logo
Summer solstice celebrations begin as parts of UK faces 34C heat on longest day of year

Summer solstice celebrations begin as parts of UK faces 34C heat on longest day of year

BBC News5 hours ago

Update:
Date: 02:55 BST
Title: A303 temporarily closed
Content: Sammy JenkinsBBC News, Live page reporter
The A303 has been closed in both directions near Stonehenge due to a high volume of vehicles parked on the side of the road and pedestrians on the carriageway.
Wiltshire Police said the road is closed between the A360 at Longbarrow Roundabout and Countess Roundabout, Amesbury.
"The closure will be kept under review," it said.
Motorists are being told to use an alternative route via Countess Road and through Larkhill.
"We would like to remind motorists to drive safely and cautiously due to the increased risk of pedestrians walking in the road," it added.
Update:
Date: 02:50 BST
Title: Does the summer solstice mark the start of summer?
Content: One of the many places last year's summer solstice was marked was the Light Pyramid in Milton Keynes
To answer this, let's look at the two ways the start and end
of seasons are defined.
One is the astronomical seasons, which are based
on the position of the Earth in relation to the Sun. The astronomical summer is
often marked as beginning on the summer solstice.
The Met Office says this year, astronomers are marking
summer as starting today and ending on 22 September - but the dates shift
slightly each year.
Meteorological seasons are another way of
defining the start and end of seasons. They're based on the annual temperature
cycle and are split into four quarters made up of three months each - a more
consistent way that makes it easier to compare seasonal statistics.
This means meteorologists always class the northern
hemisphere's summer as being from 1 June to 31 August.
So, is today the start of summer? It depends on whether
you're asking an astronomer or a meteorologist.
Update:
Date: 02:45 BST
Title: It's the longest day of the year - and one of the hottest
Content: Good morning, and if you're up in the middle of the night joining us, thank you, you have a very long day ahead - literally.
Today marks the summer solstice, the longest day and shortest night of the year, and as you read this thousands of people will be gathering at sites around the UK to mark the start of the astronomical summer.
We're up nice and early (or very late, dependent on your view point) for you, with reporters at Stonehenge, the Avebury Stone Circle and Glastonbury Tor.
There's a good chance if you are reading this in the middle of the night you're struggling to sleep in the heat - and it's expected to continue today, with temperatures of up to 34C and a yellow warning for thunderstorms.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Suffolk commemorates 77th Windrush anniversary
Suffolk commemorates 77th Windrush anniversary

BBC News

time21 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Suffolk commemorates 77th Windrush anniversary

Communities are celebrating the contributions Caribbean migrants have made to the UK on the 77th anniversary of Empire Windrush docked in Tilbury, Essex, in June 1948, bringing hundreds of passengers to will take place across Ipswich to mark this with live music, stalls, a parade and Windrush and Ipswich Windrush Society will host their own events - with both groups saying they were for all to enjoy. Suffolk Windrush has organised an event in Cornhill on Sunday including a steel band, a reggae choir, food and market stalls, and organisation's Charles Challenger hoped it would "add a different flare to the day" while also helping increase visitors to the town centre."The footfall of people will hopefully increase. This event tends to bring business into Ipswich so it's playing its part in helping to grow the local economy," he explained."We also have an exhibition for people to have a look at what the elders have been doing over the years." Mr Challenger added that the event would showcase the Caribbean as well as the contributions immigrant communities had made to British society."It is so important - it will bring greater understanding with the wider public,; it also takes away the fear; it brings love and understanding right across the board," he said."From 1968 when I arrived here to today, as we continue to celebrate the Windrush, I see the changes and I see so many changes in how young people are embracing the culture that we live in today." Ipswich Windrush Society (IWS) will celebrate the post-Windrush immigration on both Saturday and Saturday, the group will host a parade, live music, food and activities in Landseer Park in east Sunday, activities move to Sailmakers shopping centre in the town centre where there will be a gospel and fashion festival, live music and guest speakers. The shopping centre is a key location as has a Reflection Room - a time capsule exhibition of memorabilia showcasing the stories of the Windrush Thomas from IWS said he hoped it would bring people together from all walks of life."We have a front room setting that is to provoke memories of good times, bad times, sad times and the hard times, that they had to turn around, show resilience and put this room together because they were being indoctrinated into being British and they had to show they had arrived," he explained."So all the best things were in the front room."It was a mystical room and as a child you weren't allowed to go in because it was for big people only."Mr Thomas added the 77th anniversary events would the "biggest and best ever" that the group would "build on in years to come". Who are the Windrush generation? In 1948, the British Nationality Act gave people from colonies the right to live and work in World War Two, the government needed workers to help with a labour shortages and rebuild the Empire Windrush became a symbol of a wider mass-migration movement as hundreds more people sailed from the Caribbean to the UK in its wake, with immigrants from 1948-1971 becoming known as the Windrush Generation. Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Summer solstice at Stonehenge draws 'record-breaking' crowd
Summer solstice at Stonehenge draws 'record-breaking' crowd

BBC News

time31 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Summer solstice at Stonehenge draws 'record-breaking' crowd

About 25,000 people have celebrated the summer solstice at Stonehenge - a record breaking event is one of the few occasions people can walk next to the stones at the ancient site near Salisbury in comes on what could be the UK's hottest day of the year so far with temperatures predicted to peak at operations manager Julia Richardson told the BBC it had been a peaceful event with an "amazing atmosphere". She added it was a "perfect combination" of the warm weather and solstice falling on a weekend that brought the crowds Wexler, Stonehenge's curator of history, said the sunrise had been "amazing"."It's a really wonderful way to come and mark this seasonal moment in time," she solstice attracted people from as far away as Hong Kong and America, along with thousands from the Ng, 28, has lived in the UK for more than a decade and said she felt she had to visit Stonehenge before moving back home to Hong Kong. She said she was drawn to Stonehenge after hearing about the atmosphere and pagan festivals and traditions."I had to come here before I left," she said. "So I grabbed my best friend who lives up in Edinburgh and dragged her here this morning."And, one family from Atlanta, Georgia, celebrated an 18th birthday at said when she was born they would take her to Stonehenge for the landmark birthday."The weather has been absolutely amazing, the people have been amazing," said mum Kerri Hobson-Pape said it is "really special" to be there for the solstice. The A303, which runs past the ancient stone circle, was closed during the night after motorists parked their cars on the side of the Police said: "We would like to remind motorists to drive safely and cautiously due to the increased risk of pedestrians walking in the road." Elsewhere, a crowd gathered on Glastonbury Tor to watch the sunrise ahead of the music festival next week.

The legacy of the A14 Cambridge to Huntingdon upgrade
The legacy of the A14 Cambridge to Huntingdon upgrade

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

The legacy of the A14 Cambridge to Huntingdon upgrade

For decades, a dual carriageway in Cambridgeshire was synonymous with slow-moving traffic, jack-knifed lorries and long, long changed in May 2020, when the new A14 opened ahead of schedule, a12-mile (19km) Cambridge to Huntingdon three-lane carriageway. More than five years after the £1.5bn road improvement scheme was completed, what do locals think - and what is its legacy?The BBC has been finding out. "Driving to Stansted Airport could potentially be a two-hour trip, just to get there for a pick-up or drop off - now it's a 45-minute journey," said Stuart co-founder of Le Mark, a Huntingdon-based company, is a huge fan of the improvements."We are a business that is rural, we're in a nice part of the county, but we need to get up and down the motorways when we need to," he said. The company produces tapes, custom-printed labels, professional dance floors and crew-wear for the entertainment industry, including TV, touring bans, theatre, stage and buys and sells internationally, which is why getting to Stansted Airport is so Mr Gibbons can also confidently tell customers in north London that Le Mark can drop off items within an hour and a half."The difference is we can make an appointment we are fairly certain we can meet," he said. Heidi Brown has been working for Le Mark for three years - and commuting along the A14 for much longer than that. The upgraded road has transformed her journey to work. "Historically, it was quite a lot of congestion, it wasn't the easiest of journeys - I'd often have to find alternative routes to work," the purchasing assistant said."Now I can confidently leave knowing I can get to work and I don't have to allow more time in advance." Her colleague, social media content creator Charlotte Brooks, agreed, adding: "I'd hear [the old A14} a lot near our house, but it's a lot better now, much more quiet." "It's a hugely important bridge, the level of vehicles using this bridge is massive - from villages like Oakington, Cottenham, Longstanton and Willingham," said Luis newly elected Liberal Democrat county councillor has found himself negotiating with National Highways over settling embankments on land around the Bar Hill bridge at junction new layout there was part of the A14 project, but now locals are saying they feel a bump when they drive over it and Mr Navarro is "concerned it could become a hazard"."The technical term is the bridge is 'settling' and National Highways have now attached monitoring devices to it, to provide data on how fast or if the bridge is still settling," he said."It's important we are on top of this issue... it's a major artery and the idea is we try to get a permanent solution to reassure drivers that it's safe."A National Highways spokesperson said it had been monitoring the bridge for more than a year, initially with inspections by engineers."This has now been enhanced to include digital monitoring," they said. "This is part of a phased assessment process as we continue our work with Cambridgeshire County Council to determine the root cause and put an appropriate solution in place." About 270 hectares (670 acres) of habitat, including 40 native tree and shrub species, was created for wildlife along the new section of the A14, which realigned the dual carriageway south of say the tree screen will be vital to mitigate against noise from the road. However, National Highways said in 2022 about 20 to 30% of the trees had died, although all have been has since planted another 165,000 trees and shrubs, 90% of which have Russell, who founded the rewilding group Creating Nature's Corridors and with her family, lives close to the A14 in took matters into their own hands by planting their own trees."What we're really lacking is the mulching and the watering and the nurturing and that wasn't done by National Highways," she said. Paul Salmon has been working on the latest National Highways infrastructure project in Cambridgeshire, from Caxton Gibbet to the Black Cat roundabout in Bedfordshire, for more than three £1bn A428 project includes a new 10-mile (16km) dual carriageway, as well as bridges and junctions connecting to the existing road. "Everyone locally knows about the Black Cat junction, it's infamous for multiple reasons and has been a pinch point - including the last single carriageway on this east-west corridor between Milton Keynes and Felixstowe," he said. "And we will move that traffic off the local road."Currently it's about 35,000 vehicles on the A428 a day, and by the time the new road opens, it'll be down to about 3,000 a day."The agency and its partner Skanska have spent time working out "the good, the bad and the indifferent" of the A14 project, the senior project manager added. "For this project, we're top-soiling early, so it'll be green by the time the scheme opens," he said. Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store