Clouds are classified into 10 basic types (stratus, cumulus, nimbostratus, cirrus, etc.) based on their altitude and appearance, with cumulonimbus clouds developing through stages from cumulus to thunderstorm clouds, and weather patterns like jet stream positioning and atmospheric convergence determining precipitation and temperature trends.
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Deep Dive
Deep Dive 12/05/2026 – Warming next week – Met Office weekly weather forecast UKAdded:
More cold showers to come for all of us through the rest of this week. But are there signs of something a little warmer as we go into next week? Plenty of heavy showers around as well over the next few days. Some thunderstorms, some hail possible. And we're looking at some large hail uh possibly across parts of central Europe in this week's Met Office deep dive. We'll also be looking at the clouds. Some beautiful cloudscapes on offer through the course of this week.
So, plenty to stay tuned for. This is the Met Office deep dive. Welcome along.
My name is Alex Deacon. I'm a meteorologist and presenter here at the Met Office. We do the deep dive every Tuesday. You will know all about it if you subscribe to our YouTube channel.
So, please do that if you haven't done already. And if you like what you see, then let us know in the comments. Also, if you've got any questions about anything to do with weather or climate, pop them in the comments as well. And please, if you could do uh as one thing today, hit that like button. It helps to spread the love, widen the horizon of all the Met heads in the UK and beyond.
So yes, hit that like button as well as subscribing and that would be fantastic.
So yes, welcome along to this week's Met Office deep dive. Lots to get through.
As I said, it's a cool and showery feel to the weather this week, but there will be plenty to see out of your window.
We're looking at some fantastic cloudscapes and that's good for the mind and it is mental health awareness week.
That's where we're starting this week.
Uh it is mental health awareness week as I said and we're partnering up with mind because as we get into the summer months we're encouraging people to get outside more because connecting with nature is really good for your mental health.
There's lots of ways to do that. Uh, one example would be just growing, picking food, bringing plants indoors, taking notice of nature. That's what I like. And um, yeah, that's what we're going to be talking about a little bit more in a minute. Taking notice particularly of the skies, looking up for certain types of cloud. But there's lots of different ways that you can connect with nature, lots of different ways that the weather can be good for your mental health. So, there's lots of really good advice about preparing for the summer on the Met Office website. Just search for weather ready. And there's lots of really good advice as we go through the rest of mental health awareness week on the mind website. Mind of the mental health awareness charity. And as they say there, there's no right or wrong way to connect with nature. Do what feels good for you. So, I wanted to talk today a little bit about what feels good for me.
I do to kind of try and relax and calm my uh brain down and that is well just to look at clouds because they're fantastic. They're fascinating. There's always something going on. And this week in particular, I suspect there will be some cracking cloudscapes out there uh literally and metaphorically because there could well be some thunderstorms as well. Just a cautionary note, if you do hear a rumble of thunder, you don't want to be outside at that point. that is the time to to retreat indoors and look at the clouds safely through the window. But there will be, as I say, some fantastic cloudscapes around uh over the coming days. And so I wanted to talk about how we classify clouds and what we're looking at when we're looking at the sky. And that might help you identify the clouds that you're looking at. So let's pay homage to this chap.
Who is he?
Do you know? answers in the comments.
I'll give you five seconds. This chap in the early 1800s was the first really to classify clouds. I think he was on a train one day and he started sketching them. Came up with a few ideas about how to classify clouds. This is Luke Howard uh the cloud godfather and he came up with this classification by sketching and drawing clouds and um he was a clever clog. So he used the Latin phrases uh like sirrus which means wispy or hairlike uh cumulus which means heaped or stratus which means kind of inner layer. And we still use those terms today and we combine them to form the the basic forms of cloud. And there are nowadays we classify them in 10 basic forms of cloud and in three different layers through the atmosphere.
So starting at the bottom we have stratus. That's the lowest form of cloud. It's what produces drizzle. The one closest to the ground and it's as you say a thick thickish layer. can be quite thin actually but it's it's a layer and it's in strata form so it's it's not that lumpy that's your cumulus when it gets lumpy when it gets heaped cumulus meaning leap heaped and it's starting so see you can see actually see the air rising up through the cloud then you've got a cumulus cloud that's your classic kind of cotton wool cloud that we all draw when we're four years old or 52 and then if you combine those two cumulus and strata so you get a kind of layer but it's got a bit of a lumpiness to it on the top probably the most common type of clown cloud around the world is a stratou cumulus. Then you've got cumulone nimbus which is classed as a low-level cloud but for a proper cumulo nimbus you've got to start at the bottom and go all the way up to the top of the trop troposphere. So that is a cloud which goes up through the layers as we will see a cumulone nimbus a thunderstorm cloud. Now on this image you see we've got nimler stratus here as well and nimb stratus is a bit of a strange one because it actually is generally down towards the surface but it's classed as a medium level cloud and nimratus nimbo means rain so it's rainbearing very thick when the cloud goes when the sky goes very dark gray or even black usually we've got a weather front approaching that's when you've got nima stratus it's producing rain if you're under that you are getting wet but that is technically classed as a medium level cloud along with alter stratus and alto cumulus again variations on the other ones stratus meaning that layer alto now meaning higher so it's higher than the lower level ones so these mid-level ones are called altacumulus alteratus and nimbo stratus alumulus meaning the lumpy ones that are a little bit higher up between 2 and 6,000 m or about 7 and 18,000 ft if you prefer it in that kind of uh nmanllete. Is that the right term?
Probably not. Um, outer stratus, altercumulus, nimbo stratus. They're the medium level ones. And then higher up at the top of the troposphere.
Anything above 20,000 ft or above 6,000 m, you've got your cirrus, your classic wispy cirrus. Lots of different types of cirrus as we will see. But if it's that high up, but it's kind of lumpy, then it's cerumulus. Quite rare to see much cirrumulus. and sir stratus when it's in a more of a a layer uh coming in at that high level and you can see there there's the top of the cumulo nimbus so the cumulone nimbus going all the way up through the atmosphere so there your 10 basic types or genera as they're known and I'm going to point you now to the absolute oracle of all things to do with the cloud from the WMO the world meteorological organization a few years ago developed the international cloud atlas search for it online and you can spend hours looking up all kinds of different types of clouds. So in here you will find the basic table where we have the genera those 10 different basic types but within each different type cirrus circumus there are different species of that particular type of cirrus your fibratus your uncinus your bisatus your castellanis your flockus and then within that you get different variations so there are hundreds of different types of cloud and then you get your specialtity ones down this end as well. So if we just zoom in a little bit on that, I can see there are say five different types of cirrus. There's four different varieties. Not every different type, not every different species has a different variety if you see what I mean. Uh and there you go. You got four different types of serumulus and going all the way down to cumulus and stratus at the bottom. So as I say really that's the place to go really to identify a cloud. the WMO cloud atlas.
All kinds of information on there. You can see all kinds of images as well.
Another really good place to go is the um Royal Mets. They've got lots of information on different types of cloud or the cloud appreciation society as well. Really good place to go and uh be part of the cloud spotting community on there. But that's uh yeah, just some interesting sources of information to go to. Just going to highlight a few clouds that we may well see this week because the weather's really uh kind of conducive to convection. We are likely to see quite a bit of cumulus initially in the mornings and then turning into cumulo nimbus clouds. So going to break it down. These are the four species of cumulus that we see. H cumulus humulus which are wider than they are tall. You could argue the Simpsons cloud, the clouds that you start of of the Simpsons are cumulus cumulus and there they're your kind of standard fluffy white clouds. Your cumulus mediocrus which are then getting a little bit taller. So when they become as tall as they are wide, they then become cumulus mediocr as it's known for short cumulus congestus.
They're the tall ones and that's signs of things are getting pretty lively. the atmosphere is getting deep or the clouds are getting deep enough to maybe start producing some outbreaks of rain just the the stage before they become cumulo nimbus clouds. So let's take a look at a few examples of those. There's your cumulus cumulus wider than it is tall.
Then you've got a cumulus. If it's as wide as it is tall then that's a pretty much a a cumulus mediocrus. And then you've got that towering cumulus there.
You can see it in the distance. still all lumpy and bumpy at the top, but it's a cumulus congestion just before it gets probably to the top of the troposphere and it has to stop going up and it starts to get really cold at the top starts turning into ice and then that's when you've got a cumulo nimbus. So, let's take a look at some examples of cumulo nimbus. Again, the three main different species of cumulo nimbus.
cumulative numbers. Calvis is when it's reached the top of the pretty much at the top of the troposphere, but it's still lumpy and bumpy at the top. These are your your classic cauliflower shapes. There'll be plenty of those as we go through the next few days. Your cumulo nimbus capillatus where it's starting to get a little fibrous at the top and I'll show you an example of that. Uh so that's your cumulus calvis.
That's your classic cauliflower type cloud. So it's bigger, it's fatter, it's fattening up at the top. It's getting very cold up there. It's starting to rain. You get rain from those kind of clouds. That's your cumulone nimbus capillaratus where it's not lumpy anymore at the top. It's started to turn fibrous and that's because right at the top here we're starting to form ice crystals. It's cold enough at the top.
We're starting to form ice crystals and then it is going to be raining when we've got ice crystals at the top. And here you've got your cumulus incas, your classic as it develops further. It's reached the top of the troposphere and it's started to spread out and it's reached that anvil stage. When you see those anvils, you've got a cumulo nimbus incus. Wanted to show you this video of that development of the clouds as we go through the different stages of cumulus.
Start off with cumulo cumulus mediocrus.
And now it becomes a towering cumulus.
There you can see it shooting up. Now it's taller than it is wide and then it reaches the top of the toposphere. It starts to go fibrous all of a sudden. So now we're into a cumulo nimbus stage.
Just want to point out these things shooting out over the top of it overshooting cumulo nimbus. Uh that's where it's going actually going up through the top of the troposphere into the stratosphere. The clouds reach the top of the troposphere and then you get a temperature inversion. That's why they don't keep going on forever and then you're into the stratosphere. So they tend to stop at the stratosphere. But if you've got strong enough updraft, they can break through the top and head into the stratosphere. And then you've got this you've got this classic anvil shape as it's all spreading out. It's much more fibrous at the top. You still got the lumpiness here. You got the fibrousness there. And then it leaves behind a kind of a layer of cirrus up there as it all kind of drifts away. And you still got that high level cloud up there. So the development there of uh cumulus into a cumulo nimbus cloud.
I mean could just watch that all day, couldn't we? But you may well see things like this developing outside of your house. Perhaps not on this scale. I think this was in uh in Colorado somewhere. So perhaps not on this scale.
You might not have quite that kind of widecape of a view, but there's every chance that you will see uh these cumulus developing over the course of the next 24 hours, particularly so on Wednesday and on Thursday because we are looking at some pretty heavy showers for the UK. Uh let's take a look at the weather then, shall we? what's going on across the weather and why we're likely to see those showers over the next few days. Here's the big picture. We've got low pressure to the north of the UK, high pressure sitting out in the Atlantic, and we've got this developing jet, well, the the jet's been in this funny position where it's kind of been north south orientated across close to the UK, swirling down and breaking off quite an active jet down across Iberia at the moment. And that's been in place for a while. It's been bringing showery rain across uh uh southern parts of Spain and Portugal in particular. And what's happening here? You've actually got two elements of the jet coming together here. Notice across northern parts of Italy. Just one weaker branch extending down here. This one's been in place for a while. And that has allowed warmer air to waft up. So we're on the the warm side of the jet. Hot air across Africa. because of this kind of southwesterly flow, we've seen warmer air drifting in into Italy. So, the air is pretty warm here at the moment, but because of that arm of the jet coming down here now, and it's got a bit of a kink in it. Notice that that little trough in it there, that is going to be a breeding ground for heavy showers and thunderstorms through this afternoon.
That's the setup as I record this uh through early afternoon on Tuesday. that little kink in that little weakness of the jetream bringing down cooler air at higher levels. So you got warm air underneath, cooler air coming in over the top and that means the air is unstable. So it's it's going to rise that air that we just seen from the cumul cumulus clouds bubbling up. It's going to be easy for that to go because the air above is colder. So it's just going to rise. That warm air wants to rise. It'll rise. It'll cool. It'll condense. It'll form clouds. It'll eventually form rain and potentially some big thunderstorms in this part of the world. If we just put the rainfall on, you can see that pocket of rain in there uh forming across southern parts of Austria through Slovenia down into Croatia and through the rest of the afternoon. That little pocket of heavy downpours just drifting south as everything comes together and pushes its way down towards uh Bulgaria and Hungary over the course of this afternoon and into this evening. So, we are looking at this afternoon potentially some very heavy downpours developing. How much rain could we see? Well, let's zoom in on that and take a look at the rainfall accumulations that we're expecting in this part of the world. There's brighter colors there. Uh, really heavy rain.
Let's put it on the 3hour accumulations.
Tilt the map a little bit. Zoom in a little bit here. So, we're south of Vienna. And if we go through the afternoon, these are the threehour rainfall accumulations. Look at those blocks building in that part of the world. So those red cubes are anything between 25 and 50 mm and that's in 3 hours. So some places could easily be seeing 50 to maybe 100 millimeters of rain as those pockets of thunderstorms move their way across this part of the world uh through Croatia as I said through Slovenia and down towards um uh Hungary and Bulgaria, Romania, sorry, Romania. Uh we could see some pretty heavy downpours in that part of the world. We could easily see 50 to 100 millimeters of rain in the next 12 hours or so. And we could be seeing 25 to 50 millimeters of rain. And we could be seeing in 3 hours. And we could be seeing some large hailstones as is shown by this really cool map.
It's been brought to my attention today by our de deputy chief Nick Silkston.
Thank you for pointing this uh these charts out to me, Nick. crediting uh Matias Tatsar, apologies uh Mat Matsias for my pronunciation of your Polish name there.
He is a Polish uh researcher at a university in Pausnan. He uses the GFS model, the American model to come up with these convection charts across Europe. And if we just zoom in a little bit, I really wanted to highlight the chances of seeing large hail in this part of the world. just about make out Italy there only a 5 to 2% chance but that's quite high because the classing hail here is 2 cm hail so that's that's pretty big hail so if we do see it in this part of the world likely to be quite damaging so quite a strong signal here that we could easily see some damaging hailstones over the next 24 hours on that chart online we we'll put the link uh in the chat if you want to uh take a look at this really cool website be really useful I suspect over the course of the summer months as we see more heat building and more of those cumulo nimbus clouds coming in. But quite high chance of some damaging hail across parts of central and southeast Europe over the next 24 hours uh to 48 hours. Right, what about the UK? Well, I've talked about showers. That's basically it for the next couple of days. Here's the setup at the moment.
We've got that arm of the jet diving down to the west of the UK moving across. It's not really interacting with this low pressure too much, but what we are going to see is more showers. So, this weather front that's kind of draped across the country at the moment. Pretty feeble, not generating much rain because there's not a lot forcing, not a lot going on. So, that weather front's kind of fizzling out, but it is another cold front. So, it's introducing cooler air.
So, it's not very warm out there. Ahead of that weather front in the south, 15 16 degrees in the sunny spells. Actually quite a nice day here in Devon at the moment. Elsewhere, we have seen quite a few showers. And tomorrow everywhere we are likely to see the showers as we uh see as we run through the night. What we're going to see is that weather front clearing away. The jetream drifts its way further south. But notice this little feature in here. A little weather front. It's a trough really and that is going to intensify the showers. Look in here coming in quite widely across western parts sinking south through England and Wales. And if we just pause it there first thing tomorrow morning, showers just covering the UK. There'll be bands of them moving through and they will be moving through because the winds are quite brisk coming down from the north. So bringing a chill, but it won't be as cold as last night because there's more cloud around because there's more breeze. Turn quite chilly this evening in the south ahead of the showers. But it won't be as cold as last night where we had clear skies and generally light winds because the winds mix the air up and of course the cloud stops things radiating a bit. So, it won't be as cold even though the air is still pretty cold. If anything, a little bit colder coming down from the north. And tomorrow is a day of showers. Basically, we are going to just see showers in fair pretty much all parts of the UK as we go through the day. We'll see them initially created by that little trough as it goes through. And then what we'll see as we go through the day is a couple of things are going to happen. The sun has got a bit of power in it at this time of year. So although it's quite cold the air, it will still warm things up and it'll warm the land up faster than the sea. So by the time we get into the afternoon, you can see a lot of the showers developing over the land. They are going to be created by just the power of the sun. So that's the convection getting going. We'll see those clouds bubbling up. But as we go later into the day, what we're quite likely to see, if I just pause it there, notice this line of showers. That's a focus for them coming in from southern Scotland down across northern England towards the southeast. There's a a distinct line of them here, almost like another line of them in here as well, coming in from the uh uh the peninsula across uh up from Anglesy down to the uh from the northwest down to the southeast of Wales. So, kind of couple of focuses folky of the showers coming in here. And this one in particular, you can see where that's coming from because of the wind direction. We've got low pressure here sitting out in the North Sea and the wind's going around. You can just about make out the isobars on that. But look at the way the winds are going. If I take the isobars off, you can see the winds. Zoom in a little bit.
Just because of the position of the low here, the winds almost coming straight down into Yorkshire from the north. But over here, they're coming more in from the northwest. So they're kind of on a collision course. And what we are sort also going to see is the frictional forces coming into play. So as the winds come over the sea, there's not a lot of friction. So they tend to follow the isobars or not far off. As they hit land, what happens is they slow down.
There's more friction over land. So they slow down, which means the corololis force takes over and they back a little bit. So the winds will come in here. I might be able to draw it on. Actually, let's use the pen. The winds come in here, they're coming down, and then they have a little kink to them because as they come over the land, they will back a little bit. And the same is going on over here. So the winds are coming in here, and then they're backing a little bit, and they're just on a collision course. So the winds are coming in around that low pressure. They're on a collision course and that is a convergence. So when they come together, this is the surface. The winds are coming together at the surface. There's nowhere for them to go except up.
They're being pushed together. They can't go down. So they're just going to go up. And that's just going to enhance that uplift and create more showers and create that line of showers that we can see through the afternoon. The mountains will help. Of course, you've got the penines in here. So that's another bit of forcing that's going to push the air up as well. So the combination of those things going to generate some heavier showers in this zone. So much so that you might see some places not seeing many showers at all. Particularly close to the coast of northeast England. There might not be many showers because all the energy, all the forcing is going into this zone generating that uplift here. It's a similar thing going on across North Wales, but not quite the same because the winds not really in different directions, not really coming together here. But again, you do have that frictional force of the land. So it's a little bit more subtle, but the winds are coming in here from angle seed down and then in here they're coming in here and then they're hitting this side of Wales and then they're being forced. It's a bit more subtle, but you're still getting that convergence, those those winds being pushed together and it only takes a little bit because as I say, there's nowhere for else for it to go except up.
Those winds have to be forced upwards because they're coming together and they can't go down into the earth obviously.
So that's a couple of things to look out for. See if you can spot that on the radar tomorrow afternoon as those winds and it's another feature of the weather that we'll see more and more as we go through the summer. Particularly when the winds are light and you get convergence from things like seab breeze convergence. So when the seab breeze comes in that can trigger convection, the clouds bubbling up and that can create just lines of cloud or it can also create some thunderstorms too.
One area to look out for tomorrow is that uh zone of heavier showers coming in uh across parts of the north and east of England that then kind of moves away and the winds actually if anything by Thursday start to back. So we've actually got more of a um more of a sorry via got more of a northerly winds for Thursday bringing an even chillier feel I suspect. So we are going to see those temperatures struggling a little bit by day and by night but still as we go through Wednesday night and into Thursday. Let's just take it back to there. As we go through the night again, enough of a breeze, enough cloud, enough showers, we're probably not going to see too much in the way of frost. if you get some lighter winds with those clearer skies across southern Scotland, northwest England, there could be some pockets of frost in that zone there. So, still some chilly nights to come and chilly days to come as well. If we take a look at the temperatures over the next few days, you can see there was there's no great shakes really. Temperatures generally at or below average with that more northerly wind, if anything, a degree or so lower on Thursday. And don't forget that's the actual temperature. That's what the thermometer will say. We got to add that wind on as well. So quite a significant wind chill on Wednesday and Thursday. And Thursday's temperatures, yeah, 2, three, four degrees below the average. Friday, still pretty chilly, still pretty showery, although the showers do start to edge away. And still on the chilly side even into Saturday. If we take a look at the minimum temperatures and how they could vary over the next few days, this graph is showing what those temperatures are doing. You can see that this morning we were pretty close to freezing across parts of the south because we had that um we had the clearer skies whereas further north temperature actually higher to start the day today. But here you can see over the next few days if we just track it around they aren't really getting any warmer.
We are staying fairly close to freezing.
So gardeners take note still the potential for some frosts uh particularly as we head towards into the weekend when the winds will start to ease clearer skies and even further south. Okay. hard to find anywhere that dips below freezing, but we're not far off and it wouldn't take much in a in a rural hollow to get a little pocket of frost. So, it's still too early, I would say, to be putting out any delicate plants. Still some chilly nights to come over the next uh well, the rest of this week really. As we head towards the weekend, we may start to see a change, a hint of a change at least with the jet starting to shift. are still in this kind of elongated messy pattern at the moment. But as we fast forward to Friday, still got that north south orientation to the jet just to the west of the UK. Still got low pressure, but the high pressure is getting a little closer. This ridge is trying to topple its way in. So the charts for Friday, yes, we've got quite a few showers on, but they're more focused across the east. So closer to the low in here, you've got plenty of showers coming in down the eastern side, but not as many showers further west. So, a decent chance southwest Scotland, Northern Ireland, Wales, Southwest England. Good chance of a dry day on Friday. It's not going to be warm, but the winds will be lighter, so it might feel a bit warmer than the other days, and there should at least be some sunshine, and that does make a big difference at this time of year. Further east, we are still looking at some showers coming in on Friday.
Fast forward to Saturday, and by this stage, the low has gone away. Actually, look at that. Most places looking like having a dry, bright day on Saturday.
Again, temperatures are going to be probably still a touch below average, but a bit of sunshine, light winds. Put the winds on. They are still coming in from the north, but they won't be as strong. I don't think they're the right winds. Actually, they're they're not Saturday's winds uh due to the way that the data works. I don't think they were Saturday's winds. So, Saturday's winds will be lighter and actually with a bit of sunshine shouldn't be too bad. Notice this though, that is perhaps signs of a change as we head towards the weekend with a weather front trying to push in.
It's a fairly feeble affair coming in perhaps, but by the time we get to Sunday, the jets still in kind of that north south orientation, but the pressure pattern fairly messy across the UK and signs of higher pressure trying to topple in. So the winds by this stage going to be coming more in from the west. So it's still going to be a chilly air sitting over us, but with the winds coming more in from the west and generally lighter, temperatures will start to pick up. It will start to feel at least a little bit warmer, but certainly the rest of this week on the chilly side. I said right at the start, signs that things could be warming up a little bit next week. So let's try and find that if we can. Are there any signs that the temperatures are on the rise as we go through next week? These are the ensembles from the ECMWF. The ensembles when you run the model many many times and each of these green lines represents one of those uh ensemble members as they're known. So there's lots of green lines on here all in agreement at the at the moment here. These are the temperatures going along the side. These are the next few days going into next week. Up and down nature of the temperature because it's the daytime nighttime. oscillation. So, daytime, night time, daytime, night time. But as I reveal what's going to happen into next week, does look as if there's an upward trend both by day and by night.
Now, notice it gets quite messy towards the top. Quite a bit of There's some uh of the members going higher than others.
You'd expect that get more agreement in the shorter term than you do here. But there's still quite a strong signal there. There's quite an upward trajectory of something a bit warmer.
probably only closer to or a little bit above average, but we're starting at a baseline that is below average.
Remember, let's just shift this and as we head down across into Northern England, again, you've got that cold theme for the rest of this week and even into the weekend. But into next week, again, quite a strong signal that it is going to get a little bit warmer. And further south as well, again, a reasonable signal. And by here, by this stage, if we get somewhere just to the north of London, those temperatures potentially up back over 20°. So, there are signs of things getting a little bit warmer as we go into next week. There's more there more agreement. I say they're a bit closer together. Uh these ensemble tracks across the south than they are further north. get a bit more messy the signal here because there are signs of weather fronts could be coming in and and a weather front will maybe bring a bit more in the way of cloud and rain further north. So, it's not a case of it's definitely going to be gloriously sunny everywhere. Far from it, but at least decent signals that it will be warming up as we go through next week.
One to watch and something to watch or we'll have more on this will be Annie's 10day trend tomorrow. So, Annie Shuttleworth will be doing the 10day trend. another reason to hit subscribe and then you won't miss that tomorrow.
But she'll have a bit more detail about where we could be going as we go through next week. But yeah, definitely chilly this week. Watch out for those showers.
Could be some heavy ones. Keep your eyes peeled for some beautiful cloudscapes.
And send them into us if you get any really good pictures. We do love seeing them. Uh if you're on our Instagram channel and we put regular appeals out on that for pictures. So, if you get any good cloudscapes, send them to us on our Instagram channel, and we'll show some of them in our weather studio live on Friday. I think it's Alex and Aiden on the Weather Studio Live this Friday at 12:15. So, again, if you hit subscribe, you won't miss that either. If you've got any questions, then pop those in the chat. We'll try and answer some of those questions in the Weather Studio Live.
You got other ideas about what you'd like to see on a deep dive, also put those in the chat as well. Please do hit subscribe. Please share the love. Let everyone know in the world the Met Office is talking weather uh every Tuesday here on the deep dive. Give us a thumbs up. Thank you very much for watching. I'll see you again soon.
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