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CalMac said storm damage caused all services on its Kennacraig, Port Askaig and Port Ellen route and Oban, Colonsay, Port Askaig and Kennacraig route to be cancelled on Saturday.
Storm Eowyn, with winds reaching 100 mph, wreaked havoc across parts of the UK and Ireland, leaving destruction in its wake. On Friday morning (January 24), a member of the Weather & Radar team ...
Winds of almost 80mph (128km/h) battered Yorkshire on Friday, as Storm Éowyn downed trees and brought travel disruption to the region. In Poppleton, near York, a 70ft (21m) tree was blown onto a ...
Waves crash onto the shore in Bantry Bay, on the southwest coast of Ireland, on Jan. 24, 2025, as storm Eowyn brings winds over 100 mph to the U.K. and Ireland.
Thousands of Scots remain without power, days on from the disruption and damage brought by Storm Eowyn. Scottish Power Energy Networks, which provides central and southern Scotland, said 2,964 ...
Storm Éowyn - pronounced AY-oh-win - has been caused by powerful jet stream winds pushing low pressure towards the UK and Ireland over the Atlantic Ocean - after a recent cold spell over North ...
On 21 January 2025, the UK Met Office and associated organisations in Europe used the name "Éowyn" for the fifth storm of the 2024–2025 season. Éowyn is a fictional character in J. R. R. Tolkien's novel The Lord of the Rings and the name was taken from a list based on suggestions by the public.
The Met Office said Éowyn was "probably" the strongest storm to hit the UK in at least 10 years. Glasgow and Scotland's other city centres were deserted as the red weather warning came into ...