UK weather: Exact area snow expected to fall in days as Atlantic jet stream lashes Brits with heavy rain & fierce winds

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Cars make their way along the A939 after heavy snowfall in the Scottish Highlands. A yellow warning of snow and ice has been issued for northern Scotland as the Met Office said the deadly bomb cyclone that sent temperatures plunging in the US is now causing wet and windy weather in the UK. Picture date: Friday December 30, 2022. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Paul Campbell/PA Wire

SNOW is expected to fall in just days as an Atlantic jet stream lashes the UK with heavy rain.

High winds and wet weather are set to batter Britain as the powerful La Nina system takes hold.

Cars make their way along the A939 after heavy snowfall in the Scottish Highlands

A flooded road in Sutton Gault in Cambridgeshire after the River Delph burst its banks

Forecasters are anticipating the west and the northwest will be most affected but most areas can expect cold temperatures.

But an update on the Met Office website there could be snow this month but it’ll be restricted to high ground in the north.

Meteorologists said: “A westerly regime is most likely for the UK in the first part of January, which means wet and windy conditions for many.

“Rain or showers will often be heaviest and most frequent in the west and northwest but areas further south and east are by no means immune.

“Temperatures are expected to be near or above average overall, with any sleet or snow most likely restricted to high ground in the north.”

Natural Resources Wales and the Scottish Environment Protection Agency have issued flood advisories for the area.

Forecasters said the jet stream will possibly weaken towards the middle of January which would bring “colder, drier spells”.

Brits face travel chaos today as a double whammy of flooding and train strikes hit.

The Met Office issued yellow weather warnings for rain in two areas from 2pm today yesterday.

One covers central and western parts of Scotland, stretching from as far north as Inverness to just north of Glasgow.

While the second spreads over parts of South West Scotland and North West England.

Local flooding is also possible which could hit the Moors in South West England later today and tomorrow.

Brits have been urged not to travel on the ThamesLink service unless absolutely necessary during the strike days on January 4, 5 6 and 7.

Members of the RMT and Aslef unions plan to stage the mass walk out.

Today will see intermittent showers for most areas, particularly for Wales, northern England, Northern Ireland, and Scotland, though it will be a drier, mostly cloudy afternoon.

There will be some sunny spells for the rest of England, and it will be dry for most of the day with a fresh westerly wind.

Thursday will be a cloudy day with a band of rain starting off in the south in the morning, moving towards northern parts by the afternoon and becoming heavy.