Australia to be lashed with wild weather this week including snow in Tasmania and 33C heat in Sydney – what will it feel like where you are?
- Strange weather is in store for Australia this week as a 'cut-off' low crosses east
- Sydney will see scorching hot sun while Tasmania could be hit with snowfall
- Torrential rain is forecast for Melbourne along with other parts of Victoria
- While wild thunderstorms are also expected to lash large parts of the continent
The land of droughts and flooding rain is set for a wild week of weather with snow set to fall in Tasmania as Sydneysiders battle through a 33C heatwave.
Australia's strange weather phenomenon is being caused by a 'cut-off' low pressure system that could bring lighting, large hail, destructive winds and heavy rainfall across large parts of the country.
Perth and surrounding areas will be lashed with thunderstorms and lightning strikes on Tuesday and Wednesday before the chaotic weather pushes across central Australia arriving in the southeast on Thursday.

The land of droughts and flooding rain is set for a wild week of weather with snow set to fall in Tasmania as Sydneysiders battle through a 33C heatwave. Pictured: Sydney's Bondi Beach

Australia's strange weather phenomenon is being caused by a 'cut-off' low pressure system which could bring lighting, large hail, destructive winds and heavy rainfall across large parts of the country

Snow is predicted to fall on Friday in Tasmania. Pictured: Snow falls in Mount Wellington, Tasmania
'It is all being caused by the same weather system - a cut-off low pressure system forming over the continent,' Senior meteorologist Jonathan How at the Bureau of Meteorology told Daily Mail Australia on Tuesday.
'The continent is really hot but the oceans south of Australia are very cold and this happens as we transition into the warmer months.
'It's dragging down a lot of heat from the desert and that will lead to really hot days on Friday on the east coast in places like Sydney.
'At the same time once that low pressure system develops we will get a lot of rain and storms mainly in Victoria, South Australia, and Tasmania.'

Rain will be bucketing down in Victoria's capital on Friday and in Tasmania it's expected to snow. Pictured: Mount Wellington, Tasmania

'The continent is really hot but the oceans south of Australia are very cold and this happens as we transition into the warmer months,' Senior meteorologist Jonathan How at the Bureau of Meteorology told Daily Mail Australia

Temperatures in Hobart will drop to 6C on Saturday while in Melbourne the mercury will slide to a chilly 8C. Pictured: Mount Wellington, Tasmania
Storms are forecast to lash Perth and surrounding areas on Tuesday and Wednesday before the system moves east toward Adelaide on Thursday.
It is not expected to reach Melbourne and Hobart until late on Thursday, but when it does, the cold front will intensify bringing cloudy and frosty conditions for much of the southeast.
Rain will be bucketing down in Victoria's capital on Friday and in Tasmania it's forecast to snow.
Temperatures in Hobart will drop to 6C on Saturday while in Melbourne the mercury will slide to a chilly 8C.
'The snow is very dependent on this low pressure system,' Mr How said.
'If it shifts a couple of hundred kilometres it could change the conditions but at this point there is a good chance of snow falling in Tasmania.

At the same Victoria and Tasmania are shivering to keep warn, Sydneysiders will be facing a heatwave. Pictured: Sydney's Bondi Beach

The cut-off low will drag warn air from the desert to the southeast driving the mercury into the in the mid-30s. Pictured: A surfer at Sydney's Bondi Beach
'There is less of a chance in Victoria, but snowfall is still possible across alpine peaks.
'Obviously this is unusual as we don't expect to see snow falling as we get into November but Australia is always such a roller coaster.'
At the same time Victoria and Tasmania are shivering, Sydneysiders will be facing a heatwave in the mid-30s as the cut-off low drags warm air from the desert to the southeast.
But in northern NSW and southeast Queensland on Friday and Saturday, there could be 'lightning, large hail, destructive wind gusts, and heavy rainfall'.
'We are anticipating plenty of storms right across the country starting in WA and progressing east all the way from the NT through to SA and it's quite a large cold front,' Mr How said.

Grey and frosty conditions are forecast for Melbourne and much of the southeast this week. Pictured: A person walks through Melbourne's Carlton gardens in the rain