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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Jordan Reynolds and Lydia Chantler-Hicks

UK weather: 60mph winds to batter country after week of heavy rain and floods

Winds of up to 60mph are set to batter the UK bringing potential travel disruption, days after heavy rain brought flooding.

The Met Office has issued a yellow rain warning covering much of southern England and South Wales from 4pm on Sunday to 9am on Monday.

The warning means further heavy rain is likely to cause some travel delays and flooding.

London has narrowly avoided the yellow weather warning, but heavy rain is forecast in the capital on Monday.

Elsewhere, in areas covered by the weather warning, between 20-30mm of rain could be seen within the warning area over nine to 12 hours on Sunday, and 50-80mm could fall in some localised places on higher ground, the Met Office said.

Becky Mitchell, Met Office meteorologist, said it was “not a huge amount of rain” but because of the recent weather “rivers levels are quite high and grounds are quite saturated”, so more flooding could develop.

The Environment Agency had 48 flood warnings, indicating flooding is expected, and 90 flood alerts, where flooding is possible, in place across England on Saturday morning.

Meanwhile, a yellow warning for wind is also predicted to cause disruption across south-west England and Wales between 9am on Sunday until the end of the day.

Gusts of between 50-60mph could be seen, with large waves, trees brought down, travel disruption and some power cuts, Miss Mitchell said.

There could potentially be further rain warnings issued for Monday, but it is forecast to be drier later in the week, she added.

And temperatures are currently below average, with a number of areas seeing frost across the UK on Friday night.

The Met Office said temperatures this weekend will be 3-4C below average, and on Sunday they will be in the low double figures, the forecaster said.

It comes after areas across England suffered heavy rain and localised flooding in recent days, with commuters facing widespread disruption on road and rail services.

According to the Met Office, some counties in southern and central England have already had more than 250% of their average September rainfall.

Parts of the country had more than the monthly average rainfall on Monday and there were further downpours on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.

About 650 properties were flooded in Bedfordshire, Northamptonshire and the home counties, according to the Environment Agency, which estimated around 8,200 properties had been protected.

Rail services between Shrewsbury in Shropshire and Wolverhampton in the West Midlands were cancelled on Friday after severe flooding at Wellington station and a tree on the line earlier.

The pitch at the SEAH Stadium in Wellington, home to Telford United football club, was completely flooded on Thursday evening.

The Marston Vale line in Bedfordshire, which operates services between Bedford and Bletchley, is suspended until Monday because of standing water on the track.

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