Glasgow
Yes but very rarely. It is usually heathland or peat.
Well I'm from the uk, and no not really, we hardly get them at all. Maybe on the odd occasion but if they do occur they aren't very bad anyway.
The most commen weather in the united kingdom is mostly raining.
According to Wikipedia, the coldest place in England was Edgmond in Shropshire, with a recording of -26.1C or -15F on 10th January 1982. This is the lowest recorded natural temperature in England. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geography_of_England
Annual rainfall varies throughout the country. For example, it can be as much as 2000mm a year in the Southern Mountains or a much lower 400mm in the vicinity of Mainz which is more to the North West. As an average for the whole country, around 600-800mm is a good approximation. In comparison to other countries, this is quite a lot. London, UK, will get around 32-64mm per year.
Al the time.
In the UK, London.
The type of rain we get in the UK is mixed.
it is roughly 72.57cm as an average rainfall per year
Dornoch
rain
Because our weather comes across the cold Atlantic from america. Once over here, it 'battles' with warm air circulating up from the African continent - forming weather fronts.
The heaviest recorded daily rainfall total in UK was at Upwey and Martinstown in Dorset when 279 mm was recorded on 18 July 1955.
Lake District
uk
i dont no but i WANT TO
The next solar eclipse is due to occur in the UK around the 2080s.