Valley witness rise in night temperature

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Srinagar, December 24: Ahead of the expected wet spell in Kashmir, the night temperature has risen slightly across the Valley.

According to MeT officials, night temperature rose in Srinagar to minus 3.8 degree C against from minus 5.0 degree C on previous night. While the mercury increased by more than a degree, it was below two degrees Celsius for this time of the year in Srinagar, where people endured second coldest night at minus 6.6 ยฐC in a decade on last Saturday.

The temperature also remained below or equal to normal overnight in other parts of the Valley with Gulmarg, the world famous skiing resort recording a low of minus 5.6 ยฐC. The minimum temperature is normal for Gulmarg for this time of the year and as per the MeT department moderate snow is expected there on December 27 followed by a light spell on the next day. Pahalgam, the famous tourist destination in south Kashmir, recorded a low of minus 5.2 ยฐC. Qazigund recorded minus 3.4 ยฐC (a degree below the normal), Kupwara minus 3.8 ยฐC (one degree below normal) and Kokernag minus 3.0 ยฐC (one degree below normal).

Kashmir is in the middle Chillai-Kalan, the 40-day winter period which commenced on December 21 and ends on January 31. The period is considered the harshest of the winter when the chances of snowfall are most frequent and maximum.

The cold wave, however, continues even after that in Kashmir with a 20-day-long ‘Chillai-Khurd’ (small cold) and a 10-day-long ‘Chillai-Bachha’ (baby cold).

The weatherman has forecast mainly dry weather over Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh for next two days till December 27.

 โ€œThe weather is going be dry in next 24 hours,โ€ the MeT official said. While snowfall is expected, mainly on upper reaches, on December 27, the forecast for Srinagar has one or two spells of rain or thundershowers store on the day (Sunday). 

Due to harsh weather conditions, people are facing a lot of problems. The water supply has been disrupted with frozen taps becoming a common sight now. The frequent power cuts, scheduled or unscheduled, only amplify the cold and add to the discomfort of the people. Some portions of the Dal Lake were also frozen due to the cold wave.