<p>Trains were cancelled, some schools were shut and drivers were stuck for hours on a major highway as a blast of snow and wind hit Britain on Friday for the second time in a week.</p>.<p>The weather system, named Storm Larissa by meteorologists, brought gales and blizzards to much of the country.</p>.<p>Alex Burkill, a meteorologist with the Met Office weather agency, said the worst-hit area was northern England and north Wales, where 50 mph (80 kph) wind gusts were accompanied by up to a foot (30 centimetres) of snow.</p>.<p>Some drivers spent more than seven hours in their cars after traffic ground to a halt on the M62 highway that cuts across northern England.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/flights-suspended-as-arctic-air-snow-and-sleet-blast-uk-1198301.html" target="_blank">Flights suspended as Arctic air, snow and sleet blast UK</a></strong></p>.<p>“I saw lots of abandoned sports cars, one Jaguar left on the road with a shovel stuck in the ground next to it and no driver,” said video journalist Richard McCarthy.</p>.<p>“There were lots of lorries losing momentum and getting stuck.”</p>.<p>Many roads on high ground in central England's Peak District were impassable, and the train line linking the cities of Manchester and Sheffield was closed by fallen trees.</p>.<p>Freezing Arctic air has sent temperatures plunging this week to as low as minus 16 degrees Celsius (3 Fahrenheit) in the Scottish Highlands.</p>.<p>The Met Office said it isn't unusual for the country to experience a cold snap in the spring, when conditions are often highly variable.</p>.<p>Statistically, the UK is marginally more likely to get snow in March than it is in December, the office said.</p>
<p>Trains were cancelled, some schools were shut and drivers were stuck for hours on a major highway as a blast of snow and wind hit Britain on Friday for the second time in a week.</p>.<p>The weather system, named Storm Larissa by meteorologists, brought gales and blizzards to much of the country.</p>.<p>Alex Burkill, a meteorologist with the Met Office weather agency, said the worst-hit area was northern England and north Wales, where 50 mph (80 kph) wind gusts were accompanied by up to a foot (30 centimetres) of snow.</p>.<p>Some drivers spent more than seven hours in their cars after traffic ground to a halt on the M62 highway that cuts across northern England.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/flights-suspended-as-arctic-air-snow-and-sleet-blast-uk-1198301.html" target="_blank">Flights suspended as Arctic air, snow and sleet blast UK</a></strong></p>.<p>“I saw lots of abandoned sports cars, one Jaguar left on the road with a shovel stuck in the ground next to it and no driver,” said video journalist Richard McCarthy.</p>.<p>“There were lots of lorries losing momentum and getting stuck.”</p>.<p>Many roads on high ground in central England's Peak District were impassable, and the train line linking the cities of Manchester and Sheffield was closed by fallen trees.</p>.<p>Freezing Arctic air has sent temperatures plunging this week to as low as minus 16 degrees Celsius (3 Fahrenheit) in the Scottish Highlands.</p>.<p>The Met Office said it isn't unusual for the country to experience a cold snap in the spring, when conditions are often highly variable.</p>.<p>Statistically, the UK is marginally more likely to get snow in March than it is in December, the office said.</p>