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Thousands of properties are without power as temperatures plummet
Thousands of homes are still without power and many roads remain impassable after severe weather affected much of the UK over the weekend.
In Scotland several thousand homes were affected after snow and strong winds damaged power cables.
In Northern Ireland some households in remote areas have been warned it could be several days before their supplies are reconnected.
The Met Office has issued a warning for ongoing severe weather.
It has issued an extension to its previous amber alert for "severe weather action". Experts say there is a 100% probability of severe cold weather and icy conditions between 08:00 GMT on Monday and 08:00 GMT on Friday in parts of England.
"Bitterly cold easterly winds will persist this week, bringing snow showers to north-east England and light snow flurries across other areas of England. With lying snow and partial snow melt during the daytimes, icy conditions are likely during the nights," the Met Office says.
Parts of south-west Scotland, Kintyre and the Isle of Arran have been without power for four days. Electricity engineers are still working to reconnect about 3,500 homes on Kintyre and 1,500 on Arran.
The sheer weight of snow has destroyed power line and engineers have been hampered by snow-drifts and heavy winds over the weekend.
Latest local information from the BBC
Fraser Hendry, a manager at the Kilnoch Hotel in Blackwaterfoot, on the isle of Arran, said an emergency centre for local people had been set up in the hotel.
"The main problem we have is the amount of snow that fell. The roads are dreadful, the roads that have been cleared, the snow has melted and is now just freezing over and the whole place is like an ice rink.
"Our hotel has had an old generator for 60 years. We're trying to keep that going at the moment so there is a warm place for the medics, the mountain rescue and the local fire brigade.
"We've been told it could be Friday before we get the supply back."
Kenneth Young, who is on Arran, told the BBC the situation was pretty bad, especially on the south side of the island.
"There's been drift of up to 10ft. I know the headmistress of the local primary school on the south side and she showed me some pictures," he said. "Obviously the school is closed but she wanted to check the building itself and they look like scenes from the Arctic Circle."
Ross Easton, from Scottish and Southern Energy, said extra staff had been called in to deal with the problems.
"This really has been a mammoth effort from us, we've got teams drafted in from the South of England and from Scotland. Typically on Arran we've got two members of staff. Right now we've got 150," he said.
Winter weather in spring
- Caused by persistent easterly winds from frozen continental Europe which have chilled North Sea to 4- 5C
- Average land temperature is currently around 3C - normally should be nearer 6C
- Coldest March on record was in 1962 with a mean temperature of 1.9C, which will not be beaten this year
- 2013 could be colder than the more recent cold March of 1987 with a mean temperature of 3.3C
- Forecasters say the cold could hang on until the bitter end of March
In other developments:
- About 800 homes in remote areas in Northern Ireland are still without electricity. More than 140,000 properties have been affected by the severe weather in total
- Northern Ireland electricity are using two helicopters to drop emergency crews, engineers and materials into the affected areas
- Farmers in Northern Ireland fear thousands of animals may have died
- More than a dozen schools have closed in Northern Ireland
- About 300 properties in Wigtownshire, Dumfries and Galloway, are waiting to be reconnected
- All schools on Arran are closed, as are all Argyll and Bute primaries south of Tarbert and more than a dozen schools in Dumfries and Galloway
- A number of roads in the Highlands, Tayside, Grampian and Dumfries and Galloway remain closed.
- Hundreds of people in Cumbria are also still without power and several main roads remain closed
- A family in Wales who were trapped in a hillside farm tell rescuers they were forced to burn furniture to keep warm
- Some rail routes have been affected by the weather. There are delays of up to 80 minutes between Barrow-in-Furness and Carlisle, and trains are running at 5mph on one of the lines between Wimbledon and London Waterloo.
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In Derbyshire's Peak District, Laura Boddy said she had been cut off for the last two days.
"We certainly started running out of milk earlier on, and bread, but we managed to get out to a farm by walking over and through the drifts," she said.
"In fact at times we had to walk on top of walls because that was the only clear space we could get to. It's still very snowy, thankfully the wind has now died down a bit but there have been drifts that are seven or eight feet high."
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