Staying safe when driving in winter weather – snow and ice

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The recent cold snap in the UK, with snow and ice, has created hazardous driving conditions. During such times, there are more accidents and incidents on the roads, impacting businesses like vehicle recovery services who need to be out at all times to help those in danger.

Adapting the way we drive can help to reduce the likelihood of incidents and accidents when driving in winter weather.

To help with this, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (ROSPA) provides guidance for all drivers tackling such conditions. These apply to individual drivers and businesses with fleets of vehicles alike, including tips on servicing vehicles, journey preparation, and driving in winter conditions including snow and ice.

Prepare your vehicle

It’s a good idea to have your vehicle fully serviced before winter starts and have the anti-freeze tested. If you can’t have it serviced, then do your own checks. In particular, check:

  • Lights are clean and working
  • Battery is fully charged
  • Windscreen, wiper blades and other windows are clean and the washer bottle filled with screen wash
  • Tyre condition, tread depth and pressure (of all the tyres, including the spare)
  • Brakes are working well and;
  • Fluids are kept topped up, especially windscreen wash (to the correct concentration to prevent it freezing), anti-freeze and oil.

It’s also a good idea to stock up on de-icer, windscreen wash, oil and anti-freeze at the start of winter.

Emergency kit

When extreme weather is possible, keep an emergency kit in your car, especially if you’re going on a long journey. If this seems unnecessary, take a moment to imagine yourself stranded in your car overnight, due to a snowstorm or floods. How would you stay warm? What would you eat and drink?

If you must drive in these conditions, we recommend that you carry:

  • Tow rope
  • A shovel
  • Wellington boots
  • A hazard warning triangle
  • De-icing equipment
  • First aid kit (in good order)
  • A working torch
  • A car blanket
  • Warm clothes
  • Emergency rations (including hot drink in a flask)
  • Mobile phone (fully charged).

Prepare your journey

Listen to local or national weather broadcasts and travel bulletins – especially for the areas you will be driving through. As conditions can change rapidly, check them regularly and be prepared to change your plans if conditions on your route worsen.

If conditions are very bad, and the emergency services are recommending that people don’t travel, then avoid making your journey unless it is absolutely necessary. Can you postpone your trip? Can you travel by other means, or avoid the need for the journey completely by using the phone, video call or email?

Of course, what’s ‘essential’ to one person may not be to another; we each have to make our own decisions according to our circumstances. But try to be realistic about which journeys are essential and which ones could be postponed. If you decide you really must travel:

  • Let someone know where you are going and what time you hope to arrive, so that they can raise the alarm if you get into difficulties
  • Plan alternative routes in case your main choice(s) becomes impassable
  • Keep your fuel tank near to full to ensure that you do not run out
  • Make sure you have a fully charged mobile phone, so you can call for help or alert someone if you’re delayed
  • If you don’t have an emergency kit in your vehicle, at least take extra warm clothes, boots and a torch. Consider keeping a couple of long-life energy bars in the glove box
  • Clear your windows and mirrors completely of snow and ice before you set off (make sure the heater is blowing warm air before setting off – it will keep your windscreen clear).

Prepare Yourself

Most of us have very little experience of driving in extreme conditions, such as snow, so take some time to consider how it affects your driving. Don’t just drive as normal.

Particularly for those who drive for a living, undertaking a driver assessment or training can be beneficial. Where employers offer this service, take advantage of it. This is an area where Kingfisher Risk Solutions – our risk management consultancy – can help.

A lot of us will catch colds or other illnesses during the winter. If you’re feeling so ill that your driving might be affected, don’t take the chance of driving.

Driving in snow or ice

If you find yourself driving in snow or on icy or snow-covered roads, adapt your driving to these conditions:

  • Reduce your speed. The chances of skidding are much greater and your stopping distance will increase massively
  • Only travel at a speed at which you can stop within the distance you can see to be clear.
    Speed limits are the maximum in ideal conditions; in difficult conditions, they can often be too fast
  • Avoid harsh braking and acceleration, or sharp steering
  • Always reduce your speed smoothly and in plenty of time on slippery surfaces
  • Slow down in plenty of time before bends and corners
  • Braking on an icy or snow-covered bend is extremely dangerous. The centrifugal force will continue to pull you outwards and the wheels will not grip very well. This could cause your vehicle to spin
  • To slow down on ice and snow, lift the gas early to allow the speed to drop sufficiently to select a lower gear. If you need to use the brakes, use very gentle pressure depressing the clutch early to avoid stalling the engine
  • Increase the gap between you and the vehicle in front. You may need up to ten times the normal distance for braking
  • Keep your vehicle well-ventilated. The car heater turned up full can quickly make you drowsy
  • In snow, stop frequently to clean the windows, wheel arches, lights and number plates
  • Visibility will probably be reduced, so use dipped headlights
  • During wintry weather, road surfaces are often wet and/or covered in frost and ice or snow. But this does not occur uniformly. A road will often have isolated patches of frost or ice after most of the road has thawed – this commonly occurs under bridges.

If you get stuck in snow:

If you get stuck in snow, revving your engine to try to power out of the rut will just make the rut worse. Instead, move your vehicle slowly backwards and forwards out of the rut using the highest gear you can.

If this doesn’t work, you may have to ask a friendly passerby for a push or get your shovel out.

If you get caught in a snow drift:

  • Don’t leave your vehicle
  • Call your breakdown service or the emergency services and let help come to you
  • Don’t run the engine to keep warm.

Kingfisher Risk Solutions can help

While it helps to follow general guidance, our risk management consultancy, Kingfisher Risk Solutions, can provide further advice and support for individuals and businesses when tackling winter weather driving. We can help you stay safe whatever the weather. This can include easy-to-implement driver training for employees, for example.

Give us a call on 0330 174 4685 or go to our Risk Solutions page to find out more on all our services and request further information.

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