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Get the latest RSVP headlines straight to your inbox for free by signing up to our newsletter “Precipitation amounts are signalling to be normal for most areas apart from a slight signal for wetter than average conditions in the north and east.” They explained: “There is a slight signal for mean air temperatures to remain above average again this week. The national forecaster shared: “Rainfall values are signalling about normal or drier than average for most areas apart from some northern parts which may see slightly more rainfall than average.”įinally, between Friday, 21 July and Thursday, 27 July, Met Eireann found no distinct signal for either high or low pressure over the country. Moving ahead, from Friday, 14 July to Thursday, 20 July, people should expect more settled conditions with mean air temperatures expected to be above average. However, there is a signal for temperatures to be about normal for this time of year, with precipitation amounts to be above average rainfall with the highest anomaly in the west and southwest. Met.ie stated: “The signal for rainfall is indicating above average rainfall for most of the country apart from the southeast which is sheltered from the northwesterly winds and signalling below average rainfall.”įrom Friday, 7 July to Thursday, 13 July, there is a slight indication for lower pressure over Ireland which will maintain unsettled conditions. Temperatures for Thursday, 13-July (Image: WX Charts) This means that between Friday, 30 June and Thursday, 6 July, people can expect more unsettled conditions. They found indicators for lower pressure centered to the north of Ireland and higher pressure to the southwest in the Atlantic, potentially steering a northwest airflow over the country. Met Eireann seemed to agree with this, predicting that at one point in July the weather should become more settled, but consistent rain will remain. They forecast that the hottest Ireland will get before then is 24 degrees in the southern parts of the country. They found that by 13 July, people should see conditions dipping into the late teens, varying from 17-19 at the hottest point of the day. Read more: Three payments parents don’t have to make for back to school season WX Charts looked ahead to the middle of July in Ireland and found there will be a change in temperatures here, but not in the same direction. Weather experts in the UK stated there is a possibility of a heat dome arriving there in the coming weeks, bringing potential temperatures of 40 degrees. Maps have confirmed a temperature shift as Met Eireann predict conditions following reports of a “heat dome”.
