, bringing some spells of wind and rain.
“Temperatures overall generally near average, but rather cold where any fog persists.”
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