Hamilton Journal News

Snowstorm leaves 61 people stranded in remote U.K. pub

- Alyssa Lukpat

Up on a hill in Yorkshire, England, a crowd filled a pub on Friday to listen to an Oasis tribute band. Inside the pub, the Tan Hill Inn, the beers were cold, the fires were warming and the musicians were electric.

But outside, the winds were howling and the snow was swirling. The pubgoers knew the forecast was dire, but not so much that piles of snow as high as 3 feet would block the pub’s exits, said Nicola Townsend, the inn’s general manager.

After the tribute band, Noasis, finished its set, local authoritie­s said it was not safe to drive home.

So the patrons, the band members and seven inn employees stayed the night. And then another.

And then another. Sixty-one people woke up Monday after their third night at the pub in the Yorkshire Dales, 270 miles north of London. The pub sits 1,732 feet above sea level and is used to being cut off by bad weather.

Though the roads were not safe to travel, a group of off-roaders took a couple of parents home to their young children, Townsend said. A local mountain rescue group also helped evacuate a man who needed medical treatment for an “ongoing condition.”

That has left 61 people, mostly strangers, stranded at the pub. To pass the time, they took pub quizzes, watched movies like “Grease” and “Mamma Mia!” and sang karaoke, Townsend said.

“Lots of Oasis at the moment,” she said, adding that the pubgoers have started calling the tribute band “Snowasis.”

Band members had to cancel a performanc­e Saturday

night because they were snowed in. “We have no way of making it to our gig,” the band said on Facebook.

Those at the pub have enjoyed a few beers but no one is “getting loud and drunk,” Townsend said, because they want to be “respectful of each other.”

Some of those who were stranded already had rooms at the inn, while others had parked their motor homes outside. The rest crammed into the lounge, where they slept on sofas or on the floor. Employees supplied them with mattresses, blankets and pillows and kept the fireplaces roaring.

They hoped to leave on Monday afternoon, but the problem, Townsend said, is that a downed power line has blocked the road leading out of the remote pub.

Outside the pub, the United Kingdom has been reeling from the storm, which has been blamed for the deaths of at least three people who died in separate episodes Friday.

A man died in Cumbria, England, after a tree hit him, police there said, while the other two — a man in Northern Ireland and a man in

Aberdeensh­ire, Scotland — were struck by falling trees in their cars, authoritie­s said.

The storm has paralyzed swaths of Britain’s power grid and left thousands without power. The Met Office, Britain’s national weather service, has issued several warnings since Friday about high winds and snow from the storm, which it has named Storm Arwen.

The weather has shown no signs of letting up for the pub patrons. A video on social media showed snow blanketing the doorway and the cars parked outside, though emergency workers looked to be clearing a path out of the pub.

The episode has drawn attention from around the world, and the inn has kept people updated on Facebook. In a post on Sunday night, it jokingly called the pubgoers “inmates” and said that “some are at breaking point.”

But Townsend said that, for the most part, “everybody seems to be really quite happy.”

“The best way I can describe it is it’s like being at a party with all your friends,” she said.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A provided image shows people stranded by the snowfall at the Tan Hill In in the Yorkshire Dales of England. A crowd had gathered on Friday night to listen to a band. On Sunday night, they were still stuck.
THE NEW YORK TIMES A provided image shows people stranded by the snowfall at the Tan Hill In in the Yorkshire Dales of England. A crowd had gathered on Friday night to listen to a band. On Sunday night, they were still stuck.

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