The UK in June

 

Mike Hulme on last month’s weather

 

 

DAYTIME TEMPERATURES

June temperatures were quite different from north to south, and from the beginning of the month to the end.  For southern England and south Wales it was a warm month, Guernsey and Folkestone reaching more than 1C warmer than average.  For the northern two-thirds of the country, however, daytime temperatures were mostly cooler than normal for June, more so in the northwest than in the northeast.  Eskdalemuir, for example, was 2C colder than average.  The first two weeks of June were also cool, the period 7-9th achieving temperatures nationwide that were as much as 3.5C below the seasonal norm.  Temperatures rose during the last 10 days of the month and the hottest day was Monday 25th, coinciding with the start of the Wimbledon fortnight.

 

 

RAINFALL

The north-south difference in temperatures was partly reflected in rainfall amounts, with the north wetter than the south.  There were exceptions, however, and localised storms meant that some southern locations exceeded their June average.  Lowestoft, for example, recorded 68mm of rain for the month, 70 per cent above normal.  In contrast, Bournemouth only recorded 3mm in the entire month.  Further north there was more rain, although for most of Scotland it was still a drier month than usual, by about 10-20%.  Again, there were some large localised differences.  The wettest day of the month for the country as a whole was Saturday 16th with a nationwide average of about 5mm.

 

 

SUNSHINE

The north-south contrast was also evident in sunshine hours – parts of southern England enjoyed sunshine totals during June that were 20 or 30 per cent above average, Bournemouth and Folkestone again the luckiest averaging over 10 hours of bright sunshine per day.  In contrast, Belfast and Eskdalemuir recorded barely 3 hours of sun per day, 40 per cent below normal.  Most of Scotland was also cloudy, Leuchars being the one exception of the locations monitored here.  The best of the sunshine again was reserved for the latter half of the month, with the 24th and 25th being the two sunniest days.

 

 

Dr Mike Hulme is a Director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, at UEA

(more details at website at www.tyndall.ac.uk)

 

 

June 2001: Dry; warm and sunny in south

 

Daytime Temperature: 0.3C below average;          Rainfall:   31% below average;      Sunshine:  7% below average.

 

[all average figures are based on the 1951-80 average]

 

Mean monthly extremes:

 

Warmest          Ross-on-Wye                               20.1C

Sunniest          Folkestone                                      308 hours sun

Wettest          Eskdalemuir                          89mm   

Coldest          Lerwick                                             11.4C

Cloudiest          Belfast                                    92 hours sun

Driest           Bournemouth                                  3mm