Crime & Safety
How to track Storm Dave as heavy snow and wind to hit UK
Scotland and parts of northern England are expected to be affected by Storm Dave in the coming hours.
Disruption could be seen on roads, as well as on rail, air and ferry services, so whether you’ve got travel plans or are interested in seeing where the storm is, here’s how you can track it.
⚠️⚠️ Amber weather warning issued ⚠️⚠️#StormDave brings strong winds across northern England, southern Scotland and northwest Wales
Saturday 19:00 – Sunday 03:00
Latest info 👉 https://t.co/QwDLMfRBfs
Stay #WeatherAware ⚠️ pic.twitter.com/SFNZe404xo
— Met Office (@metoffice) April 4, 2026
How to track Storm Dave
Brits can track Storm Dave via the Met Office website today through to tomorrow.
The Met Office’s tracker allows you to see the movement of Storm Dave and the impact of the storm.
You can see the rainfall, wind gusts, cloud cover and temperature as the storm moves across the UK.
#StormDave has been named and is forecast to bring damaging winds across northern parts of the UK, with some disruptive snow possible in northwest Scotland later on Saturday and into Easter Day #WeatherAware pic.twitter.com/J0NZYD2SPC
— Met Office (@metoffice) April 2, 2026
Where is Storm Dave expected in the UK?
Up to 30 centimetres of snow could fall, with the Met Office issuing a yellow severe weather warning in Scotland for heavy snow and blizzards, causing some travel and power disruption.
Meanwhile, an amber weather warning for wind has been issued for parts of northern England, Scotland and Wales tonight.
The Met Office has upgraded a severe yellow weather warning for wind to amber, meaning flying debris could lead to “injuries or danger to life”.
What different Met Office weather warnings mean
The amber warning covers parts of Lancashire, North Yorkshire, Northumberland, North Wales and Scotland, and comes into effect at 7pm this evening and is due to remain in place until 3am on Sunday.
When is Storm Dave expected to hit the UK?
The warnings are in place this evening and tomorrow morning, with the storm expected to hit during this period.
Storm Dave will hit hardest on Saturday evening, before beginning to weaken on Sunday as it moves into the North Sea.
Recommended reading:
The Met Office has issued multiple warnings for wind covering the whole of mainland Scotland, Northern Ireland, parts of northern England and North Wales from Saturday evening into Sunday.
Greg Dewhurst, a Met Office meteorologist, said: “There is cold air across Scotland at the moment and, as the rain pushes across this afternoon, it is going to turn to snow.
“We’ll see heavy snow forming across parts of the Highlands as we go through the rest of the afternoon into the evening time and early hours, as much as 20 to 30 centimetres could fall over the higher ground, and five to 10 centimetres over lower ground.”
Will you be tracking Storm Dave? Let us know in the comments.
Crime & Safety
Aldi to reconsider packaging after customer complaint
The supermarket giant said they were “treating seriously” Emma Ward’s complaint over them selling pens labelled for boys or girls despite them appearing to be the same product.
The 48-year-old, who has worked with children for 30 years, says it “hit a nerve” when she spotted the gendered pens in the middle aisle of her local Aldi store.
The kids club worker says the packs of multicoloured blow pens appeared to be the exact same product in the same packaging, but one was labelled with “boys” and the other “girls”.
Aldi are reconsidering the packaging of kids’ pens – after a customer complained that they were ‘gendered for no reason’. (Image: Kennedy News & Media)
Emma says that separating the product into genders “goes against everything” she tries to teach children in her job.
Emma believes labelling the stationary could be potentially “damaging” for children, who she tries to encourage to “play with and do anything that they wish without prejudice”.
Aldi claimed they take customer feedback ‘very seriously’ and said they will take Emma’s complaint about the gendered pens ‘into account when planning future ranges and product specifications’.
Emma, from Bourne, said: “We spend our life telling the children that they can do whatever they want to do and play with whatever they want to.
“Gendering something as simple as pens just hit a nerve – it goes against everything that I’ve told the children.
“Why do it? It’s just silly really that they’re stereotyping pens to be for one gender or the other.
“It’s the exact same product, the exact same packaging and everything.
“It’s about opening possibilities for children and not closing doors on them and saying look, you can’t use this product because it’s for boys or girls.
“I think it really can be damaging, obviously when children see them, they’ll think boys and girls are different.”
Emma believes that Aldi should pull the product from their shelves – and it has made her reconsider shopping with them in the future.
An Aldi spokesperson said: “We take customer feedback very seriously and will take this into account when planning future ranges and product specifications.”
Crime & Safety
Center Parcs ditches family service at all UK holiday parks
With lodge and apartment accommodation, a big indoor subtropical-style pool and a wide range of paid activities, from cycling and climbing to watersports and spa treatments.
But now, things are set to change.
The company previously offered a crèche service for kids between three months and three years, for up to three hours.
The price was around £30 a session.
However, it has confirmed that this will no longer be offered at any of its five UK resorts by the end of next month.
Customers with upcoming bookings have discovered they can no longer book their kids in if their holiday is after the end of May, and the option has been removed across all of Center Parcs’ UK sites.
For many, it opened up the opportunity for parents to enjoy quality time together, or for grandparents to be let off the childcare hook.
A spokesperson for Center Parcs told Metro: “We’re always looking to review and evolve the guest experience. We have made the decision to remove the crèche activity from our breaks, to reflect guest feedback and limited demand for this particular activity.
“Crèche sessions are one of more than 20 activities available within our Activity Den and our other activities will continue to run as normal.”
What is a crèche service?
A crèche service is short‑term childcare where young children are looked after while their parents or carers do something else nearby (for example, working, studying, using a gym, attending an event or shopping).
It’s usually:
- Occasional and short‑duration – children are typically there for a couple of hours rather than full days, and it’s not necessarily the same children every day.
- Linked to a venue or activity – often attached to leisure centres, colleges, workplaces, conferences, weddings or community events so adults can take part while children are safely supervised.
- Supervised play, not full nursery education – staff provide a safe space, toys and activities, and meet basic care needs (nappies, drinks, comforting), but it’s generally more about short‑term care than structured early‑years education.
Depending on how long children stay, their ages, and whether parents remain on site, crèche services may need to be registered and inspected under local childcare regulations (for example by Ofsted or equivalent bodies).
Crime & Safety
Cotswolds – three badgers found dead as police investigate
Officers from Gloucestershire Constabulary’s rural crime team are appealing for information after several badgers were shot and killed near Tewkesbury.
Police were contacted on Saturday, March 21 with a report that three dead badgers had been found on the public footpath at Buckland Wood in Broadway.
The exact location where the badgers were found is the footpath that runs along the north side of Buckland Wood and it is believed they had been shot just days earlier.
READ MORE: Car wash at football club ground employed illegal workers
The Badger Trust and Gloucestershire Badger Group also contacted police to report that a fourth badger was found dead nearby and officers believe the animal was also shot.
PC Parker from the rural crime team said: “Badgers are protected by law and it is a criminal offence to intentionally capture, kill or injure a badger.
“This incident has understandably caused upset for the wildlife community and we want to do all we can to identify those responsible.”
Craig Fellowes, wildlife crime manager and trainer for the Badger Trust added: “Badgers in the UK continue to face illegal persecution, despite clear laws prohibiting their shooting unless licensed.
“Badgers are regarded by some as vermin, they are not. They are protected by law; unlawful shooting may result in six months’ imprisonment or an unlimited fine under the Protection of Badgers Act.
“The recent incident in Gloucestershire shows the ongoing challenges for badgers. Anyone with information should contact the police, Badger Trust, or local groups, or report anonymously to Crimestoppers.”
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