A warning for heavy rain and showers is in power throughout southern England – with greater than 200 flood alerts issued nationwide.
The Met Office yellow alert comes days after Storm Ciaran battered the identical space with rain, flooding and winds of as much as 100mph.
The floor continues to be saturated in lots of locations, elevating the chance of journey disruption.
A big swathe of the South – from Cornwall to Kent, and so far as south London – is roofed by the warning from 5am on Saturday till midnight.
Up to 40mm (1.57in) of rain is feasible.
Spray and flooding may make automotive journeys tough – and bus and practice providers might be affected too, in keeping with the Met Office.
It mentioned massive waves may additionally trigger harmful situations on some coastal stretches.
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Chief forecaster Frank Saunders referred to as it “fairly typical autumnal weather” – however rain falling on already sodden floor was partly why the warning had been issued.
However, it is higher information for folks heading out for Bonfire Night, with Mr Saunders predicting a “largely dry and settled” Sunday – albeit colder than final week.
Storm Ciaran was nonetheless inflicting some knock-on issues for the railways on Friday.
LNER, which runs the road between London King’s Cross and Edinburgh Waverley, suggested passengers to not journey till Saturday.
Delays and cancellations had been anticipated as a result of trains and employees had been out of place because of energy failures.
Other operators additionally warned of disruption as they cleared particles off tracks.
Storm Ciaran had now moved into the North Sea – however its southern edge has brought on chaos in elements of Italy.
Official mentioned six folks died and two had been lacking after rivers in Tuscany burst their banks following torrential rain in a single day into Friday.
There had been fears that Florence might be flooded, however the historic metropolis prevented any main incidents.
Italian Civil Protection officers mentioned 200mm (7.87in) of rain fell in a three-hour interval stretching from Livorno on the western coast to the inland valley of Mugello.
Tuscany’s president, Eugenio Giani, mentioned it had by no means had a lot rain in such a brief area of time.
He informed Sky TG24 that specialists imagine it was the worst downpour in 100 years.
“What happened overnight in Tuscany has a clear name: CLIMATE CHANGE,” he wrote on X.
Source: information.sky.com”