Two yellow weather warnings, external remain in place in Scotland:
-
An ice and snow warning over most of the mainland from 18:00 on Saturday until 10:00 on Sunday.
-
A wind warning for the far north-west coast and Western Isles from 18:00 on Saturday until 10:00 on Sunday.
Speaking on the BBC’s Good Morning Scotland programme, Jim Dale, senior meteorologist at British Weather Services, said it was one of the most significant storms of his 40 year career.
“People will recognise this in terms of the damage that has been done. One thankful thing, and I’ll try to be positive about storms, is that there is only sadly one death in the Republic of Ireland,” he said.
“But you can imagine if there had been no warnings, if people hadn’t heeded those warnings – red and amber as they were – then the casualty list would have been far, far higher.
“The storm was well forecasted so it wasn’t like it came out of the blue like some storms do so I think people handled it reasonably well,” he said.
Mr Dale said the storm is now heading towards Norway, leaving behind wintry conditions over much of Scotland.
“There is snow across much of the high ground and even some of the lower ground.
“So it’s a case of picking up the pieces literally today and some of those without electric may be taking a bit more time to get that one back but that’s the sort of normality. There is a lot of work to be done after the storm, not just while it’s going on,” he said.