Staying fine and dry throughout the period, with variable amounts of cloud and sunny spells. Feeling much warmer than on Monday, with light winds. Maximum temperature 20 ☌.Īfter a cool start in places, it will be a fine and dry day, with lengthy spells of sunshine. Less windy than on Sunday and feeling warm in any sunnier spells. He said: "“We should beat that comfortably on Friday and potentially exceed it, or get very close to it, on Wednesday and Thursday as well" Skegness weather forecast - June 13-17Īfter a cool start it will be a mostly fine and dry day, with large amounts of cloud around, but also some sunny spells developing in the afternoon. Speaking about the potential for this Friday to be the hottest day of the year, Mr Keates was very positive. We’re set to see probably a brief spell of hot weather at the end of this coming week.” The Met Office's Steven Keates told The Mirror: "There’s not been much in the way of exceptionally warm days or hot days yet this year, but that is set to change. This is because the Met Office defines a heatwave as 'three successive days of temperatures above 28C.' READ MORE: Met Office hay fever warning as 'very high' pollen levels set to continue this weekĭespite the mercury soaring to 30C, the hot weather will not be declared a heatwave.
The hot temperatures are thanks to a 'Spanish plume' hitting the UK later this week, meaning that Lincolnshire will be warmer than parts of Hawaii and the Spanish Coastline this Friday - you can find the full forecast for the week ahead below. The soaring temperatures are not expected to last for very long, however, as temperatures will drop by almost 10C by Saturday, June 18. The Met Office is predicting that the hottest day of the year so far could be on the way this Friday, June 17.įurther inland, temperatures will be even higher, with the mercury set to rise to 30C in Lincoln.
Becoming northeast 10-18 m/s with rain by the southeast coast today, but 5-13 m/s and mostly dry. It just means that severe weather outbreaks may not be as frequent as in areas farther east.Lincolnshire's beaches are set to be as hot as the Spanish Coastline by the end of this week with extreme temperatures of 28C expected in Skegness. Cloudy and mainly dry, but mist or drizzle at the east coast. That is not to say parts of Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas will not be hit with severe weather this spring. An expected lack of Gulf moisture getting farther west into the areas of Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas that are typically more prone to tornadoes and severe weather is why these states are not included in this main zone of concern for a severe weather season that is more active than normal. A major player will also be the presence of moist air from the Gulf of Mexico, which is expected to be drawn most frequently into this zone.
The factors pointing to increased severe weather activity in this zone include clashes that will take place between warm air across the southern tier of the nation and colder air to the north. He added that this zone could shift north-northeastward into Ohio, Indiana and Illinois later in the spring. The zone of greatest concern for above-normal severe thunderstorm activity this spring, according to Pastelok, lies from Arkansas and Missouri into Tennessee and Kentucky, areas that have been targeted already by several severe outbreaks the last week of February. Severe Weather Season More Active than Normal This area will also lie in the path of more cold shots into April. As is the case every year, the big concern for people across the northern tier of the nation will be flooding with melting snow and spring storms bringing more snow and rain. More than 88,000 acres of land in western Texas were scorched just this past weekend as wildfires ignited in response to hot, dry conditions already surfacing. These conditions will also bring about a high danger of wildfires from the southern Plains into the interior Southwest.
Note that while temperatures are expected to average near or slightly below normal in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic, this spring will feel much cooler as compared to last year, when the regions experienced record warmth in March and April. He is also concerned about abnormally dry and warm conditions worsening a drought on the Plains and bringing a major hit to cotton growers in Texas and wheat growers in sections of the southern Plains. Paul Pastelok, leader of the Long-Range Forecasting Team, warned that this spring's severe weather season will be more active than normal, meaning there could be a higher-than-average number of tornadoes and severe thunderstorms in the eastern part of the country. The biggest concerns center around expectations of an active severe weather season, the spreading of a severe drought and a high wildfire danger, and, as always, threats for flooding. According to forecast for Spring 2011 calls for more wild weather for the U.S.