Forecasters say two people have died and thousands have been left without power as strong winds continue to blow across Britain on Sunday.
The Meteorological Department has issued four yellow weather warnings for the air. South-east Scotland as well as most of England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Gusts of 35-45 mph are expected more widely inland, and up to 70 mph in coastal areas, meaning some travel disruption and further power outages are possible.
The Met Office issued a rare red weather warning for winds on Saturday as Storm Dara swept across Britain with gusts of up to 93mph.
Two victims of Saturday’s storm died in separate incidents when trees fell on their cars in Lancashire and the West Midlands.
The Energy Networks Association said Saturday evening that 259,000 customers were still without power.
It added that engineers would work overnight to restore power through the night and into Sunday.
Northern Ireland’s Electricity Networks said more than 20,000 properties were without power on Saturday evening and warned it could take days to fully restore supplies. At the peak of the storm, more than 48,000 premises were affected.
Sixty-four flood warnings – meaning flooding is expected – and 147 flood alerts for parts of England after heavy rain. According to the Environment Agency.
In Wales, which is still recovering from last month’s flooding from Storm Britt, Natural Resources Wales says 25 flood warnings and 49 alerts are in effect.. Scottish Environment Protection Agency Two flood warnings are in place..
Disruption to train travel is also expected to continue, with National Rail warning passengers to check their journeys before travelling.
It said there was likely to be “significant disruption with heavy rain and wind” to services in south-west Scotland, north and south-west England and Wales.
Operators including Chiltern Railway, Great Western Railway, Northern, LNER and Transport for Wales are currently experiencing delays and cancellations.
Belfast International Airport said flights were fully scheduled for Sunday but could be delayed.
Storm Darragh was the fourth named storm of the season after Burt and Conall last month.