Western Isles and Shetland

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0:00:08 > 0:00:10The seas around Scotland

0:00:10 > 0:00:12are a paradise of islands -

0:00:12 > 0:00:14700 at least.

0:00:14 > 0:00:18Some rise up in majestic splendour,

0:00:18 > 0:00:22others barely break the surface.

0:00:24 > 0:00:26The Scottish Isles are home

0:00:26 > 0:00:30to some of the most close-knit communities in Britain,

0:00:30 > 0:00:32people ringed by the sea.

0:00:32 > 0:00:34It's their provider, their adversary

0:00:34 > 0:00:36and their inspiration.

0:01:01 > 0:01:05We're sampling the delights of the Scottish Isles.

0:01:07 > 0:01:11My journey will take me across the islands of the Outer Hebrides.

0:01:11 > 0:01:14I'll be heading for Port of Ness,

0:01:14 > 0:01:17but I begin in the south, on Eriskay.

0:01:19 > 0:01:21Arriving somewhere new,

0:01:21 > 0:01:25my first instinct is to make for the centre of town.

0:01:25 > 0:01:27Never mind the centre, where's the town?

0:01:32 > 0:01:35There are just 100 or so islanders,

0:01:35 > 0:01:38but they're spread over six square miles.

0:01:41 > 0:01:44With so much space to do their own thing,

0:01:44 > 0:01:47I'm keen to know what binds Eriskay people together.

0:01:47 > 0:01:54What is it that creates an island's special community?

0:01:54 > 0:01:57The focus of village life is the local shop.

0:02:02 > 0:02:05This is a real Aladdin's cave.

0:02:05 > 0:02:10The islanders run the shop themselves, to suit their needs.

0:02:10 > 0:02:12- Wooden clothes pegs!- Yes.

0:02:12 > 0:02:14I didn't know those were still available.

0:02:14 > 0:02:17- Special socks for wellington boots. - Yes.

0:02:17 > 0:02:19- Does it rain here? - Oh, not really.

0:02:21 > 0:02:24This isn't just the only shop on Eriskay, it's the Post Office too.

0:02:26 > 0:02:28- Hello.- Hello.- Are you Patrick?

0:02:28 > 0:02:33- I am Patrick, yes.- How do you do? I'm Nick. Can I come round the back?- You can indeed, yes.

0:02:35 > 0:02:37- Hello there.- Hello.

0:02:37 > 0:02:41Are these all your customers on the island, the people you deliver letters to?

0:02:41 > 0:02:43That's all the customers on the island, yes.

0:02:43 > 0:02:48- You've got them labelled by all their Christian names. - Labelled by name, yes, yes.

0:02:57 > 0:03:01I'm continuing my journey north along the Outer Hebrides

0:03:01 > 0:03:04to the island of Benbecula.

0:03:06 > 0:03:11This causeway links the communities of South Uist and Benbecula.

0:03:11 > 0:03:14But back in the 1960s,

0:03:14 > 0:03:17it wasn't only locals who were making this crossing.

0:03:20 > 0:03:25Trucks were rolling along these roads laden with rockets.

0:03:25 > 0:03:27That's because Benbecula

0:03:27 > 0:03:31was the headquarters of a missile testing range.

0:03:31 > 0:03:33It was the height of the Cold War

0:03:33 > 0:03:38and Britain was desperate to keep up with the nuclear arms race.

0:03:38 > 0:03:42As the military mobilised in defence of the realm,

0:03:42 > 0:03:46the islanders were preparing to face an invasion of their own.

0:03:46 > 0:03:50With the rockets came soldiers,

0:03:50 > 0:03:53young men from all over the UK.

0:03:53 > 0:03:58Watching over his "young chaps" was the redoubtable Colonel Cooper.

0:03:58 > 0:03:59They get on very well indeed.

0:03:59 > 0:04:02They have settled down very nicely, I think,

0:04:02 > 0:04:04and the locals have accepted them,

0:04:04 > 0:04:07and I think our relations are extremely cordial. I can say that.

0:04:10 > 0:04:14British military bases had their own shops and bars run by the NAAFI.

0:04:14 > 0:04:19Here the army and civilians might rub shoulders.

0:04:19 > 0:04:20Benbecula was no exception.

0:04:23 > 0:04:26'I've come to meet Margaret Macdonald.'

0:04:26 > 0:04:27Hello, Margaret.

0:04:27 > 0:04:30- 'A local girl.'- Hello.

0:04:30 > 0:04:33'She was just 19 when she went to work in the NAAFI shop.'

0:04:33 > 0:04:35This was where the NAAFI shop was.

0:04:35 > 0:04:38So you were in the NAAFI with your friends, who were also islanders?

0:04:38 > 0:04:40Yes, they were, they were all island girls.

0:04:40 > 0:04:43It was a meeting place in the NAAFI shop in these days.

0:04:43 > 0:04:46They knew the girls that were in the shop and we knew them

0:04:46 > 0:04:47and they used to come in...

0:04:47 > 0:04:51It was sort of a social event, really, they didn't come to shop.

0:04:51 > 0:04:53Really?

0:04:53 > 0:04:58'So it was good fun for the island girls. But what about the squaddies?

0:04:58 > 0:05:03'Lance Corporal John Saxton was 22 when he was posted to Benbecula.'

0:05:03 > 0:05:05Have you got room for a hitchhiker?

0:05:05 > 0:05:07- OK.- Hello, John.

0:05:10 > 0:05:13I'd been told before I got here that there's a girl behind every tree.

0:05:13 > 0:05:16- Well, you've seen what like it is here.- There's no trees.- Exactly.

0:05:16 > 0:05:19'John's taking me to the site of his old barracks.'

0:05:19 > 0:05:22It must have been a floodgate opening for the girls up here,

0:05:22 > 0:05:25because if you've only got a very small community

0:05:25 > 0:05:30and then you get 300 fellas coming in...it's heaven for somebody.

0:05:30 > 0:05:33It was really good, it was a very good social life,

0:05:33 > 0:05:37and they had lots of dances on the actual camp itself, in the NAAFI,

0:05:37 > 0:05:40and that's when I remember the buses - the green buses -

0:05:40 > 0:05:45going round the villages of North Uist and picking up local girls

0:05:45 > 0:05:46and taking them to the army camp.

0:05:46 > 0:05:49Jiving and twisting and things like that in those days.

0:05:49 > 0:05:53So if you went to the local dances, it was a hop,

0:05:53 > 0:05:56it was one of these things that had a single fella

0:05:56 > 0:05:59sat on a chair playing the accordion.

0:05:59 > 0:06:02And out of the hundreds of men who poured into that NAAFI,

0:06:02 > 0:06:05- did you meet anyone special? - I did, I did.

0:06:05 > 0:06:08He was in the Royal Signals here, he had come in from Germany.

0:06:08 > 0:06:11Oh, I met the wife up here.

0:06:11 > 0:06:13I met him in the NAAFI, I think, and, erm...

0:06:13 > 0:06:17I was at one of the dances and I spied her over - that'll do me fine.

0:06:17 > 0:06:21- I think it was a NAAFI... - You can't remember where you met your husband!

0:06:21 > 0:06:25This is me on my wedding day in 1969.

0:06:25 > 0:06:27It's a wedding photograph.

0:06:27 > 0:06:30I can see why you went for John, a handsome man, eh?

0:06:31 > 0:06:33'John and Margaret married.'

0:06:35 > 0:06:37Then John was posted to Cyprus.

0:06:39 > 0:06:45But for Margaret, the Mediterranean was no match for Benbecula.

0:06:45 > 0:06:51The pull of the island community was just too strong to resist.

0:06:51 > 0:06:54When John left the army, they came home.

0:06:59 > 0:07:04It's not just locals like Margaret who are connected to Benbecula,

0:07:04 > 0:07:07we all have a link to this island.

0:07:11 > 0:07:13Benbecula is still protecting us.

0:07:13 > 0:07:17It's the frontline of national defence.

0:07:17 > 0:07:194023.

0:07:21 > 0:07:24'Behind this fence

0:07:24 > 0:07:27'is a piece of kit that's been guarding Britain since the Cold War.

0:07:27 > 0:07:31'Squadron Leader Mark Philipson

0:07:31 > 0:07:34'has agreed to throw open the doors of his base to Coast.'

0:07:35 > 0:07:37'And there are lots of doors.'

0:07:56 > 0:08:00Wow, it looks like something from a James Bond set!

0:08:00 > 0:08:02This is the radar Type 92.

0:08:02 > 0:08:08It sees aircraft out to about 250 miles and up to about 90,000 feet.

0:08:08 > 0:08:13It is here to guard and look out into the western Atlantic, over the western part of Scotland.

0:08:13 > 0:08:16Now the Cold War is hopefully history, why do you still need this radar?

0:08:16 > 0:08:21Well, as 9/11 proved, you still have to be able to defend your airspace.

0:08:21 > 0:08:22The enemy, of course, has changed now

0:08:22 > 0:08:24and without bits of equipment like this,

0:08:24 > 0:08:28we wouldn't have a chance of finding the potential rogue airliner.

0:08:30 > 0:08:33And this is what the radar picks up.

0:08:33 > 0:08:39Each flashing green dot is a plane in airspace covered by Benbecula.

0:08:39 > 0:08:43And if among these innocent green dots there was a rogue aircraft,

0:08:43 > 0:08:44how would you spot it?

0:08:44 > 0:08:46By elimination,

0:08:46 > 0:08:49because we have to maintain awareness on what all of them are.

0:08:49 > 0:08:52So if we find something that we can't correlate or resolve,

0:08:52 > 0:08:55then by default that has to be a problem.

0:08:55 > 0:08:58In the Battle of Britain you picked up a phone and said, "Scramble",

0:08:58 > 0:09:01but what would you do if you found a rogue aircraft?

0:09:01 > 0:09:03We pass that up the chain and if they really don't like it,

0:09:03 > 0:09:06then we pick up a phone and say, "Scramble",

0:09:06 > 0:09:09and the fighters get airborne. So actually, not a lot has changed.

0:09:15 > 0:09:20While the RAF scans the skies for hostile intruders,

0:09:20 > 0:09:24others seek out the Scottish Isles for native wildlife.

0:09:41 > 0:09:44One of the most enchanting and elusive animals

0:09:44 > 0:09:46can be found on Shetland.

0:09:51 > 0:09:54Miranda's there on her own spying mission.

0:09:56 > 0:10:00I'm on the hunt for an animal that I've only seen a couple of times in the wild before,

0:10:00 > 0:10:04and here in Shetland is one of the very best places to find them.

0:10:04 > 0:10:06I'm looking for otters.

0:10:08 > 0:10:13Around one in ten of the UK's otter population lives on Shetland,

0:10:13 > 0:10:16but that doesn't make them easy to find.

0:10:19 > 0:10:23John Campbell is a full-time otter spotter.

0:10:25 > 0:10:27He's taking me to a bay

0:10:27 > 0:10:30where he's seen a family of these shy creatures.

0:10:30 > 0:10:33Fingers crossed, but the weather isn't helping.

0:10:33 > 0:10:37We can hear one of them squeaking, so we know they're out there,

0:10:37 > 0:10:41but it's just so misty we just can't see them, but hopefully...

0:10:41 > 0:10:43Do you hear that squeaking? OTTER SQUEAKS

0:10:43 > 0:10:47If we listen to those calls, that's them communicating with each other,

0:10:47 > 0:10:48the cubs trying to find the mother.

0:10:51 > 0:10:56'If you want to spot otters, it's a waiting game.'

0:10:59 > 0:11:03'We've been sitting here for ages and we still haven't seen them.

0:11:03 > 0:11:07'I've seen a seal...'

0:11:09 > 0:11:12'..and the midges are biting,

0:11:12 > 0:11:14'but no otters.

0:11:14 > 0:11:17'To cap it all, it's raining.'

0:11:19 > 0:11:22You'd think these watery beasts would be happy in the rain,

0:11:22 > 0:11:23but they're not.

0:11:23 > 0:11:26If they've been fishing in the sea for half an hour or so

0:11:26 > 0:11:27they get chilled,

0:11:27 > 0:11:30and they like to come ashore, get themselves dry,

0:11:30 > 0:11:32get themselves warmed up again.

0:11:32 > 0:11:35- Obviously, if it's pouring with rain they struggle to get dry.- Yeah.

0:11:35 > 0:11:37So what they tend to do is they'll go and fish

0:11:37 > 0:11:39and then go back to the holt,

0:11:39 > 0:11:43- which makes life awfully difficult for the likes of us trying to find them.- We can't see them.

0:11:48 > 0:11:53'At last, our patience is rewarded.'

0:11:55 > 0:11:59We've got a couple of cubs just playing in the water in front of us.

0:11:59 > 0:12:03It's just beautiful. They're completely oblivious to the fact we're watching them

0:12:03 > 0:12:05and they're just doing what kids do,

0:12:05 > 0:12:08just playing and rolling around each other

0:12:08 > 0:12:11and look really happy and very relaxed. It's really special.

0:12:13 > 0:12:19'There's one more member of the family who makes an appearance.

0:12:19 > 0:12:22'It's a male otter, it must be dad.'

0:12:24 > 0:12:27You never know where they're going to pop up,

0:12:27 > 0:12:29what they're going to do next

0:12:29 > 0:12:32and that for me is the excitement of seeing wild otters.

0:12:32 > 0:12:35I've watched wild otters for the last 35, 40 years

0:12:35 > 0:12:37and every time it's a buzz.

0:12:37 > 0:12:39- Yeah.- I absolutely love it.

0:12:51 > 0:12:54We're on a tour of the Scottish islands,

0:12:54 > 0:12:59some 700 individual worlds,

0:12:59 > 0:13:05separated and united by the great seaway between them.

0:13:05 > 0:13:06For hundreds of years,

0:13:06 > 0:13:10sailors and navigators have charted courses over the water.

0:13:10 > 0:13:11But until recently,

0:13:11 > 0:13:14what lay beneath in the deep ocean

0:13:14 > 0:13:16was a complete mystery.

0:13:16 > 0:13:20The quest to discover the secret life of the sea

0:13:20 > 0:13:24began in the waters off Scotland.

0:13:24 > 0:13:28Historian Tessa Dunlop is in Oban on the west coast.

0:13:28 > 0:13:33She's on the trail of a great 19th-century adventure.

0:13:35 > 0:13:39This state-of-the-art research vessel

0:13:39 > 0:13:42owes its existence to a voyage undertaken in the 19th century

0:13:42 > 0:13:44by HMS Challenger.

0:13:44 > 0:13:47Challenger was at sea for nearly four years.

0:13:47 > 0:13:49It was an epic voyage around the globe

0:13:49 > 0:13:52to make the first ever survey of the world's oceans.

0:13:54 > 0:13:57The voyage of HMS Challenger

0:13:57 > 0:14:00revolutionised our view of what lives in the deep sea.

0:14:00 > 0:14:03It was one of the greatest adventures in science

0:14:03 > 0:14:08and it began off the coast of Scotland.

0:14:08 > 0:14:11'It took 50 volumes to report the findings of Challenger's global odyssey.

0:14:11 > 0:14:15'Professor Laurence Mee knows the secrets of these books

0:14:15 > 0:14:18'and their rare creatures.'

0:14:18 > 0:14:21It's one of the original specimens from the Challenger expedition.

0:14:21 > 0:14:25Obviously it's a starfish, it comes from the deep sea off Nova Scotia,

0:14:25 > 0:14:28so these animals live at depths below 1,000 metres.

0:14:28 > 0:14:31Before that, people assumed there was nothing down there.

0:14:31 > 0:14:33This was a colossal scientific endeavour.

0:14:34 > 0:14:37The brains behind the Challenger expedition

0:14:37 > 0:14:41was a brilliant Scottish scientist, Charles Wyville Thomson.

0:14:41 > 0:14:43- Hi, Laila.- Hi, good morning.

0:14:43 > 0:14:47'People used to think the deep ocean was a barren, dead zone.

0:14:47 > 0:14:50'Wyville Thomson thought otherwise.

0:14:50 > 0:14:53'He set out to find proof of life below.

0:14:53 > 0:14:58'In 1868, Thomson began his search in Scottish seas.'

0:14:58 > 0:15:03Wyville Thomson was actually based at the University of Edinburgh, up here in Scotland.

0:15:03 > 0:15:06He persuaded the Admiralty to lend him a small ship,

0:15:06 > 0:15:10which set off and studied the region between the Faeroes and the Scottish coast.

0:15:10 > 0:15:12They found sponges,

0:15:12 > 0:15:15they found cold-water corals on reefs just beyond us,

0:15:15 > 0:15:17and organisms with multiple legs

0:15:17 > 0:15:21that people did not believe could live in those dark, deep, high-pressure depths.

0:15:23 > 0:15:27If such wonders were to be found in home waters,

0:15:27 > 0:15:30what would be discovered elsewhere?

0:15:30 > 0:15:32Buoyed with success,

0:15:32 > 0:15:36Wyville Thomson persuaded the British government

0:15:36 > 0:15:38to fund the Challenger expedition,

0:15:38 > 0:15:42the most ambitious scientific endeavour of the age.

0:15:44 > 0:15:49In 1872, they set sail on an epic voyage around the globe.

0:15:49 > 0:15:53They journeyed for three and a half long years.

0:15:53 > 0:15:56Challenger crossed all the great oceans.

0:15:56 > 0:15:59They travelled as far as the Antarctic,

0:15:59 > 0:16:03zigzagging their way across the Atlantic,

0:16:03 > 0:16:06before finally returning home.

0:16:06 > 0:16:08Everywhere they went,

0:16:08 > 0:16:10they took samples and looked for new creatures.

0:16:13 > 0:16:16The Challenger was also the first official expedition

0:16:16 > 0:16:19to have a photographer.

0:16:19 > 0:16:23They captured images of new cultures around the world, all on photographic plates.

0:16:23 > 0:16:25The people, costumes, traditions

0:16:25 > 0:16:27were recorded for the first time photographically.

0:16:27 > 0:16:32They took the first ever photo of an Antarctic iceberg.

0:16:32 > 0:16:35This is a rare image of a warrior from the Philippines.

0:16:37 > 0:16:41The Challenger revealed a world never seen before,

0:16:41 > 0:16:44above and below the waves.

0:16:46 > 0:16:47This is a dredge.

0:16:47 > 0:16:49It's very similar to the one used on the Challenger

0:16:49 > 0:16:54and it's used for collecting animals that live on the sea bed.

0:16:54 > 0:16:57We can use similar dredges even in the very deep ocean,

0:16:57 > 0:16:58thousands of metres deep.

0:16:58 > 0:17:02- That is chock-full, isn't it?- It is.

0:17:02 > 0:17:06It's mainly mud, stones, old shells, but there will be some animals.

0:17:06 > 0:17:10- What is that? It's got purple legs. - That looks like a hermit crab.

0:17:10 > 0:17:17Yes, little spider crab here.

0:17:17 > 0:17:20- It's always exciting. You never - know what you're going to find.

0:17:20 > 0:17:22And, of course, if you're doing this in deep water,

0:17:22 > 0:17:27- you can find species that no-one's ever seen.- Which is what they were doing on the Challenger.

0:17:27 > 0:17:31They were sampling down to over 5,000 metres depth,

0:17:31 > 0:17:34so they were catching things that no-one had ever seen in human history.

0:17:34 > 0:17:37And now, today, how many species do we know of?

0:17:37 > 0:17:42There may be somewhere in the region of 1.5 million species in the oceans,

0:17:42 > 0:17:44most of which we haven't even discovered yet.

0:17:47 > 0:17:53Once, scientists believed the deep sea was lifeless.

0:17:53 > 0:17:55Now, thanks to Wyville Thomson,

0:17:55 > 0:18:00we know the depths are teeming with weird and wonderful creatures.

0:18:00 > 0:18:05140 years after the science of oceanography started in Scottish waters,

0:18:05 > 0:18:08we've still only discovered a small fraction

0:18:08 > 0:18:12of the secret life of the sea.

0:18:30 > 0:18:32My journey along the Outer Hebrides

0:18:32 > 0:18:35continues towards the port of Leverburgh.

0:18:37 > 0:18:43This is a tale of a business tycoon with a big appetite for fish.

0:18:43 > 0:18:47Imagine, nearly 100 years ago,

0:18:47 > 0:18:48trying to turn this tiny port

0:18:48 > 0:18:51into the centre of Britain's biggest fishing business.

0:18:51 > 0:18:54That was the vision

0:18:54 > 0:18:57of an extraordinary English entrepreneur.

0:18:57 > 0:18:59Who was this man?

0:18:59 > 0:19:03Well, the answer's in the name he gave this port - Leverburgh.

0:19:03 > 0:19:08It was christened by the irrepressible Lord Leverhulme.

0:19:08 > 0:19:09At the turn of the 20th century,

0:19:09 > 0:19:11he was one of the richest,

0:19:11 > 0:19:13one of the most powerful men in Britain.

0:19:16 > 0:19:20In 1919, he used his vast wealth

0:19:20 > 0:19:23to buy the entire island of Harris.

0:19:27 > 0:19:31Lever had made it big making soap,

0:19:31 > 0:19:33Sunlight soap.

0:19:33 > 0:19:37Now he planned to clean up in the fish trade.

0:19:42 > 0:19:45His grand design centred on this little port.

0:19:45 > 0:19:48Back then, it was a town called Obbe.

0:19:48 > 0:19:49He spent a fortune,

0:19:49 > 0:19:55the equivalent today of £21 million.

0:19:55 > 0:19:57And yet, some 90 years on, when you look around,

0:19:57 > 0:20:03there's remarkably little to be seen of Lever's huge investment.

0:20:03 > 0:20:06'What happened to his big fish business?

0:20:06 > 0:20:08'I've come to meet Tony Scherr

0:20:08 > 0:20:12'who knows all about Leverhulme's ambitions for Harris.

0:20:12 > 0:20:17'He started with some unconventional home improvements at Borve Lodge.'

0:20:17 > 0:20:22When he came, all he could see was this cliff going across,

0:20:22 > 0:20:25and then he could see Taransay above the cliff.

0:20:25 > 0:20:28So, being Leverhulme,

0:20:28 > 0:20:32he decided the best thing to do was to get rid of the cliff,

0:20:32 > 0:20:34so he blew it up.

0:20:34 > 0:20:37That was the man, really.

0:20:37 > 0:20:39If he didn't like it, he blew it up.

0:20:39 > 0:20:41Or he changed it.

0:20:41 > 0:20:46Leverhulme was never one to sit back and admire the view.

0:20:46 > 0:20:49He was a man with a mission -

0:20:49 > 0:20:52to transform the lives of the islanders

0:20:52 > 0:20:54by building a monumental business.

0:20:56 > 0:21:02His plans were to make Leverburgh into a large fishing port

0:21:02 > 0:21:06and he produced a map with this in mind.

0:21:06 > 0:21:08And all these were the fishing grounds,

0:21:08 > 0:21:12but everything centred around the port of Leverburgh.

0:21:12 > 0:21:16He could put up his curing sheds, he could put up his kilns,

0:21:16 > 0:21:20- and to get as many as 10,000 people...- 10,000?!

0:21:20 > 0:21:22..10,000 people living in Leverburgh, yes.

0:21:22 > 0:21:24In Hebridean terms, that's a city.

0:21:24 > 0:21:25It is indeed.

0:21:25 > 0:21:29This was ambition on an epic scale.

0:21:32 > 0:21:35At the time, Leverburgh's population was less than 200,

0:21:35 > 0:21:39but Leverhulme was a man of extraordinary vision.

0:21:41 > 0:21:44He could see a more affluent Britain developing,

0:21:44 > 0:21:50a busy population demanding better, fresher food.

0:21:50 > 0:21:56'Harris didn't have many people, but it did have a lot of herring.

0:21:56 > 0:21:59'Donald MacLean knows these waters better than most.'

0:21:59 > 0:22:02- Have you got one?- Here he comes!

0:22:03 > 0:22:05He's not very old.

0:22:05 > 0:22:09Donald, back then, Lord Leverhulme was chasing the herring shoals,

0:22:09 > 0:22:13and, you know, the catches were absolutely enormous, weren't they?

0:22:13 > 0:22:15Yes, big, big catches of herring, very plentiful.

0:22:15 > 0:22:17My grandfather worked for Lord Leverhulme,

0:22:17 > 0:22:20he was a foreman round about the pier when they were building it.

0:22:20 > 0:22:22My auntie worked there as well.

0:22:22 > 0:22:27She worked at the herring, sorting the herring and curing the herring into barrels.

0:22:27 > 0:22:30Did that make him quite a popular figure with local people then?

0:22:30 > 0:22:33Oh, certainly, yes. Yes.

0:22:35 > 0:22:38Leverhulme invested a fortune in the port.

0:22:38 > 0:22:39He built a new pier,

0:22:39 > 0:22:41a smokehouse,

0:22:41 > 0:22:44and a refrigeration plant.

0:22:44 > 0:22:47On the face of it, a crazy scheme,

0:22:47 > 0:22:51but Leverhulme was the shrewdest of entrepreneurs.

0:22:51 > 0:22:57His plan was to control the fish business from sea to shop.

0:22:57 > 0:23:00To create an outlet for the catch landed at his Scottish port,

0:23:00 > 0:23:04he bought up 400 fishmongers throughout Britain

0:23:04 > 0:23:07and called them Mac Fisheries.

0:23:07 > 0:23:11By 1924, his plan no longer seemed so mad.

0:23:13 > 0:23:18Steam-powered trawlers landed a huge haul of herring -

0:23:18 > 0:23:22so many that women from the mainland were brought in to help.

0:23:22 > 0:23:27Leverhulme and Leverburgh had success within their grasp,

0:23:27 > 0:23:29yet within months,

0:23:29 > 0:23:34the entire business came crashing down.

0:23:36 > 0:23:40In 1925, Lord Leverhulme caught pneumonia and died.

0:23:45 > 0:23:5130,000 paid their respects at his funeral in Port Sunlight.

0:23:51 > 0:23:56In Leverburgh, sirens sounded on the pier and work stopped...

0:23:56 > 0:23:58for good.

0:23:58 > 0:23:59When Leverhulme died,

0:23:59 > 0:24:02his vision for Harris died with him.

0:24:02 > 0:24:09Today, there are just a few bleak reminders of his grandiose scheme.

0:24:10 > 0:24:14What do you think he'd think or say if he saw Leverburgh today?

0:24:14 > 0:24:18He would be an extremely sad man, I think,

0:24:18 > 0:24:22to see his dream come to naught.

0:24:29 > 0:24:31Many of the Scottish Isles

0:24:31 > 0:24:37have managed to export their products far out across the seas.

0:24:37 > 0:24:41The Outer Hebrides can boast their own global brand.

0:24:42 > 0:24:45That's what's brought me to Tarbert, on Harris.

0:24:49 > 0:24:51This is what I'm after.

0:24:52 > 0:24:56Harris Tweed.

0:24:56 > 0:24:58- Hello there.- Hi there. - May I look at your jackets?

0:24:58 > 0:25:00Yes, of course. Just got some over here.

0:25:00 > 0:25:03- Look at those. They're very evocative.- Yeah, they are.

0:25:03 > 0:25:07They're the colours of Scotland, with the grey rock, the heather...

0:25:07 > 0:25:12And then this one seems to have little traces of blue in it, and awesome colours.

0:25:12 > 0:25:14It's got lots of colours in it. Would you like to try one?

0:25:14 > 0:25:17- Yeah, why not?- We can try this one.

0:25:17 > 0:25:21This will be a sartorial leap for me,

0:25:21 > 0:25:25to get rid of the old anorak and present Coast in a genuine Harris...

0:25:25 > 0:25:29- Oh, it's very comfortable. - How's that for you?- It's lovely.

0:25:29 > 0:25:32Oh, yes. Now that really is an improvement, don't you think?

0:25:32 > 0:25:34- Yes.- Coast and beyond!

0:25:37 > 0:25:41There's a reason why the colours of Harris Tweed mirror the landscape.

0:25:41 > 0:25:45Originally, the dyes were produced by local plants and lichens.

0:25:45 > 0:25:49'Textile designer Alice Starmore

0:25:49 > 0:25:51'is going to show me how it was done.'

0:25:51 > 0:25:53- Very good to meet you.- You too.

0:25:53 > 0:25:56- Looks as if you've got things started already.- Yes. I have lit the peat fire.

0:25:56 > 0:26:00I have the water, which obviously you need for dyeing as well.

0:26:00 > 0:26:04I have the fleece, and the only thing I need now is the crottal lichen,

0:26:04 > 0:26:07which is going to actually give me the colour.

0:26:07 > 0:26:08What are we looking out for?

0:26:08 > 0:26:11Well, we're looking out for a very unassuming

0:26:11 > 0:26:15and drab, grey, crusty stuff,

0:26:15 > 0:26:17which actually is black crottal.

0:26:17 > 0:26:20And here is a very nice crop of it.

0:26:20 > 0:26:21Oh, is this it here?

0:26:21 > 0:26:24- This is it.- It looks like a spillage of very old porridge.

0:26:24 > 0:26:29It does, but the dye comes out of it very easily.

0:26:29 > 0:26:32It's a beautiful rich bronze-brown shade that you get from it

0:26:32 > 0:26:36and you can see that it's actually ready to come right off the rock here.

0:26:36 > 0:26:39The Harris people would say that was ripe and ready.

0:26:39 > 0:26:44'Some lichens are protected, but this one's safe to pick.

0:26:44 > 0:26:48'Even so, we're just taking enough to dye one small fleece.'

0:26:48 > 0:26:51- Now for the exciting part. - Time to get the pot.

0:26:51 > 0:26:57'First, take one scoured fleece and moisten with peat-rich spring water.'

0:26:57 > 0:26:59We're not just bunging it in, we're going to layer it a bit.

0:26:59 > 0:27:03It's important that the dye should be as even as possible.

0:27:03 > 0:27:06- It's a bit like making lasagne! - It is a bit, yes!

0:27:06 > 0:27:09And it is - the whole thing is a little bit like cooking.

0:27:09 > 0:27:11Pour in the water.

0:27:11 > 0:27:13Yes.

0:27:13 > 0:27:17And as it slowly comes to the boil, rather like a stew,

0:27:17 > 0:27:22all the products will come out and dye the fleece.

0:27:22 > 0:27:26'While we wait for the chemistry to cook,

0:27:26 > 0:27:28'Alice has some samples to show me,

0:27:28 > 0:27:30'all colours produced from local lichens and plants.'

0:27:30 > 0:27:35- Look at that. - It's like silverweed and ragweed.

0:27:35 > 0:27:37Here are the crottal colours

0:27:37 > 0:27:43and here is the rich dark colour that you would get from cooking it overnight, as it were.

0:27:43 > 0:27:46OK, it's been cooking for some time now, Alice.

0:27:46 > 0:27:50- It's a rich, deep colour, isn't it? - It's beginning to get orange.

0:27:50 > 0:27:52Look at that.

0:27:52 > 0:27:57That's it in the early stages, so you can see what a slow and painstaking process it was.

0:28:01 > 0:28:04The rules governing the Harris Tweed trademark are strict.

0:28:04 > 0:28:09The cloth must be woven by the people of the Outer Hebrides

0:28:09 > 0:28:10in their own homes.

0:28:10 > 0:28:13MECHANICAL WHIRRING

0:28:13 > 0:28:15I can hear clattering machinery.

0:28:18 > 0:28:22'Donald John MacKay has been busy with the fabric for over 40 years.'

0:28:22 > 0:28:24My goodness!

0:28:24 > 0:28:26So, Donald, how is the loom powered?

0:28:26 > 0:28:31- By my feet.- Oh, I see, so handmade really means...

0:28:31 > 0:28:36- Means foot power, yes.- So you cannot have an electric...- No! No, no, no.

0:28:36 > 0:28:38What's this roll going to be used for?

0:28:38 > 0:28:41This is going to Nike for shoes and bags.

0:28:41 > 0:28:45- Really?- Yes.- To Nike?- Yes.

0:28:45 > 0:28:48- The big sports manufacturer? - Yes, the big... Yes, yes, yes.

0:28:48 > 0:28:51That's incredible. And what about the threads themselves?

0:28:51 > 0:28:54See, each thread is made up of many, many colours.

0:28:54 > 0:28:58- Isn't that extraordinary? When you look closely, it's a whole rainbow of colours.- Comes alive.

0:28:58 > 0:29:01Comes alive, exactly! It really comes alive.

0:29:01 > 0:29:03Well, that's Harris Tweed for you.

0:29:03 > 0:29:04'The colours of the island

0:29:04 > 0:29:08'inspire the blends and patterns of the cloth.

0:29:08 > 0:29:11'So I want to see what it looks like in the landscape.'

0:29:11 > 0:29:15- Now, let's have a look, Donald. - Now...- Wow!

0:29:15 > 0:29:20I can see the yellow of the wild grasses out there, coming on the cloth, and the heather.

0:29:20 > 0:29:23And you can see there the marram grass, the lighter one there.

0:29:23 > 0:29:26The roots, the grass, the darker one down there.

0:29:26 > 0:29:29There's blue in there too. See the sea beyond?

0:29:29 > 0:29:31It's all there in front of us.

0:29:31 > 0:29:36It's as if you've unrolled the surface of the Outer Hebrides and carried it into your loom.

0:29:46 > 0:29:50Harris is separated from Lewis in name only.

0:29:50 > 0:29:54They're parts of the same island,

0:29:54 > 0:29:56separated not by water,

0:29:56 > 0:29:58but by a range of mountains.

0:30:00 > 0:30:02Across those peaks, on the east coast,

0:30:02 > 0:30:05lies the capital of Lewis, Stornoway.

0:30:09 > 0:30:15A disaster at sea nearly a century ago shocked this community so much,

0:30:15 > 0:30:18the pain is still raw today.

0:30:18 > 0:30:24It's a tragic tale, not often told to outsiders,

0:30:24 > 0:30:26that Neil knows well.

0:30:30 > 0:30:31In the First World War,

0:30:31 > 0:30:35half the male population of Lewis served in the armed forces.

0:30:37 > 0:30:39Many never returned,

0:30:39 > 0:30:43but some perished cruelly close to home.

0:30:43 > 0:30:48More than 200 servicemen died in a disaster off the Scottish coast,

0:30:48 > 0:30:51just days after the Great War ended.

0:30:57 > 0:31:01It's late on New Year's Eve 1918,

0:31:01 > 0:31:05a cold, dark end to a terrible year.

0:31:05 > 0:31:08But the men onboard the Iolaire are in high spirits

0:31:08 > 0:31:09because they're going home.

0:31:09 > 0:31:11The war is over.

0:31:11 > 0:31:17These are just a few of the 280-odd souls who were packed aboard,

0:31:17 > 0:31:19mostly sailors of the Royal Naval Reserve,

0:31:19 > 0:31:22men from the islands, the Outer Hebrides,

0:31:22 > 0:31:25who'd survived the horrors of the First World War.

0:31:28 > 0:31:32They were on a large civilian yacht pressed into war service

0:31:32 > 0:31:36and renamed Her Majesty's Yacht Iolaire.

0:31:36 > 0:31:39By 1.50 in the morning, the boat was almost home.

0:31:39 > 0:31:44The servicemen aboard could see the harbour lights of Stornoway.

0:31:44 > 0:31:48They knew their loved ones would be lining the quayside at Stornoway,

0:31:48 > 0:31:49just half a mile away.

0:31:49 > 0:31:52But most of the men crammed aboard the Iolaire that night

0:31:52 > 0:31:56would never see their families again.

0:31:56 > 0:32:00Minutes later, in stormy seas,

0:32:00 > 0:32:04the Iolaire struck a notorious reef - the Beasts of Holm.

0:32:07 > 0:32:10They were only 30 yards from land,

0:32:10 > 0:32:15but of the 285 men on board, just 80 survived.

0:32:18 > 0:32:20More than half of those that did survive

0:32:20 > 0:32:23owed their lives to one man aboard the stricken ship,

0:32:23 > 0:32:26John Finlay MacLeod, a Lewis man,

0:32:26 > 0:32:27a boat builder, in fact.

0:32:27 > 0:32:29Somehow, amid the chaos,

0:32:29 > 0:32:32he managed to half-scramble, half-swim ashore

0:32:32 > 0:32:34with a line tied around his wrist.

0:32:37 > 0:32:41This monument stands on the spot where John Finlay swam ashore.

0:32:41 > 0:32:46Interviewed in 1973, he recalled that night.

0:33:13 > 0:33:1840 survivors owed their lives to the courage of John Finlay MacLeod,

0:33:18 > 0:33:23but 205 men died on that last night of 1918.

0:33:23 > 0:33:26When dawn finally broke that New Year's Day,

0:33:26 > 0:33:29the people of Lewis were greeted to a dreadful sight.

0:33:29 > 0:33:33There's a photograph showing the wreck of the Iolaire,

0:33:33 > 0:33:39the bulk of her still submerged, and just the mast sticking out.

0:33:42 > 0:33:45As news of the Iolaire disaster spread,

0:33:45 > 0:33:50people walked the coastline, looking for relatives.

0:33:50 > 0:33:53At Sandwick Bay, they found only dozens of bodies...

0:33:55 > 0:33:58..servicemen returning from the Great War.

0:33:58 > 0:34:03These Scots didn't die on a foreign field, but in home waters,

0:34:03 > 0:34:06within sight of safety.

0:34:06 > 0:34:10Relatives and friends, looking for loved ones,

0:34:10 > 0:34:13picked their way through the wreckage of the Iolaire

0:34:13 > 0:34:15and what they found were toys,

0:34:15 > 0:34:20presents that fathers never got the chance to give to children.

0:34:24 > 0:34:26In a remote part of Lewis,

0:34:26 > 0:34:29four-year-old Marion Smith was waiting for her father.

0:34:29 > 0:34:33- Oh, hello. Come in.- Hello, Marion.

0:34:33 > 0:34:38'Kenneth Smith survived the Great War, but only his suitcase made it back home.'

0:34:38 > 0:34:41In his possessions that they found on the beach,

0:34:41 > 0:34:43- they found this box that we have here.- Mm-hm.

0:34:43 > 0:34:49Inside it are ration cards,

0:34:49 > 0:34:52with which they were issued.

0:34:52 > 0:34:55- So that's your dad, Kenneth Smith. - Yes.

0:34:55 > 0:34:59And he should have been on leave from the 30th December 1918

0:34:59 > 0:35:03until the 14th January 1919.

0:35:03 > 0:35:05That made it home and he didn't.

0:35:07 > 0:35:10What do you remember about your mum

0:35:10 > 0:35:12on the night when the news arrived at the house?

0:35:12 > 0:35:17She was sitting down, and the neighbours were coming in,

0:35:17 > 0:35:21and also people whom I didn't know were coming in.

0:35:21 > 0:35:25And they all hugged her and they all cried,

0:35:25 > 0:35:28and my grandfather just sat,

0:35:28 > 0:35:33and I would go over and lean across his knees.

0:35:33 > 0:35:38And I remember the tears dropping off his cheeks

0:35:38 > 0:35:41onto the top of my head.

0:35:41 > 0:35:45I couldn't understand what had happened.

0:35:45 > 0:35:47The clock stopped

0:35:47 > 0:35:50and the world changed.

0:35:55 > 0:35:58The people of Lewis were grieving their loss,

0:35:58 > 0:36:01but alongside grief came anger.

0:36:01 > 0:36:05Why had the Iolaire foundered on the Beasts of Holm?

0:36:05 > 0:36:08Why had so many died within yards of the shore?

0:36:10 > 0:36:15'John Macleod has examined the events of that tragic night.'

0:36:15 > 0:36:17The boat was very under-crewed,

0:36:17 > 0:36:20the officer had never sailed at night.

0:36:20 > 0:36:21It was quite stormy.

0:36:21 > 0:36:24They weren't familiar with the waters and they lost their way.

0:36:24 > 0:36:28The Iolaire didn't have enough lifeboats for all the men. There weren't enough life jackets.

0:36:28 > 0:36:30It was a disaster waiting to happen.

0:36:30 > 0:36:32You would think that they were so close

0:36:32 > 0:36:35that it ought to have been possible to escape the tragedy.

0:36:35 > 0:36:38You've these huge breakers hammering in,

0:36:38 > 0:36:41so the men who'd jumped into the water were mostly beaten to death.

0:36:41 > 0:36:44They weren't drowned, they were smashed against the rocks time and time again,

0:36:44 > 0:36:47like being caught in the most nightmarish washing machine.

0:36:49 > 0:36:53The appalling deaths in the Iolaire disaster

0:36:53 > 0:36:55happened just after the Great War ended,

0:36:55 > 0:37:00a war that had already killed 866 men of Lewis.

0:37:00 > 0:37:02A terrible sacrifice.

0:37:03 > 0:37:06Of those who'd volunteered, one in six were dead.

0:37:06 > 0:37:10But the needless loss of all those men aboard the Iolaire

0:37:10 > 0:37:11was the cruellest blow,

0:37:11 > 0:37:15and yet for many years, the response from Lewis was silence.

0:37:15 > 0:37:19Because what could anyone say that mattered?

0:37:19 > 0:37:21And that's why, beyond the islands,

0:37:21 > 0:37:23the name Iolaire is essentially unknown,

0:37:23 > 0:37:27because this was a very private tragedy.

0:37:27 > 0:37:32Amongst the list of names here, Seaman Kenneth Smith.

0:37:32 > 0:37:34For his widow Christina,

0:37:34 > 0:37:37his death and her grief

0:37:37 > 0:37:39were not something to be shared.

0:37:39 > 0:37:45Did she ever talk to you about your dad and about what happened?

0:37:45 > 0:37:47No, she didn't.

0:37:47 > 0:37:53She never talked about the tragedy at all.

0:37:55 > 0:37:58I remember that she only wore black.

0:37:58 > 0:38:02Black, black.

0:38:02 > 0:38:05If she was baking, she still wore black.

0:38:05 > 0:38:10And to this day...I remember.

0:38:10 > 0:38:16I just didn't like the colour and I still don't.

0:38:16 > 0:38:19To have come so close to coming home,

0:38:19 > 0:38:22you know, to drown, to die on the doorstep of home.

0:38:22 > 0:38:25Yes, well, as the song said,

0:38:25 > 0:38:27these brave men

0:38:27 > 0:38:28who'd gone so far

0:38:28 > 0:38:30through the dangers of the war,

0:38:30 > 0:38:33by the irony of fate

0:38:33 > 0:38:36were drowned at home.

0:38:49 > 0:38:55Many would envy the sense of community on the Scottish Isles.

0:38:55 > 0:38:57Language and traditions

0:38:57 > 0:39:00bind people together,

0:39:00 > 0:39:02but some of those traditional customs

0:39:02 > 0:39:06may seem at odds with life elsewhere in our islands.

0:39:09 > 0:39:15I've reached my final stop at the tip of the Hebrides, Port of Ness.

0:39:19 > 0:39:21It looks like the end of the line,

0:39:21 > 0:39:24but this little harbour is actually the point of departure

0:39:24 > 0:39:27for a group of men who set sail every August.

0:39:27 > 0:39:31It's a voyage the men of Ness have been undertaking for centuries,

0:39:31 > 0:39:34sons following fathers who followed their fathers.

0:39:34 > 0:39:36They've all been heading for the same spot,

0:39:36 > 0:39:40a lonely rocky island, 40 miles from here, called Sula Sgeir.

0:39:43 > 0:39:45Nobody lives there,

0:39:45 > 0:39:48but it's home to thousands of gannets.

0:39:50 > 0:39:54The men of Ness come to Sula Sgeir to hunt for birds.

0:39:56 > 0:40:00It was a tradition captured on film in the 1950s. Take a look at this.

0:40:04 > 0:40:09They're after the young gannets, known in these parts as guga.

0:40:09 > 0:40:12The guga-hunting season is August,

0:40:12 > 0:40:15when the chicks are almost fully grown.

0:40:15 > 0:40:19There's no shortage of people to buy them.

0:40:19 > 0:40:22Guga is an age-old delicacy in these parts.

0:40:24 > 0:40:2950 years on, the small boy in the film is doing as his father did.

0:40:31 > 0:40:34John MacFarlane is now the leader of the annual guga hunt,

0:40:34 > 0:40:39a time-honoured custom first recorded in 1549.

0:40:39 > 0:40:43It's a big thing in Ness, our community,

0:40:43 > 0:40:45in this part of the island, up the Butt of Lewis end.

0:40:45 > 0:40:48If you mention the community of Ness to someone,

0:40:48 > 0:40:51it's always associated with the guga, with the guga hunt.

0:40:51 > 0:40:54The Ness gannet.

0:40:54 > 0:40:57It's... It's a Ness thing.

0:40:57 > 0:41:02Once, the men of Ness could take as many guga as they could carry.

0:41:02 > 0:41:05But now, they operate under a licence

0:41:05 > 0:41:09to take no more than 2,000 birds a year.

0:41:09 > 0:41:12The Scottish Government licenses the hunt,

0:41:12 > 0:41:15which it's argued is culturally important.

0:41:18 > 0:41:22The ritual hasn't changed in living memory.

0:41:22 > 0:41:25We lift them out of the nest with a 10ft pole,

0:41:25 > 0:41:28with a clamp at the end, around its neck.

0:41:28 > 0:41:31I pass it on to the next person behind me,

0:41:31 > 0:41:33who gives it a whack on the head.

0:41:33 > 0:41:37From the time I pick it out of the nest to the time it's dead

0:41:37 > 0:41:38is about three seconds.

0:41:38 > 0:41:41We start plucking them,

0:41:41 > 0:41:43taking the feathers off.

0:41:43 > 0:41:46The next part is what we call the factory.

0:41:46 > 0:41:50Two of the boys actually take the down off the birds

0:41:50 > 0:41:53by dipping them into the fire.

0:41:53 > 0:41:57And they're passed onto the next two guys, who actually split them open,

0:41:57 > 0:42:02to leave four quarters of ripe prime guga.

0:42:02 > 0:42:07We then salt them and make a brown pile of them.

0:42:07 > 0:42:10There's a special way of doing it so that the meat doesn't go off.

0:42:13 > 0:42:16We build a chute to the bottom of the island.

0:42:16 > 0:42:19When we're going home the gugas go down on the chute.

0:42:19 > 0:42:22What do you say to people

0:42:22 > 0:42:27who find the idea of killing wild seabirds...

0:42:27 > 0:42:29distasteful, abhorrent?

0:42:29 > 0:42:32I don't see any difference between that

0:42:32 > 0:42:36and going into a supermarket and buying a chicken or a turkey.

0:42:36 > 0:42:39Those who oppose us going to the island,

0:42:39 > 0:42:44if you could put a guga and a chicken together,

0:42:44 > 0:42:48how could you explain to the chicken why it should be killed

0:42:48 > 0:42:52and the wild guga go free?

0:42:52 > 0:42:54There's no difference.

0:42:54 > 0:42:57It's for human consumption.

0:42:58 > 0:43:02Guga and guga hunting may not be to everyone's taste,

0:43:02 > 0:43:05but the annual journey to Sula Sgeir

0:43:05 > 0:43:07is a centuries-old tradition,

0:43:07 > 0:43:12one fiercely defended by the men of Ness and their community.

0:43:15 > 0:43:20The Outer Hebrides are famously wild, rugged and beautiful.

0:43:20 > 0:43:23They share a quality that's far less conspicuous.

0:43:23 > 0:43:28The people I've met have a real sense of community, of belonging,

0:43:28 > 0:43:32a conviction that their island is truly their home.

0:43:32 > 0:43:37And that, maybe, is what it means to be an islander.

0:43:44 > 0:43:47Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd