Great -Britain woke up today with a morning below zero with temperatures that fell to -4C, an ice warning in place and more snow en route.
The yellow warning this morning with Office issued the yellow warning in ten areas of England, including Yorkshire, Lancashire, Northumberland and Derbyshire.
Predictors said that showers would occasionally fall as ice or hail and even snow over hills, with clear spells between allowing the temperatures close to zero.
Motorists were also warned that icy roads would increase the chance of accidents during the morning handlebar, especially about the Pennines and the Peak District.
The temperatures fell to -4C (25F) this morning in Glasgow, -1c (30F) in Belfast and Cardiff as well as in Staffordshire and Cumbria. London came to 4C (39F).
It said with Office that cold Arctic air would remain in force in the coming days before the return of milder but wetter and windier from the West next week.
It comes after Snow shower fell in different places yesterday, including the southern uplands, Shropshire Hills and the Cotswolds – as well as the Cheltenham Festival.
And that followed at the United Kingdom and enjoyed the hottest days of 2025 so far last weekend, when parts of England on Saturday 19.1 ° C (66.4F) and 19.7 ° C (67.5F) reached on Sundays.

Horses on the snow -covered gallops at the Cheltenham Festival in Gloucestershire yesterday

Rowers left along the river Theems of a club in Marlow, Buckinghamshire, yesterday



Cheltenham enjoyed on Sunday from 18 ° C (64F), but snow yesterday covered the racecourse for what is often called a 'foolish feather' when a period of warm weather is quickly followed by a cold Snap, which sometimes happens in March and April.
Today Frost will free up to leave another cold but sunny day, with any showers probably in central, eastern and distant northern parts where they can become winters over high land.
Further showers and a group of shower levers will sink to the south tonight, with a risk of black and snow over high ground – but clear spells and fragmentary fog further south and west.
On Friday, showery rain will see rain to the south to leave another sunny day, albeit with showers, which could again be winters on the hills in the north.
The circumstances will generally be dryer during the weekend with lots of sunshine on Saturday, before Sunday gets a little more cloud and then brings some showers on Monday.





Meteorologist Tom Morgan Van with Office said: 'We currently have an arctic air mass in the United Kingdom, compared to a much milder continental air mass last weekend.
'Last weekend we had very mild southern wind from North Africa and Spain who brought those temperatures into the teenage years.
“On Monday we saw cold fronts sinking south in the United Kingdom, and that introduced colder, Arctic air.”
He also pointed out that snow and frost are 'not unusual' in March, adding it: 'If there is something, last weekend that was quite unusual to see temperatures as high as 18 ° C or 19c.
“With climate change we can expect that higher temperatures will become a little more likely earlier this year and shorter winters with less extreme, less cold conditions.”