When the Pentecost weekend is at the door, the pen weather moves from north to south. Then it is likely that the first summer day of the year can be registered in the capital.
Updated less than 20 minutes ago
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People in the south have lately cast envious glances at the weather in the north. In the south, there has been unstable weather with showers, lightning and thunder, while there has been nice weather in large parts of northern Norway.
– That’s how it will be until Friday, says on-duty meteorologist at the Meteorological Institute, Ingvild Villa, to NTB.
Then you can pick up the summer clothes in the south, while the southwest and umbrella must be picked up from the drawer in the north.
– It will be a kind of shift. Then it will be Northern Norway that gets rain activity, precipitation and lower temperatures, while Southern Norway gets higher temperatures and more stable weather, says Villa.
Western Norway and Trøndelag have to wait
– There will be some precipitation left in Western Norway on Friday, but then Eastern Norway will start to get nicer, says the meteorologist.
The precipitation will linger in Western Norway and in Trøndelag, which means that the taste of good weather here will be postponed until over the weekend. South of Stad and all the way along the coast to Oslo it will be good.
– So it seems that Pentecost weekend will be best in the south. On the second day of Pentecost, Monday, there may be more places in the south, says Villa.
On Wednesday we entered the three official summer months. A Nordic summer day means that the temperature reaches 20 degrees, something that was already measured on Wednesday three times this year at the weather forecast in Tromsø. This has only happened four times since the measurement of maximum temperature began in 1937.