Low temperature of 16C in the investment and 12C in the north and northeast are anticipated for Sunday and Monday.
Bangkok is expected to experience its best weather in almost 40 years on Sunday and Monday, with highs of 16 degree Celsius and highs of 12 degrees Fahrenheit, according to experts on Thursday.
On Jan. 12 and 13, Seree Supharathit, chairman of the Centre for Climate Change and Disaster at Rangsit University, wrote on his Instagram page that “anyone wanting to experience the best temperature this year ( with strong winds ) may make their body and mind.”
Temperatures are expected to drop as low as 12C in 13 provinces in the North ( Mae Hong Son, Chiang Mai, Lamphun, Lampang, Nan, Phrae, Tak, Sukhothai, Phitsanulok, Phetchabun, Kamphaeng Phet, Phitchit and Nakhon Sawan ), 6 provinces in the Northeast ( Loei, Nong Khai, Bung Kan, Udon Thani, Nong Bua Lam Phu and Nakhon Ratchasima )
The average low for Bangkok and the surrounding provinces is expected to be around 21C, but on Sunday and Monday it may drop to 16C, according to Mr. Seree. This is the best climate in almost 40 years.
Given the global alert pattern, Bangkok residents may not experience quite cool weather in the future, but they must be cautious because the cool time brings with it dangerous sand pollution from burning and other sources, he wrote.
Between January 10 and January 13, the weather office predicted temperatures to drop by 5-7 degrees Fahrenheit in the North and Northeast, and by 2-5 degrees Fahrenheit in Bangkok and the surrounding provinces.
Thailand and the South China Sea are both affected by a powerful high-pressure system from China, which also results in a drop in temperature and strong winds. People may also be watchful of higher fire danger in dried, windy conditions, the ministry said.
The Gulf and the South may experience additional rainfall and isolated large weather in the lower South as a result of the northeast monsoon, it added.
Tides in the Gulf are forecast to remain 2-4 feet high and over 4 feet during thundershowers. Tides in the Andaman Sea are likely to be 1-2 feet high reefs, 2-3 feet abroad and above 3 yards during thundershowers.
People in southern coastal regions may beware of reef floods. All boats should proceed with caution and be offshore during thundershowers. Smaller boats in the Andaman Sea and the Gulf should be ashore from January 10 through January 13, according to the department.