Millennium Post

Mercury dips in north India; bone-chilling cold in Kashmir, Himachal

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The mercury took a dip in most parts of north India on Sunday with bonechilli­ng cold sweeping Kashmir, Ladakh and tourist destinatio­ns of Himachal Pradesh.

The national capital woke to a cold morning and maximum temperatur­es settled three notches below the normal at 16.7 degrees Celsius. The city recorded a low of 7 degrees Celsius.

The Kashmir Valley and

Ladakh Union Territory continued to reel under sub-zero night temperatur­es with a layer of frost developing on roads, causing inconvenie­nce to the people.

The night temperatur­e continued to remain below the freezing point across Kashmir and Ladakh, a MET official said.

Srinagar recorded the minimum temperatur­e at minus 2.8 degrees Celsius, over a degree down from yesterday’s minus 1.4 degrees Celsius, he said.

Leh in Ladakh recorded a low of minus 16.3 degrees Celsius -- down from minus 13.0 degrees Celsius the previous night.

Kashmir witnessed a sunny day though, bringing some relief to the residents, the official said.

Cold wave conditions persisted in Himachal Pradesh on Sunday with popular tourist hotspots in the state shivering at sub-zero temperatur­es, the MET office said.

The minimum temperatur­e decreased by 2 to 3 degrees Celsius across the state, Shimla MET

Centre Director Manmohan Singh said.

Kufri recorded a low of minus 4.6 degrees Celsius, followed by Manali (minus 4.4 degrees Celsius), Dalhousie (minus 2.4 degrees Celsius) and Shimla (minus 0.6 degrees Celsius).

Tribal district Lahaul-spiti’s administra­tive centre Keylong continued to be the coldest place in the state at minus 14.6 degrees Celsius.

Another tribal district Kinnaur’s Kalpa recorded a low of minus 8.4 degrees Celsius.

The maximum temperatur­e was 1 to 2 degrees Celsius below normal. The highest temperatur­e in the state was recorded in Una at 21 degrees Celsius.

As per data recorded at 8.30 am on Sunday, Khadrala and Kothi received 5 cm snowfall each, followed by Bijahi 3 cm, Chhatarari 2 cm, Theog and Sarahan 1 cm each.

Besides, Shimla received 0.8 cm snowfall, whereas Kalpa got 0.6 cm snowfall in the last 24 hours, Singh said.

Sujanpur Tira received 25 mm rain, followed by Sundernaga­r 23 mm, Dehra Gopipur 14 mm, Nadaun 9 mm, Mandi 8 mm, Kahu and Mehre 7 mm each, Palampur 6 mm, Pandoh 5 mm, Solan and Hamirpur 4 mm each, Berthin, Banjar and Jubbal 3 mm each, Naina Devi, Nagrota Suriyan Bharari, Guler, Aghar, Una and Bhuntar 2 mm each in last 24 hours.

Punjab and Haryana were in the grip of cold wave conditions on Sunday, with the minimum temperatur­e hovering below normal at most places.

In Punjab, Adampur was the coldest place recording a minimum temperatur­e of 3.8 degrees Celsius.

Ludhiana (6.7 deg C), Patiala (7.6 deg C), Halwara (7 deg C), Bathinda (5.3 deg C), Faridkot (4 deg C) and Gurdaspur (8.1 deg C) experience­d cold night, a meteorolog­ical department official said here.

In Haryana, Hisar (5.3 deg C), Ambala (6.2 deg C), Karnal (6 deg C), Narnaul (5.5 deg C), Rohtak (6.2 deg C), Bhiwani (6.1 deg C) and Sirsa (5.2 deg C) also experience­d cold night.

Chandigarh registered a night temperatur­e of 6.6 degrees Celsius.

The MET official said fog reduced visibility in the morning hours at Ambala, Hisar, Karnal, Narnaul, Bhiwani, Amritsar, Ludhiana and Patiala.

Night temperatur­es were 2 to 3 notches below normal as cold weather conditions intensifie­d in Rajasthan over the last 24 hours, the meteorolog­ical department said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India