City
Epaper

Mainly clear to partly cloudy weather likely in J&K: MeT

By IANS | Updated: July 4, 2022 10:25 IST

Srinagar, July 4 Mainly clear to partly cloudy weather is likely during the next 24 hours in Jammu ...

Open in App

Srinagar, July 4 Mainly clear to partly cloudy weather is likely during the next 24 hours in Jammu and Kashmir, the Meteorological (MeT) department said on Monday.

"Weather is likely to remain mainly clear to partly cloudy in J&K. Light rain is expected from Tuesday that will break the current heat wave in the Valley", an official of the MeT department said.

Srinagar recorded 24 degrees Celsius, Pahalgam 18.6 and Gulmarg 14.8 degrees the minimum temperature this morning.

In Ladakh region, Leh had 16.2 and Kargil 21 as the minimum temperature.

Jammu registered 26.6 degrees, Katra 24.2, Batote 19.5, Banihal 20.8 and Bhaderwah 19.8 as the minimum temperature.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: kargil
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalKargil Vijay Diwas 2025: PM Modi, President Droupadi Murmu, Rajnath Singh Pay Tribute to Martyrs

LifestyleVijay Diwas 2024: History, Significance, Wishes to Mark India’s 1971 War Victory

NationalJammu and Kashmir Building Collapse: 5 Injured After Building in Kargil's Kabaddi Nullah Area Collapses (Watch Video)

NationalKargil Vijay Diwas 2024: PM Modi Pays Tribute to Kargil War Martyrs in Drass (Watch Video)

NationalIndian Air Force Celebrates 'Kargil Vijay Diwas Rajat Jayanti 2024' at Air Force Station in Uttar Pradesh (Watch Videos)

National Realted Stories

NationalBengaluru: College student working part-time with Blinkit 'misbehaves' with Brazilian model, arrested

NationalTN BJP criticises DMK for 'shielding bogus voters' in Kolathur, backs ECI's SIR

NationalAttacks on Adani Group coordinated effort to undermine India’s growth: Lawyer

NationalBengal: Ward boy at Burdwan Medical College and Hospital held in molestation case

NationalPakistan's ISI hires global voices to wage propaganda war against India