Shulia: there will be Lithuanian summer weather, not Kazakh



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Tomorrow, the clouds will be concentrated mainly in central Europe, with the heaviest in the Balkans and the northeast. The warmer weather starts in the west of the continent, it will be cool in the central part and then warmer in the east and southeast.

Today it has rained a little in Lithuania, but it is quite hot. Tonight all the clouds will vanish pretty quickly, they will melt, the rain will stop soon. Later in the evening, a clear sky will prevail. The day will be sunny, there will be a lot of sun, if it is a little and it will rain, it will be mostly in the west of the country.

Fresh air travels from the northwest to Lithuania, so the lowest temperature in the morning will be 13-15 degrees, only in the sea around 18 hot. The sun will not be depleted during the day, so the air will heat up to 24-26 degrees. The Baltic countries are still very hot, so it will be hot by the sea.

“In other words, tomorrow will be the Lithuanian summer, not Kazakh. Somewhere it will play tonight, tomorrow it will play a bit in the west of the country. Thunderstorms are unlikely. At night it will cool down to 13-15 degrees, in the sea around 18 degrees, during the day it will warm to 24-26 degrees “, says meteorologist Naglis Šulija.

For the next two days, the weather in Lithuania will remain similar. On Wednesday night, somewhere, during the day in some places, but certainly not all, there will be a short-lived summer rain and thunderstorms are likely. The lowest temperature at night will be from 14 to 16, in the sea from 18 to 20 degrees, during the day, just like tomorrow, the weather will warm to 24 to 26 degrees.

No rain is expected on Thursday night, during the day in some places, mainly in the west of the country, we will have summer rain. At night, the weather will cool to 12-14, during the day it will warm to 23-25 ​​degrees.

“Well, finally the weather is what it should be in Lithuania in July. Another message is that we will not see the new heat for at least a week, and when it passes, we will look more,” says N. Šulija.



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