The heavy rain in Great Britain will go on through Sunday and into next week. The Environment Agency issued 85 flood warnings in England, mainly in the south-west and Midlands. Another 245 flood alerts are active, covering areas from North Yorkshire to Cornwall and from the Welsh borders to Norfolk. Natural Resources Wales has 11 flood alerts. Scotland has one flood warning and five flood alerts. The Met Office said Sunday will see showers especially in the west, with steady rain and drizzle in parts of Scotland. From Monday to Wednesday, cloudy skies will bring spells of heavy rain across the UK, with brief dry breaks. It has rained every day in the UK for 37 days straight. Aberdeen has seen no sunshine since January 21, and Sheffield has had no sunshine in February so far. Early February rainfall in the south-east was nearly a third of the monthly average in just three days. Dan Stroud, a Met Office meteorologist, said, “Unfortunately, there’s no end in sight.” Newcastle’s jumps meeting scheduled for Sunday was canceled due to a waterlogged track after 13mm of rain in 24 hours and 56mm over the past week. The south-west and south Wales have had rain every day in 2026 so far, with 50% more rainfall than usual for January. The UK’s wettest February record was in 2020, with 213.7mm of rain, including storms Ciara and Dennis.