UK weather: Met Office issues severe warning

Britain to be battered with four inches of rain, 65 mph gales of wind and 24ft waves over next three days as Storm Alex sweeps in from TONIGHT

  • Low pressure area moving east has brought a severe spell of wet and windy conditions to parts of Britain
  • The slow moving storm, named Alex, will strike the South tonight and the Midlands and North from tomorrow 
  • It could bring four inches of rain, 65 mph gales and 24ft waves, causing havoc for Britons over the weekend 

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Britain will be battered by three days of severe weather from tonight with Storm Alex, the first named storm of the season, sweeping in.

The slow moving storm will strike the South tonight and the Midlands and North from tomorrow and could bring four inches of rain, 65 mph gales and 24ft waves. 

A low pressure area moving east has brought a spell of wet and windy conditions to the country, with up to two inches of rain falling in Scotland yesterday amid fears over flooding of homes and travel disruption.

A brighter interlude will follow today with sunshine and showers, but a further spell of heavy rain and strong winds will then hit Britain into Friday – with the worst conditions in the South.

The Met Office has warned another two inches of rain could then fall along with gusts of up to 55mph inland and 65mph on the coast. 

Temperatures will drop from the mid-teens Celsius to the low-single figures this week in parts of the UK, while frost is expected in many parts of the North and West by Friday.

A pedestrian shelters under an umbrella as they walk past the London Eye amid heavy rain in the capital yesterday

This morning's weather

Saturday's forecast

Heavy rain swept across parts of Britain this morning (left) with wet and windy conditions also on the way this Saturday (right)

Craig Snell, Met Office meteorologist, said: ‘It looks like the wettest period for England and Wales will be on Friday going into Saturday. Southern England and Wales are likely to see the heaviest of the rain.

‘That will mean a chance of some problems with surface water which could affect transport. There is also a chance of gales around southern coasts in the later part of Friday into Saturday, with gusts of up to 60mph.’

The unsettled weather is expected to continue through the weekend and next week. Highs of just 13C (55F) are expected this weekend amid further rain – mirroring the chilly conditions seen last Saturday and Sunday.

A return to fine and settled weather is not expected until the middle of October, when ‘spells of fine and dry weather could become more widespread and long-lived’, with frost and fog at night.

The highest temperature of the week so far was 21.2C (70.2F) at Manston in Kent yesterday, while the low was -1.6C (29.1F) at Bramer in Aberdeenshire, also recorded yesterday.

BBC forecaster Helen Willetts said yesterday will be a ‘thoroughly wet day’, adding that Storm Alex will be named as the first of the season if the winds this week are powerful to spark an amber warning.

A rainbow at sunrise over the Watch House Museum at Seaton Sluice in Northumberland this morning

A rainbow at sunrise over the Watch House Museum at Seaton Sluice in Northumberland this morning

The sun rises behind the Watch House Museum at Seaton Sluice in Northumberland today

The sun rises behind the Watch House Museum at Seaton Sluice in Northumberland today

She added: ‘By Friday uncertainty remains as to where this area of low pressure will come. But once it does it’s going to bring in a spell of wet and windy weather, not just through Friday but into the weekend as well.’

And Aidan McGivern, a Met Office meteorologist, said: ‘Following a fine Tuesday for many of us, Wednesday will bring outbreaks of rain at times along with a freshening wind, gales around exposed western coasts.’

He added: ‘Quite a long strip of wet weather pushing into western Britain during Wednesday morning. Certainly, Northern Ireland, western Scotland, western parts of England and Wales seeing a lot of wet weather first thing.’

He said wind will pick up around western coasts with 50mph gusts in exposed spots. Mr McGivern added that a low pressure moving is will get ‘deepened quite furiously by the jet stream which dives to the south of the UK’. 

He continued: ‘By Friday it’s significantly deeper and it’s likely to bring a significantly wetter period of weather during Friday and much of the weekend for various parts of the UK.’ 

Can’t get to the beach? It’ll blow to you in Norfolk… 

Homes, cars and roads were blanketed in a thick layer of sand after a village was struck by a sand storm.

The phenomenon usually associated with arid, sun-blasted regions hit the wet and windy seaside community of Walcott in Norfolk. 

Winds gusting at up to 70mph carried particles from the beach which was covered in 1.8 million cubic metres of sand last year to stop coastal erosion. 

A thick layer of sand hit the wet and windy seaside community of Walcott in Norfolk on Saturday, covering cars

A thick layer of sand hit the wet and windy seaside community of Walcott in Norfolk on Saturday, covering cars

Winds gusting at up to 70mph carried particles from the beach of Walcott in Norfolk on Saturday

Winds gusting at up to 70mph carried particles from the beach of Walcott in Norfolk on Saturday 

The beach at Walcott in Norfolk had been covered in 1.8 million cubic metres of sand last year to stop coastal erosion

The beach at Walcott in Norfolk had been covered in 1.8 million cubic metres of sand last year to stop coastal erosion

Residents woke on Saturday to find themselves looking out at sand dunes. Jay Durrant said he ‘couldn’t believe it’ when he looked out of his window, adding that it will take up to a week to clear up the mess.

Caroline Stubbs said she had ‘never seen anything like it’ in 16 years as landlady of the Poacher’s Pocket pub. She added: ‘We have spent the morning digging ourselves a path out of the pub so customers can get in.

‘It has come through every nook and cranny of the building. I had to get a locksmith to come out as I couldn’t get my key into the door because of a build-up of sand.’ 

But Walcott Parish Council chairman Pauline Porter said the sand was ‘far superior than water and flooding’. She said: ‘It’s not nice but it is far better than sofas floating in a field.’