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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Jon Hebditch

Massive snow fall in Scotland leaves 4x4 covered to roof with snow- and there's more to come

Massive snow fall across Scotland left a four-by-four covered up to its roof in the white stuff.

The country has been battered by bad weather with more set to come this week.

A stunning picture from the Cawdor estate near Nairn in the Highlands shows the snow up to roof level of the Toyota Hilux.

Only the top of the roof of the Hilux is visible (Cawdor Estate)

The vehicles stand nearly six foot off the ground.

The pictures, posted on Facebook, were simply captioned: 'When the snow is higher than your Hilux!'

Scots are braced for more wintery conditions in the week ahead.

The Met Office has issued an amber weather warning from Tuesday until Sunday as six days of snow and ice are expected across the country.

The snow fell hard by Nairn (Cawdor Estate)

Up to 20 inches of snow is expected to dump on the country from Friday until 6pm on Saturday amid a week-long spell of weather chaos.

Strathclyde, Grampian, Central, Tayside and Fife and Highlands & Eilean Siar will will see the worst of the conditions due to persistent and heavy snow.

Experts say between 10cm and 15 inches of snow could land in areas of high ground in The Highlands and Western Isles, South-west Scotland, and Lothian Borders.

The Met Office said: "By Friday, snow is expected to become more widespread, persistent and heavy, and will settle at increasingly low levels. The heaviest snowfall should clear later on Saturday.

"Fresh snowfall totals of 10-15 cm is possible at low-levels, with 20-30 cm accumulating above about 150 m. Some high ground exposed to strong easterly winds could see as much as 50 cm building up by Saturday evening.

"However some places close to the east coast may see only small amounts of snow settling.

"The strong easterly winds will likely lead to drifting snow, temporary blizzard conditions, and ice forming on exposed power lines and phone masts."

NHS Grampian said locals should 'walk like a penguin' when out on icy roads to stop from falling.

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