UK meteorology

Continued model uncertainty. GFS is particular shows successive low pressure areas after a warm/hot first half of next week. Other models show one low but then some ridging from the Azores High.
 
Yellow weather warning from the Met Office for the period overnight tonight, as storms associated with a cold front and troughs move up from the south. These fronts are part of the cut-off Low I mentioned last Thursday:

http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/warnings
 
I was just thinking of chucking some grass seed on the lawn on the strength of that warning...
I suspect you're too far north for tonight's risk, Colum. You might see some rain, but it probably won't be storm-like until tomorrow.
Here's Netweather's storm forecast:

http://www.netweather.tv/index.cgi?action=convective;sess=

 
Very rare event to the west and now north of London; a Mesoscale Convective Vortex (MCV). It's essentially a Mesoscale Convective System (MCS), which in itself is a cluster of storms which can cover an area of 200 square miles, but, in an MCV situation, the whole thing starts rotating as though it was a miniature hurricane. It's immensely rare not just in this country but in Europe generally. Consider this an unsceduled 'lesson' post - here's the radar image from earlier when i was at its height:

 
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Flash flooding in parts of Cornwall, it did come down heavy!
 
Met Office warning for today:
 
It seems I slept through what passed our area. We caught the edge of the storms that initiated over north London to the SW of the MCV around 1 a.m., but on scrolling through the overnight radar, it's evident that they weakened as they approached. Later-on, we caught the easternmost squall line that had set-up in the Channel durimng the evening, and this brought some heavy rain, and, apparently, a few louder rumbles and visible lightning, though this also failed to wake me for some reason.