Thousands of properties left with out energy as disruption attributable to Storm Dave continues
Thousands of homes in Britain have been left without power and disruption is continuing in the wake of Storm Dave.
Some properties in Scotland and thousands in the North East of England have been left without power following high winds overnight.
However, three yellow warnings of wind across parts of northern England, Scotland and Wales were lifted a few hours early on Easter Sunday after the storm pulled away.
Some Caledonian MacBrayne ferry services on Scotland’s west coast were disrupted by the weather, and some motorists faced disruption due to fallen trees blocking routes.
It is understood Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks (SSEN) fault response teams are out on the network working to reconnect the small number of customers affected who are mainly in Skye, Caithness and coastal parts of Aberdeenshire.
Northern Power Grid said this morning it was ‘working to restore power as quickly as possible’ after households across Northumberland, County Durham, Tyneside and Wearside woke up to no power.
‘We’re supporting customers affected by Storm Dave,’ the energy firm said in a post on X.
Durham Cricket Club had to temporarily close its ground to spectators today when it was left looking like a ‘war scene’.
Severe sleet and snow hit Central Scotland on Easter Sunday in the wake of Storm Dave — April 5, 2026
There was no play on the third morning of the Rothesay County Championship Division Two curtain-raiser against Kent after one of the covers was blown into the stands, exposing the pitch to heavy overnight rain.
Durham announced at 1pm it was now safe to enter with a pitch inspection to take place at 3.40pm.
Storm Dave swept in on Saturday and an amber wind warning covering parts of northern England, north-west Wales and southern Scotland was in place until 3am on Sunday.
The strongest gust overnight was 93mph at Capel Curig in North Wales, while gusts of 75mph were recorded at Emley Moor in West Yorkshire and St Bees Head in Cumbria, and one of 73mph was recorded at Buchan in Aberdeenshire, the Met Office said.
Three yellow warnings across parts of northern England, Scotland and Wales had been due to remain in place until midday on Easter Sunday but were lifted by around 7.30am as the weather improved.
In Manchester, grandfather John Glover, 57, told how a massive tree narrowly missed crashing into his sleeping grandson’s bedroom.
The tree landed on his 36-year-old daughter Stephanie’s car outside the house that she and her two children, aged eight and three, were inside.
Mr Glover, who lives opposite, said the impact sounded like a ‘massive crash’. He said the road has been left without internet, with two cars and fencing left damaged by the fallen tree.
‘If it had fallen 10ft the other way it would’ve gone through my grandson’s bedroom where he was asleep,’ he said.
‘It’s taken everything out. It took two cars out, all the fencing up. It’s blocked all the road and there’s no internet.
‘We were all out this morning at 6am. We couldn’t sleep because we knew what it could’ve done to the family home.’
A huge tree felled by the high winds of Storm Dave blocks the forecourt of a Newcastle Petrol station — April 5, 2026
A car damaged by a fallen tree in Monkseaton, North Tyneside this morning — April 5, 2026
Marco Petagna, a Met Office spokesman, said: ‘The winds eased down a bit more quickly than forecast across Scotland, northern England and Wales.
‘Storm Dave is pulling away and the warnings are easing more quickly than forecast so the yellow warnings were no longer warranted.’
Before the severe amber weather warning was lifted, the Met Office had forecast ‘severe gales’ across central and northern areas of the country overnight into Sunday.
There was snow in Skye and other parts of western Scotland including Inverclyde while Glasgow saw snow late in the morning on Easter Sunday and there were snow flurries elsewhere in central Scotland.
Network Rail Scotland put speed restrictions in place on some routes, with the last of these lifting at around 8am on Sunday.
The Humber Bridge linking East Yorkshire with north Lincolnshire reopened after being closed in both directions to high-sided and vulnerable vehicles early on Sunday because of strong winds, National Highways said.
Network Rail Manchester announced rail replacement bus services would run between Manchester Piccadilly and Chester because of overnight conditions.
The Met Office’s forecast for Easter Sunday said: ‘Storm Dave will clear north east on Sunday morning, leaving sunshine and widespread showers across the UK.
‘Northern areas will see the heaviest blustery showers and feel cold, while temperatures elsewhere stay closer to average for early April.’
As of 1pm on Sunday there was one flood warning in place in Scotland and one flood warning and 17 flood alerts in England.
