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Cold Grips Northern China, Flowers Blossom in the South

Rain and snow swept over north China yesterday after a cold front from Siberia sent temperatures plummeting.

The State Meteorological Observatory said the mercury will plunge by as much as 8 to 10 ℃  across much of north China, with some regions experiencing drops of more than 10 ℃.

According to the Beijing meteorological observatory, the capital's temperature was expected to drop to -2 ℃ overnight and reach a high today of around 6 ℃.

"It's largely normal weather," said Yang Guiming from the State Meteorological Observatory. Cold fronts usually intensify after Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival, which is the 15th day of the eighth lunar month.

Many people already started preparing for the cold at a large vegetable stall near Guozijian in northeast Beijing's Chaoyang District yesterday morning. Some local residents were busy storing Chinese cabbages and onions as in previous years, when winter always led to vegetable shortages.

The predicted snowfall has also stirred controversy over whether to let learner drivers on the slippery roads.

But elsewhere in China, there was no sign of cold weather. In Chongqing Municipality in Southwest China, the city's average temperature has remained at around 22 ℃ since late October, according to a Xinhuanet report.

In Wuhan, capital of Central China's Hubei Province, flowers which normally bloom in spring are blossoming again in autumn at the city's botanical gardens.

(China Daily November 7, 2003)

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