The final stretch of Holy Week will be marked by a notable meteorological contrast in Spain. The situation of general stability is will impose in the Peninsula and the Balearic Islands, with clear skies that will hardly be altered by some intervals of high clouds in the northern half and low clouds at the end of the day in the northwest end.
This scenery will allow thermometers to experience a practically general rise, especially in the maximum temperatureswhich will reach high values for the time in large areas of the country.
The increases will be more pronounced in the northern peninsula and the Iberian arcwith notable and even locally extraordinary ascents in the eastern Cantabrian area. Thermometers are expected to exceed 25 degrees in the southwest quadrant, as well as in regions of Galicia, the Cantabrian Sea and the depressions of the northeast.
However, not all regions They will enjoy this early heat. In the Strait, the west of Alborán and the coasts of Catalonia there will be decreases in the maximums, while the minimums will decrease in the lower Guadalquivir and the Ampurdán.
The wind and isolated storms disturb the calm in the south and the Canary Islands
The wind will blow with intensity variable. The east will affect Alborán with strong intervals and the possibility of very strong gusts in the Strait, which could complicate navigation conditions and outdoor activities in those areas.
In Ampurdán and the north of the Balearic Islands, the northwest wind will blow moderate, but it will go subsiding throughout the day. On the coasts of the Cantabrian Sea and northern Galicia, the east wind will rotate to the west. In the rest of the country, the wind will be loose with a predominance of the eastern component, which will rotate south.
Canary Islands You will live a different day from the rest of the territory. The heavens will appear cloudy with medium and high clouds that could leave an occasional shower. Although the trend will be clearDuring the afternoon, occasional rainfall in high areas is not ruled out, which could be accompanied by some storm isolated on the summits of the most mountainous islands.
Maximum temperatures will drop in the archipelago, while minimum temperatures they will hardly change. Thus, while the Peninsula says goodbye to winter with an advance of spring heat, the islands and some points in the south of the peninsula continue to carry traces of instability typical of a transition season that still It doesn’t finish settling.