11 January 2005 is one of those days that everybody who was in the Outer  Hebrides at the time will not forget. A deep Atlantic depression moved  past our islands, bringing with it winds of force 12 on the Beaufort  scale, with gusts in excess of 130 mph. At the time, I was staying in  Kershader, 12 miles south of Stornoway as the crow flies - more like 22  miles by road. At 6.22pm, the power went off, not to go back on again  for 48 hours. The wind was already howling around the building. Blue  flashing lights penetrated the darkness from across Loch Erisort -  police cars were stopping traffic on the Stornoway to Tarbert road after  a lorry driver reported a sheep flying past his windscreen. The driver  of the South Lochs bus that night was mightily relieved to make it home  in one piece, he told me later. Trees were downed, roofs taken off,  vehicles crushed under trees - and hundreds of them toppled in the  Castle Grounds in Stornoway. High tides lapped at the doors of people on  Cromwell Street and Bayhead in the town. Boats were torn off their  moorings and smashed into the ferry terminal. Slates became like  missiles, and pedestrians blown off their feet. Some who sought refuge  were denied entry; others were taken inside.
The next morning dawned breezy and bright. Everybody heaved a sigh of  relief. That was a bad one, but it's only damage. By 9.20 am however,  reports start to emerge from the Southern Isles. Five people are missing  in South Uist, after they fled their home the previous evening at  around 7pm. Rising tides had started to approach their home, and pebbles  were hurled against walls and windows. They enter two cars and drive  from their home at Eochdar towards the causeway, linking South Uist and  Benbecula. A fatal decision. That road parallels the stretch of sea that  separates the two islands. The southeasterly storm, combined with a  springtide from the northwest pushed the waters of Loch Bi up; but on  account of the floodtide they could not drain into the sea. The loch  flooded a small causeway, sweeping the cars into the water. By morning,  the five missing people are found dead. They include a mother and father  with two young children and a grandfather. 
This is a repost from an entry I made on 11 January 2010. 
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