The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

April not as cold as you think despite late blooms

It may have felt unusually chilly but Met Office data show it has been one of warmest Aprils on record

- By Guy Kelly and The Telegraph’s Forecast: A Diary of the Seasons, Editorial Comment: Page 17

Emma Gatten

APRIL may have felt unusually cold but the Met Office has suggested it may all be in your head.

Although it has felt unseasonab­ly cold all month, dominating conversati­on and causing havoc with the transition to a spring/summer wardrobe, April has in fact been warmer than the UK average.

The UK mean temperatur­e for April so far is running at 0.7C above the long-term average from 1991 to 2020, making it relatively warm by comparison with the past 30 years, the Met Office said.

Graham Madge, spokesman for the Met Office, said April “certainly won’t be regarded as a cold month meteorolog­ically”.

“Currently, April 2024 sits just outside the top 10 in the series of April temperatur­es for the UK,” he said.

“I suspect that many people may believe the month has been cold, but perhaps they are just expecting even warmer temperatur­es in April.”

But the dramatic swings in temperatur­e were some of the most extreme in recent years. The second week of April recorded some of the highest temperatur­es for the month, whereas the latter half of the month has seen some of the lowest.

That could explain why on the commute to work, everyone appears to be dressed for entirely different seasons.

You could be forgiven for having missed them, but there have been bright and warm days this year: the village of Writtle in Essex hit 21.8C on April 12; even Achfary, a hamlet on the shore of Loch nan Ealachan in the

Scottish Highlands, reached 19.9C at the end of January.

But those now feel like anomalies. The British public, which has unwritten rules about how weather is discussed, needs a little consistenc­y in order to build a collective memory of how the conditions have been. And whatever the statistics say, the only constant this spring has been cloud, drizzle and a distinct absence of sunshine. To TS Eliot, April was the cruellest month. To update that using modern parlance: April, what an absolute troll.

“The rain in recent weeks hasn’t been especially heavy, it’s just always been there,” says Alex Burkill, a meteorolog­ist at the Met Office. “From most people’s perspectiv­es it’s also been a little disappoint­ing in terms of sunshine: we’ve only had around 42 per cent of the average spring sunshine at this point. The average would be around 59 per cent, so to have had only two-thirds of sunshine is interestin­g.”

The RHS is certainly seeing the effects of the cold snap, which is delaying a “wonderful year” of wisteria that is just on the horizon.

This may not count as breaking news, but after a long, dark winter, it’s sunshine – or the lack of it – that we notice most in spring. “Yes, especially at this time of year, when the sun is getting stronger and stronger, it makes all the difference,” Mr Burkill says.

This spring has been cloudier than usual. “A lot of cloud cover has taken away from the warm spring sunny days. At the moment if it’s cloudy it feels chilly, as the sun isn’t getting through.”

Living as we do on an archipelag­o buffeted by four seas, the weather on the British Isles is inconsiste­nt at the best of times – and absolutely haywire at the worst. The transition­al months often feature the greatest extremes, and while advanced modelling means we can easily analyse weather patterns in granular detail, as a nation predominan­tly working indoors, we’re arguably less attuned to its nuances than we used to be. In other words, our internal “feel” antennae may be rusty.

As veteran weather columnist Joe Shute writes in his book

which looks at how our seasons are shifting and melding, “in the very simplest sense, centuries ago, when we farmed locally all that we ate, the weather was clearly a matter of life and death.

“But beyond that prosaic explanatio­n, our connection with the weather ran far deeper. The proliferat­ion of almanacs, symbols, stories and traditiona­l sayings that persist within even our modern minds reveals the extent to which we have always lived by the seasons and sought to define ourselves through them.”

What we will never lose as a society, however, is the ability to instantly recall sunnier days. That is likely playing a part at the moment, Mr Burkill reckons. “Recent springs have been very sunny, 2020 and 2021 were sunnier than average, even 2023 was.”

The spring of 2020 – when we skulked into the first pandemic lockdown with relative obedience, it being made all the easier for a sudden heatwave – is the colloquial high benchmark everybody now uses for April. “That spring was the sunniest on record [626.2 hours of sunshine], and I think May was the sunniest month ever,” Mr Burkill says. And preceding that lockdown, spring was the fifth wettest winter on record. “So we had a contrast, whereas this year it’s almost been a continuati­on of the wet winter we’ve just been through. It’s dragged on, but that change is what people expect from spring.”

Change is the thing, when it comes to getting us all agreeing the weather has shifted – especially if it’s a short, fierce burst of hot or cold weather. But we should be careful what we wish for: France saw dozens of monthly heat records fall this month – including 32C at the foot of the Pyrenees, and 22.5C at night in Biarritz.

Yet just weeks later, the continent is now experienci­ng the other extreme, with freezing temperatur­es falling over western Europe.

Some might say all this is simply April being April. After all, countless poets – from Eliot to Shakespear­e to Prince – have been inspired by the month’s tendency to disappoint. In ‘The rain in recent weeks hasn’t been especially heavy, it’s just always been there’ recent years, though, climate change has added record-breaking temperatur­e and weather extremes that have complicate­d April further.

Shute has argued that winter and summer are becoming “increasing­ly muddied terms. He notes that even Shakespear­e remarked on how unsettling the seasons behaving strangely is: “And through this distempera­ture we see / the seasons alter: hoary-headed frosts / fall in the fresh lap of the crimson rose,” the faerie queen Titania says in A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

Regrettabl­y, Mr Burkill can provide no great reassuranc­e that spring is about to feel much more springlike across the UK. But even though the

Met Office is forecastin­g temperatur­es will trend upwards soon, we should be wary of getting ahead of ourselves. Just as one swallow doesn’t make a summer - nor does it make a spring.

“To some extent that’s true, yes. There’ll be quite a bit of dry weather, but we’re not quite at the sitting outside, al fresco dining point that at this time of year some people want to do. We need to wait a little bit longer.”

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 ?? ?? Gardener Agnes Piaseczna by the Azalea Bowl at Exbury Gardens, Hampshire, which has sprung to life in a kaleidosco­pe of reds, pinks, purples and whites
Gardener Agnes Piaseczna by the Azalea Bowl at Exbury Gardens, Hampshire, which has sprung to life in a kaleidosco­pe of reds, pinks, purples and whites

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