Aberdeen ends 21-day sunless streak, longest since 1957 records began
In Brief
Aberdeen experienced sunshine for the first time in 21 days, ending its longest recorded sunless period since 1957.
Key Facts
- Aberdeen had not seen sunshine since 21 January, marking 21 consecutive days without sun
- This period is the longest sunless stretch recorded in Aberdeen since 1957
- Sunshine was officially recorded for 30 minutes in Dyce on Thursday afternoon
- The Met Office maintains weather records for the Aberdeen area dating back to 1957
- Residents of Aberdeen, known as the Granite City, experienced unrelenting rain during this period
What Happened
Aberdeen experienced its longest sunless period since weather records began in 1957, with no sunshine recorded from 21 January until late Thursday afternoon. The Met Office officially recorded 30 minutes of sunshine in Dyce, marking the end of 21 consecutive days of gloomy weather and persistent rain in the area.
Why It Matters
The end of this extended sunless period is notable in Aberdeen's weather history. It provides updated data on local weather patterns and conditions in northeast Scotland.
Sources
- BBC News — Aberdeen finally sees sunshine after 21 days of gloom(6h ago)
- The Guardian — Aberdeen sees sunshine for the first time in 21 days(just now)
