Forecasters have claimed that the worst of the winter weather has passed by Britain as it moves towards Spring, but rising stress will result in storms monitoring Europe moving into the UK instead.
According to charts and maps, the UK will be drenched in rain this week, clearing by the weekend.
A blob of rain is expected to move northwards from Europe towards the south of England and Wales on Tuesday, with 2mm in London and 3mm in Cornwall expected by 9pm.
Situations that are delicate, with showers of rain
Rain has moved northwards into the UK by 6 a.m. on Wednesday, settling in the midlands and Wales, while continuing to fall over the south, with 1 mm per hour expected in most places, as per Virginia News Today.
About the same time, a belt of Atlantic rain moving east approaches Eire and Britain, with Eire arriving Wednesday night and the west coast of Britain arriving at 6 p.m. on Thursday.
This band, which brings snow to Scotland and up to 3mm of rain per hour to the rest of the UK, moves over the country from Thursday into Friday night, clearing by Saturday midday.
Through the week, Bournemouth and Bristol are expected to receive 45mm of rain, or about 2 inches, whilst Belfast and Carlisle are expected to receive 35mm and 42mm, respectively.
London received 15mm of rain from Tuesday to Saturday midday, whilst Scarborough is mainly spared from the wet weather forecast for the next week.
The brunt of the rain remained over the east coast of Scotland around midnight on Wednesday, with some spreading south onto England and Wales' shoreline, as per Express.
While most of the rain has passed throughout the UK by 9 p.m., snowfall rates of up to 3cm per hour have been reported in certain parts of Scotland.
Areas like Lochcarron had 45mm of rain in the 24 hours leading up to midnight on Thursday.
Meanwhile, the majority of the UK will have a rainy finish to the week, but it will be considerably lighter, with WXCharts predicting that all regions except Newcastle will get at least 1mm of rain throughout the course of the day.
According to British Weather Services meteorologist Jim Dale, the cold will return on Wednesday.
In comparison to the end of last week, we will lose the very chilly effect on Sunday and Monday, and Tuesday will seem warmer.
However, when this cold front passes through on Wednesday and Thursday, we'll be back in the deep freeze.
In the days running up to Wednesday, average temperatures vary from 7 to 11 degrees Celsius, with lows of 3 degrees Celsius as far south as Cardiff, according to WXCharts.
Also Read: Study Explains why North Receives more Tropical Rainfall than the South
Other areas that will affected by the rainfall
The "meteorological winter" is finished, according to Jo Farrow, a Netweather.tv forecaster, but some showers are still expected.
Excessive tension is currently building over the UK, with a waving climate entry lurking over the English Channel, according to her.
The rain can be seen on the backside of the Radar image above, which covers SE Britain to begin the day.
By lunchtime, the patchy rain across East Anglia, London, and the House Counties has faded, but the comfortable and cozy entry progressively moves northwards, bringing rain.
To Cornwall, South Devon, and Dorset, then to Cardiff and along the M4 and M3 in the evening rush hour.
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