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Bomb cyclone batters B.C., cutting roads and power, snapping trees ‘like gunshots’

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VANCOUVER — Geoff Johnson and fellow storm watchers in Ucluelet, B.C., were concerned on Tuesday about the so-called “bomb cyclone” taking shape off Vancouver Island — not for safety reasons, but because they wondered if it would be “disappointing.”

Winds had been light throughout the day. But they need not have worried about any lack of drama as night fell, and the howling winds were punctuated by the sound of trees snapping “like gunshots.”

“Last night, around 8 o’clock, a tree fell on my friend’s boat, narrowly missing the RV that he lives in,” said Johnson on Wednesday. “I know another friend’s car was completely crushed by a fallen tree overnight.

“I’m actually standing in a house that had a large tree in its yard that luckily fell (in) the other direction, across the neighbour’s driveway instead of onto their second storey,” said Johnson, a weather enthusiast who runs the YouTube channel UkeeTube.

The massive storm battered parts of coastal British Columbia with winds up to 170 km/h, equivalent to a Category 2 hurricane. A bomb cyclone is caused by rapidly dropping atmospheric pressure at the centre of a weather system.

More than 200,000 homes and businesses were plunged into darkness as the winds and downed trees brought down power lines.

Ted Olynyk, BC Hydro’s manager of community relations for Vancouver Island, said winds in Nanaimo were unlike anything he had experienced in the area before.

“And we know as a result of climate change unfortunately, we’re going to get more storms — and they’re going to be more intense like this,” he added.

The BC Hydro outage map showed about 75,000 customers remained without power on Wednesday afternoon, mostly on Vancouver Island.

A wind warning remained in effect for the west coast of Vancouver Island, where gusts were expected to weaken overnight as the storm system — located about 500 kilometres off the coast — moved north.

Environment Canada data show remote Sartine Island, off the northern tip of Vancouver Island, was hit by the most powerful gusts late Tuesday, recording the storm’s top wind speed of 170 km/h.

But gusts of more than 100 km/h were still being recorded on Wednesday at several northern and central weather stations.

In Metro Vancouver, winds peaked at 87 km/h at the Tsawwassen ferry terminal.

While just one location set a new record for wind speed — the Port Hardy Airport, which recorded winds of 122 km/h at their peak — Environment Canada meteorologist Brian Proctor said wind records are difficult to compare historically, and the power outages demonstrate the severity of the weather event.

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