Ken BanksNorth east Scotland reporter, Aberdeen

BBC
Kate Finlay was delighted to see some late afternoon sunshine in Aberdeen on Thursday
The sun has finally broken through the clouds for the first time in 21 days in Aberdeen.
Sunshine was last recorded in the city three weeks ago - on 21 January. This is the longest sunless period in the area since Met Office records began in 1957.
Residents of the Granite City finally glimpsed the sun late on Thursday afternoon.
Meanwhile, however, there is a yellow warning for snow and ice across Scotland overnight.


The glow of the sun was felt in Aberdeen
Kate Finlay, 21, said she was delighted to finally see the sunshine in Aberdeen.
"It's honestly very strange, the first thing I did when I came out of the flat there was message my friends, like 'guys the sun's out'.
"It's really weird, I opened the curtains, and thought 'oh it feels brighter than it did', and then went outside and it was a blue sky. I was really taken aback to be honest.
"It's actually been really hard, being trapped in the house as it's so wet, we don't want to walk anywhere or do an awful lot.
"It's been pretty miserable - so so happy that it's finally back," the University of Aberdeen student said.

Anne's World/BBC Weather Watcher
The sun was also seen in nearby Balmedie in Aberdeenshire
The first 10 days of 2026 brought heavy snow to the north east of Scotland.
Since then it has barely stopped raining.
More than 277mm of rain fell on Aboyne in Aberdeenshire during January alone - about four times the monthly average.
It affected football matches, North Sea oil workers, farmers and even pothole repairs.
Experts blamed what was described as a "blocked weather pattern".
It prevented any significant shift in the position of the jet stream, and limited the chance of more settled, drier conditions.


Heavy rain brought minor flooding to parts of Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire
Scientists say climate changes means periods of more intense rainfall can be expected.
Figures from the Met Office suggest that 1.5C of warming could bring up to 16% more winter rainfall to Aberdeen and 13% more in Aberdeenshire, compared with levels in the 1980s and 90s.
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