Met Office forecast after days of heavy rain batters North West

It led to flooding in parts of the region

Homes in Bootle were hit by flooding on Monday (30 September)
Author: Liam ArrowsmithPublished 2nd Oct 2024

The Met Office has forecast further rain following days a heavy downpours in the north west, which led to flooding in some parts.

However, drier spells are expected over the next few days, with unsettled conditions mainly confined to the south.

It comes after large parts of England and Wales were hit with intense downpours at the start of the week and Met Office figures showed 10 English counties experienced their wettest September on record.

Areas across England have suffered heavy rain, high winds and flooding in recent weeks, with hundreds of properties and farmland flooded and widespread travel disruption with roads closed and rail services suspended.

The Environment Agency had 35 flood warnings, meaning flooding is expected, and 135 flood alerts in place across England late on Tuesday evening.

Clare Nasir, meteorologist at the Met Office, said: "Showers become confined to the Midlands south-eastwards as we head through the morning into the afternoon on Wednesday, and the cloud is breaking up further west across Wales as well.

"We hang on to those showers, fleeting at times, with a wind coming in from the North East through the latter part of tomorrow, so even here you'll still see some showers, but not the intense rain that we have seen through the last month, off and on."

Largely fine but chilly conditions are expected across most of Scotland and Northern Ireland, with early cloud also breaking up in northern English counties to create drier, more mild conditions, Ms Nasir said.

Temperatures will widely be around the seasonal average, with highs of 17C in South Wales and south-east England.

Southern England had its wettest September since 1918, and its third wettest in records dating back to 1836, the Met Office said.

England saw 95% above-average rainfall and Wales had 37% more for the month, but Scotland was 37% below average and Northern Ireland was 18% down.

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