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Dublin: 12 °C Wednesday 23 May, 2012

Brace yourself… Dublin could face eight inches of snow tonight

Image: TheJournal.ie

Updated at 17:45

MOST OF THE COUNTRY escaped without fresh snowfall last night, but those on the east coast should prepare for another torrential blizzard tonight.

Met Éireann’s latest weather advisory has warned that County Wicklow could face between six and ten inches of snow tonight, as temperatures begin to plummet once more.

Drivers in the county have been warned to avoid travelling on higher ground. AA Roadwatch says the Sally Gap and Wicklow Gap are impassable.

People in counties Dublin and Louth, meanwhile, have been told to expect between four and eight inches of snow, while inland Leinster should prepare to experience anywhere from two to four inches of new snowfall.

Met Éireann adds that the latest stretch of cold weather will continue across Ireland throughout the week, with overnight temperatures hitting -10′C (or, worryingly, lower).

The Road Safety Authority is urging drivers to consider if the journey they are about to undertake is absolutely necessary and warns that severe weather conditions can catch road users off guard.

It says that if the weather is too bad, people should not attend test centres for their driving test, but should contact 1890 40 60 40 or fill in the online test cancellation form.

AA Ireland said earlier this afternoon that its AA Rescue service received a breakdown call every 30 second during this morning’s rush hour. The highest volume of calls were made in Leinster.

AA’s Conor Faughnan reminds motorists to reduce their speed and double their braking distance during the severe weather, and recommended drivers carry a fully-charged mobile phone with them in case they need to call for assistance.

The Irish Examiner reports that about 2,400 Eircom customers are without telephone and broadband services because of the weather, with Dublin, Wicklow and Louth worst affected as a result of lightning and storm damage.

Eircom is warning of further faults if the weather continues to deteriorate.

If you have hatches, batten them down. In the meantime, updates on the country’s transport network can be found at the Department of Transport website, or at AA Roadwatch’s Twitter page.

Additional reporting by Susan Ryan

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Comments (4 Comments)

  • Stephen Kelly 29/11/10 #
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    Am curious as to why you’ve translated the Met Eireann warning from metric to imperial…

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    • Gavan Reilly 29/11/10 #
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      The general idea was that an average reader measures overnight snowfall themselves in inches. You’d much more regularly hear someone say, “There just have been three inches of snow overnight” rather than saying, “There just have been between 70 and 80 millimetres”.

  • Stephen Kelly 29/11/10 #
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    Fair enough. We definitely have a strange relationship with the metric system as a nation. I liked when road signs displayed distances in mph and distances in kmph. Summed it up nicely. (And the km displays on most cars’ speedometers here are so small they’re virtually invisible anyway)

    Reply
  • Stewart Curry 30/11/10 #
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    I would have preferred if the headline said “Dubliners warned to brace themselves for up to eight inches tonight”

    Reply

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