Party's over for the inn crowd trapped by snow
Some 30 revellers had gathered to welcome 2010 at North Yorkshire's Tan Hill Inn, England's highest pub, at a get together organised by Leeds University Cross Country Club.
They were later joined for what one party goer called "the ultimate lock-in" by 17 people rescued from the nearby A66 which was closed between Bowes and Brough as snow blanketed the Pennines.
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Hide AdThe guests ended up stranded for three days but refused to let the heavy snow – 7ft deep in places – dampen the party spirit.
Guest Paul Manson, from Alnwick, Northumberland, arrived on Wednesday night with his fiance.
He said: "It was not too bad. The weather was cold and windy. But everyone was chipping in. Everyone was peeling potatoes, washing up, moving cars and keeping the generators going.
"I was picked to do the quiz and everyone was doing personal entertainment. A number of people had to get back to work on Monday including someone starting a new job. But I am not that desperate."
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Hide AdPub disc jockey Peter Richardson said: "We've kept our spirits up. It's actually been quite heart-warming."
The Tan Hill Inn stands 1,700ft (520m) above sea level in the Yorkshire Dales and Mr Richardson said the isolation had bred a strong feeling of camaraderie. Pub staff said there had been heavy snowfalls all through the night following New Year's Eve. It was 2ft deep by the pub, but up to 7ft in drifts, making the roads impassable.
Guests began heading for home yesterday after road-gritting crews and snow ploughs broke through.
Elsewhere in the region there was more heavy snow, including the Halifax and Huddersfield areas.
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Hide AdSnow and ice caused traffic tailbacks on the M62 between Rishworth Moor and Ainley Top.
The cold snap is forecast to last throughout the first two weeks of January, with Yorkshire, North-East England and parts of Scotland being worst affected. Temperatures could fall to -15C.