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WEATHER

‘Ice days’: Denmark set for biting cold this weekend

This week’s blizzards and pouring rain might be over, but harsh weather will continue in Denmark this weekend as temperatures plunge to well below zero.

'Ice days': Denmark set for biting cold this weekend
Freezing conditions on southern island Falster. Photo:Ingrid Riis/Ritzau Scanpix

Forecasts for this weekend’s weather from national meteorological agency DMI show temperatures plunging, particularly during Saturday night when more than 10 degrees under freezing is forecast in several areas.

“In the coming days, ice-cold polar air will push down over Denmark from the north,” the agency states.

That will bring “widespread day frosts and night temperatures which will drop down to two-digit minus degrees [Celsius] in several places,” it said.

A repeat of heavy snowfall is not forecast, with the weather staying mostly dry during the cold snap.

Temperatures below zero for 24 hours straight – a so-called isdøgn or “ice day” – are likely.

On Saturday, mostly clear weather will see temperatures range between 0 and -8 degrees Celsius during the day, depending on location in Denmark. Eastern parts of the country near the Baltic Sea will have the mildest conditions, while central and eastern parts of Jutland along with northern Zealand are forecast to get the coldest temperatures.

The clear weather will continue during the night on Saturday with temperatures between 2 and 10 degrees below zero, with that dropping as low as -17 degrees locally.

That pattern is likely to be repeated on Sunday, with -8 degrees the lowest temperature forecast during the day. Baltic Sea island Bornholm could see some snow but the rest of the country will be largely dry.

This weekend’s weather is likely to elicit shivers but will be some way from the record for the coldest recorded night in Denmark.

The lowest temperature ever recorded in Denmark was in northern region Thy in January 1982, where minus 31.2 degrees Celsius was registered, according to broadcaster DR.

The thermometer dropped to -20.7 degrees as recently as February 2021.

Warmer and more humid air from the middle of next week could see the ice begin to thaw along with fog, DMI adds.

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WEATHER

It’s officially summer in Denmark!

The Danish Meteorological Institute has officially declared Wednesday the country's first day of summer, after a temperature of 25.2C was recorded in Stauning on the Ringkøbing fjord.

It's officially summer in Denmark!

DMI defines a summer’s day in Denmark as one where a temperature of at least 25C is recorded somewhere in the country. 

“The year’s first summer’s day is in the bag,” the institute announced on X, along with a link to temperature measurements updated in real time. “Could the temperature rise further during the afternoon?”. 

On Tuesday, Stauning came within a tenth of a degree of the summer threshold, with a temperature of 24.9C recorded. 

The earliest summer day ever recorded in Denmark came on April 17th, 1964, when the temperature reached 25.2 degrees at Klosterhede Plantage between Holstebro, Lemvig and Struer. The latest first day of summer recorded came in 2004, when Danes had to wait until July 30th before summer was declared. 

On average, the first summer’s day falls on May 23, according to TV2’s weather data from 1991 to 2020, so this year summer has come about a week early.

The first summer’s day came last year on May 22 with a measured temperature of 25.1C, and in 2022 it fell on May 18, with a temperature of 25.9C. 

Here are the current maxiumum temperatures so far recorded today: 

Here

Source: DMI
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