Tour Scotland 4K travel video of afternoon late Spring hail storm on May visit to my cottage garden in Scone by Perth, Perthshire. Weather forecast today was for hot temperatures followed by hail and rain storms across Scotland scattered heavy and thundery showers across the rest of the United Kingdom. Hail is a type of precipitation, or water in the atmosphere. Hail is formed when drops of water freeze together in the cold upper regions of thunderstorm clouds. These chunks of ice are called hailstones. Hailstones are not frozen raindrops. Frozen rain falls as water and freezes as it nears the ground. Hail actually falls as a solid. Hailstones are formed by layers of water attaching and freezing in a large cloud. A frozen droplet begins to fall from a cloud during a storm, but is pushed back up into the cloud by a strong updraft of wind. When the hailstone is lifted, it hits liquid water droplets. Those droplets then freeze to the hailstone, adding another layer to it. The hailstone eventually falls to Earth when it becomes too heavy to remain in the cloud, or when the updraft stops or slows down.
All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.
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