October 26, 2024

The Big Freeze hits Britain: Thundersnow, hail and severe ice grips as far south as London ahead of year’s coldest night as temperatures plummet to bone-chilling -12C

Snowfall in Booker in High Wycombe

Snowfall in Booker in High Wycombe

Thundersnow, hail and severe ice have gripped Britain as far south as London today ahead of the year’s coldest night, with temperatures plummeting to a bone-chilling -12C.

The Met Office is predicting thundersnow in parts of the country tonight – a rare combination of snow and thunder and lightning that only occurs a few months of the year.

Thundersnow can see between two and four inches of snowfall per hour – as drivers skidded off slippery snow-covered roads across the country today. 

Photographs showed car crashes in the likes of Derbyshire and Scotland – while a video revealed the top layer of the sea had frozen in Whitstable, Kent, due to the sub-zero temperatures.

Snow was first seen in northern Scotland and the Western Isles late last week – but it has crept down through the likes of County Durham and Cumbria towards Birmingham and then London today.

Met Office warnings for ice remain in place across the whole of Britain throughout today and into tomorrow as cold air moves in – with showers forecast to continue to bring rain, sleet or snow as the day progresses.  

Excited Londoners posted videos online of snowfall ahead of temperatures falling to possibly -12C (10F) tonight, breaking the current record for this winter of -10.8C (13F) which was set last Friday at Braemar in Aberdeenshire.

Simon Partridge from the Met Office told MailOnline: ‘We had some [thundersnow today], a little bit in Northern Ireland, there was a touch in north east Wales, in the Cheshire area for a time.

‘There’s also been lightning strikes just off the south east coast. Tomorrow it’s less likely to see any thundersnow but there will still be some showers but not on the scale we’ve seen today.’

Met Office warnings for ice (pictured) remain in place today

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Met Office warnings for ice (pictured) remain in place today

Mr Partridge added: ‘There may be more in the next couple of hours in south east England. It’s the same as any other thunderstorm, just that it’s cold.’

However, significant flurries are expected to remain limited to higher ground. Temperatures in London and Cardiff are expected to peak at 5C (41F), while Birmingham will see highs of 3C (37F) and 2C (36F) in Edinburgh. 

Temperatures have fallen to at least -7C (19F) for four nights in a row now – with -7.6C (18F) in Aboyne yesterday, -9.6C (15F) in Kinbrace on Sunday, -9.5C (15F) in Altnaharra on Saturday and -10.8C (13F) in Braemar last Friday. 

Highways England warned motorists that it was snowing ‘quite heavy’ on the M62 trans-Pennine route, where efforts were under way to keep the road open using ploughs and salt.

In Cornwall, the A30 was partially blocked following two separate multi-vehicle crashes caused by a heavy hail storm at about 10am on the road at Launceston and Bodmin Moor, with icy conditions also reported. 

On the M6 snow caused the closure of a sliproad at junction four overnight, but it was reopened in the early hours. Meanwhile a fleet of 32 gritters was out in south-west Scotland where Transerv described conditions as ‘Baltic’. 

Up to an inch of snow is due to fall on high ground from the Peak District northwards and in North Wales. In Scotland, up to four inches of snow was expected overnight in the Highlands.

Some light snow was also seen down in South East England as the wintry front moved through from the North West.

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