Worse things DO happen at sea: How HMS Queen Elizabeth's support ship is riding out the perfect winter storm in roaring winds and driving snow
This dramatic picture captures the moment a Royal Navy battleship was battered by the Beast From the East off the coast of Plymouth.
In scenes reminiscent of disaster movie The Perfect Storm, Royal Fleet Auxiliary Tidespring was rocked from side-to-side as hurricane conditions smashed into it yesterday.
The Tidespring, which provides key support to Britains most powerful warship HMS Queen Elizabeth, powered through the thunderous waves and Baltic temperatures.
This dramatic picture captures the moment a Royal Navy battleship was battered by the Beast From the East off the coast of Plymouth.
The Tidespring, which provides key support to Britains most powerful warship HMS Queen Elizabeth, powered through the thunderous waves and Baltic temperatures.
In scenes reminiscent of disaster movie The Perfect Storm, Royal Fleet Auxiliary Tidespring was rocked from side-to-side as hurricane conditions smashed into it yesterday.
Based on a true story, the film (pictured) told the story of fishermen who were caught up in a torrid storm on Halloween, 1991.
Footprints in the snow can be seen on the ship as it powers through choppy waters on its way home to Devon.
The incredible picture was shared on the Royal Navys Twitter page with the caption: This is what the #TheBeastFromTheEast looks like if youre sailing into the teeth of it. This was taken on the bridge of brand-new tanker RFA Tidespring #snowday.
RFA Tidespring was not accompanying Queen Elizabeth when the photo was taken as she had already docked in Portsmouth. The tanker is one of three vessels that supports the 280 metre warship, which weighs a mamouth 65,000 tonnes.
Meanwhile, Green Berets from Royal Marines 539 Assault Squadron took a chilly-looking selfie while battling the Beast from the East in an Offshore Raiding Craft.
Footprints in the snow can be seen on the ship as it powers through choppy waters on its way home to Devon.
Royal Marines 539 Assault Squadron took a chilly-looking selfie while battling the Beast from the East in an Offshore Raiding Craft.
National Grid has warned it may not have enough gas to meet demand in Britain today, as sub-zero temperatures, icy blasts and blizzard-like conditions left drivers stranded for more than 13 hours and airport passengers stuck.
The Met Office has put England under a red weather warning for snow for the first time ever, amid concerns that up to 1ft 8in could fall in the South West along with very strong winds leading to severe drifting.
Storm Emma, rolling in from the Atlantic, is meeting the Beast from the Easts chilly Russia air - causing further widespread snowfall and bitter temperatures after the mercury fell as low as -16C (3F) last night.
On the first day of meteorological spring today, temperatures will drop to -11C (12F) during the day as Scotland also remains under a red alert - and London Paddington train station was closed due to severe weather.
The National Grid has issued a gas deficit warning as fears mount that supplies could run empty. It issued the warning in response to a series of significant supply losses resulting in a forecast end of day supply deficit. .
Royal Marines' Surveillance and Reconnaissance Squadron and 539 Assault Squadron.
The blizzard conditions are perfect for infiltration and extraction – so the assault squadron took their Offshore and Inshore Raiding Craft out in the snowstorm with the recce squad from 30 Commando IX Group to practise cliff assaults just down the coast from their home in Plymouth.
The blizzard conditions are perfect for infiltration and extraction – so the assault squadron took their Offshore and Inshore Raiding Craft out in the snowstorm with the recce squad from 30 Commando IX Group to practise cliff assaults just down the coast from their home in Plymouth.
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