
LONDON (Reuters) - Thick fog grounded hundreds of flights at airports serving Britain's capital on Thursday, stranding thousands of travelers at one of the peak travel periods of the year.
The flight chaos looked set to continue on Friday after British Airways said all domestic flights at London's Heathrow airport and some European services had been canceled and more planes might be grounded.
The airline said severe fog was expected to last for another 48 hours and forecasters at Britain's Met Office warned there was a risk of fog hanging over the southeast of England during the Christmas period, continuing to next week.
About 500 people spent the night at Heathrow after British Airways canceled all domestic and some European flights to and from the airport because of poor visibility.
"I am too tired to be angry," said student Rob Evans, 23, who spent last night on the floor after arriving from Calgary to find his connecting flight to Hamburg was canceled.
"It felt like the worst sleepover ever."
Heathrow, the world's busiest international airport, was shrouded in fog for a second day, prompting air traffic controllers to impose tight restrictions on flights.
Passengers queued in the cold outside terminal buildings to find out if their flight would leave.
"It looks like I will be spending Christmas in London," said student Gianluca Longhi, 24, after his flight to Milan was canceled. "I feel I will be stranded here indefinitely."
Airport operator BAA, which runs Heathrow and six other airports in Britain, warned of overcrowding and delays for people visiting families for Christmas or leaving on holiday.
Chistmas has been canceled," said David Page, 43, a health worker from northern England after his flight to the Canary Islands was scrapped. "I'll be spending a quiet Christmas in Derbyshire rather than on a beach in Gran Canaria."
Flights were canceled at other British airports, including 30 in Scotland, as the disruption spread.
Earlier this year, hundreds of flights were canceled at Heathrow after strict security measures were enforced after police said they had foiled a plot to blow up airliners.
Car hire firms at Heathrow's Terminal One said they were running out of cars as people looked for other ways to travel.
"All of our 350 cars were snapped up this morning," a Hertz spokesman said. Alamo said it had no cars left there.
Hotels at Heathrow said bookings were up by nearly a third.