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Exact time Scots to be battered with rain in bank holiday weekend washout

Exact time Scots to be battered with rain in bank holiday weekend washout

Daily Record20-05-2025

The heatwave is to abruptly end this weekend with widespread heavy showers across Scotland.
Scots may have enjoyed the recent mini heatwave over the past few weeks, which brought temperatures well above 20C. But we should now brace ourselves for a huge rainy bank holiday washout, according to forecasters.
Weather modelling maps by WXCharts, which uses Met Desk data, show a massive Atlantic weatherfront moving in from Friday. This is expected to bring relentless downpours that could dampen plans right through the weekend, reported the Mirror.

Scotland's west coast is predicted to be deluged, with Glasgow also in for a wet few days. There are some parts of the weekend where the entire country is forecast for a soaking.

Down south, major cities like Manchester, Birmingham, Liverpool, and Cardiff are expecting long spells of downpours. And the Met Office has warned that some of the rain will be "thundery".
Scotland can expect the brunt of the washout to start at around 12pm on Friday, May 23, bringing a damp end to the recent glorious weather. At noon on Friday, the rain is forecast to hit the west coast and the Western Isles as it moves in from the Atlantic.
The weatherfront will continue to move across the country bringing much worse conditions for most of Scotland. By 9pm on Friday night, the majority of the mainland will be experiencing some form of rain, from drizzle to downpours.
While WX Charts predict a drier Saturday for Scotland, while the rest of the UK will continue being battered by showers, things take a wet turn for us on Sunday.

The west coast is, again, expected to bear the brunt of the weatherfront, but there is also a band of rain across southern Scotland the Central Belt. This means those running or spectating the Edinburgh Marathon on Sunday may want to look out some waterproofs.
Monday, however, is set to be generally drier for the whole of the UK. There will still be showers throughout parts of Scotland, especially focused in the north west of the country, but these are unlikely to be as extreme as Friday's downpours.

It comes as the Met Office released its long-range forecast for the period. The national forecaster said: "As we head into the bank holiday weekend and following week, a change in weather type is expected as unsettled conditions develop, with weather systems moving in from the Atlantic.
"The change is likely to overspread most areas through Saturday, with many seeing spells of rain and low cloud, and it will feel humid. This will herald a changeable spell as further systems come east.

"Drier and brighter intervals are likely between systems but with showers, some of which could be heavy/thundery. The wettest weather will tend to be toward the west."
The Met Office's Deputy Chief Meteorologist Mark Sidaway added that the country should brace itself for "unsettled conditions."

He said: "The high pressure that has been around for the last few weeks will slowly lose its grip on the UK this week, bringing a change to more unsettled conditions with many areas seeing rain or showers, ending the prolonged dry spell.
"The change comes this weekend, with weather systems moving in from the Atlantic, arriving from the west probably later on Friday and through Saturday. They will bring with them spells of rain, which may be heavy at times, with a risk of strong winds in places.

"These conditions will gradually spread across the UK on Saturday, with Sunday and Bank Holiday Monday likely seeing sunshine and showers.
"So, whilst the bank holiday won't be a complete washout, with some sunshine expected, this weekend represents a notable shift from the fine and settled weather pattern that has dominated so far this month."
It comes after the Met Office announced it will from now on predict the UK's weather more accurately, thanks to its brand new supercomputer, which is particularly useful for more accurately predicting rainfall.
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