Spring paused, the rains return to Italy: that’s when

The weather on Italy is about to change once again. After the influx of strong northerly winds, which affected the Easter weekend and Easter Monday, now the atmospheric circulation returns to arrange itself from the western quadrants. From the Atlantic Ocean, a cyclonic vortex is preparing to reach the central Mediterranean, bringing the rain back to our country as well. Lorenzo Tedici, meteorologist of the site www.iLMeteo.it announces that in the next few days the vortex will pilot an Atlantic perturbation driven by strong southern winds (Scirocco) and fed by cooler air at high altitude. The weather is expected to worsen starting from the afternoon of Wednesday 20 April when the cloudiness will rapidly increase in the Center-North with the first rains on Piedmont, Liguria and then Sardinia. Between Thursday and Friday the disturbance will cross Italy, dispensing widespread and even heavy rainfall, especially on Sardinia, Tuscany and Emilia Romagna. It will also rain in the South, especially in Calabria and Basilicata. The fresh air at high altitude that will feed the perturbed front will cause the snow to descend on the Alps above 1500-1600 meters, at higher altitudes instead on the Apennines. By Friday the disturbance will have wet most of our regions, also favoring a decrease in temperatures, more noticeable in the North. today they don’t see him very convinced. IN DETAIL: Tuesday 19th. In the north: clouds rising over all regions. Middle: stable and sunny weather. South: good weather. Wednesday 20. In the north: overcast skies, rains in Piedmont. In the center: increasingly widespread clouds, rains in Sardinia by evening. In the south: partly cloudy sky. Thursday 21. In the north: bad weather with widespread rain. Center: overcast sky with rain and thunderstorms. In the south: worsens by evening on the peninsular regions. Trend. From Friday the weather has improved from the afternoon / evening, more sun at the weekend but beware of the afternoon thunderstorms in the North.