Easter Monday temperature is new Scottish record
- Published
Scotland has enjoyed its hottest Easter Monday on record with a top temperature of 24.2C (75.5F) in Kinlochewe in Wester Ross.
The figure beat the previous high of 21.4C (70.5F) from 2014.
It came 24 hours after a peak of 23.4C in Edinburgh broke Scotland's Easter Sunday record.
This year, Easter fell on the latest date since 2011, meaning that warm weather is far more likely than those years when Easter is marked in March.
The Met Office said all four of the UK nations had recorded their warmest Easter Monday on record.
The second highest temperature recorded in Scotland was 23.7C (74.6F) in Achnagart in the Highlands, followed by 23.5C (74.3F) in Kinloss in Moray.
Temperatures are likely to fall back to the seasonal average later in the week.
The Monday sunshine brought huge crowds to beaches and parks around the country.
That caused some disruption on the roads, with long tailbacks around parts of Loch Lomond.
Traffic was also heavy around Largs and other Ayrshire seaside towns. In the east there were reports of big delays near the Fife coast.
Matt Row, duty forecaster at the Met Office in Aberdeen, said much of Scotland had been warmer than the Mediterranean, which was "quite remarkable".
He added: "We've had wall-wall-wall sunshine, from Shetland all the way down to Galloway.
"Normally we expect 12C as an average for much of Scotland in April. But today the Balearics have been 15C and 17C in eastern Spain.
"It will be another warm day in the west of Scotland on Tuesday, with temperatures up to 22C. But it will be cooler in the east and we will see that cooler weather spreading across the whole of Scotland during the rest o the week.
"And, indeed, there will be some welcome rain for many of us by Thursday and Friday."