Monday is expected to be a harbinger drop in temperature and rain for some areas of UK at the end of unseasonably warm Easter weekend.
The temperature was expected to reach adolescence on Sunday, with possibility of even higher in in the south after Good Friday was the warmest day of in year already, with 23.4C recorded in St. James Park in London is warmer than Ibiza.
But cloudier skies were expected in West on Sunday with outbreaks of rain in Northern Ireland and western Scotland is slowly shifting east in week, which the UK Met Office says will lead to a return to more normal weather for April, when the average temperature is around 12C.
He predicted that temperatures would start to drop from Easter Monday with some scattered rain and cloud moving in over well of a week.
Marco Petagna, senior a meteorologist from the Met Office said that the rain in from the west overnight, which will “weaken” as you go, so the east can stay dry.
“The idea is that the temperature gradually just creeping down everyday for in next a few days in the UK,” he said.
“The farther south and southeast you go, the more likely you are to stay in order. again [it will be] a little cooler [on Monday] at 19 in southeast, low to medium teens elsewhere.”
Pollen levels – which were high in most of calling country misery for those with hay fever will begin to decrease in in many areas from Monday onwards, and Petagna said that Easter Monday could be last of dry, bright weather for a week when there was a moderate level of UV radiation with “The sun is as strong now as it was in August.”
He said: “Tuesday and Wednesday there may be some showers, especially in the south. of United Kingdom. And then second half of an east wind blows during the week, more in in way of cloud in from the east with little rain, but still a lot of relatively dry weather too much.
But the trend is definitely for temperature to take a little of failure so we kinda of back down to lower local averages by Thursday.”
Warm weather over weekend together with This first Easter without self-isolation restrictions for two years meant a lot people headed for the coast with Bournemouth attracts some of the largest crowds of in year and coastal car parks in Cornwall also packed with vacationers.
The RAC advised people returning from the weekend to travel before 10:30 or after 18:30. on Easter Monday to avoid queues.

