The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Family’s lucky escape after car flips on ice

Dundee family’s Land Rover landed in ditch on its roof in Angus crash

- GRAEME STRACHAN gstrachan@thecourier.co.uk

A Tayside mum has said she cannot believe her family are still alive following a spectacula­r Angus road crash.

The Arbuckle family were left hanging upside down when their Land Rover ended up in a ditch after skidding on black ice and flipping on to its roof.

Anne Arbuckle, 35 and husband Michael, 36, walked away with minor injuries while children Sophie, 3, and Ellie, 1, were miraculous­ly unscathed.

“I feel like a cat with nine lives,” said Mrs Arbuckle from Dundee.

“I can’t believe we are all alive.” The car’s SOS system called the emergency services when the air bags deployed.

Mr Arbuckle managed to pull his family to safety through the boot as the couple feared the car would catch fire.

Emergency services attended the onevehicle incident which took place shortly after 5.20pm on Tuesday on the B961 near Carmyllie.

Mrs Arbuckle, who works in Dundee as a solicitor, said the family were visiting a friend at a farm in the village.

“I had felt ill on the drive up so I said I would drive home which I wish I hadn’t,” she said.

“We came out of the cottage and I decided to go cross-country because it is quicker so I did that as usual. We knew it was frosty and we approached a bend at about 20-25mph but as I went to turn, the car just didn’t respond and started to slide across the road.

I was absolutely terrified the carwas going to go onfireand we couldn’t get out. ANNE ARBUCKLE

“I hit the brakes and it became clear we were not going to stay on the road.

“There was a big fence post and Mike said we were going to hit it and I thought we were going to damage the car – not realising there was also a ditch there.

“We hit the fence post and kept going and rolled into the ditch – we went over once and there was a really loud bang.

“Then I was upside down in the car and the air bags had gone off.”

Mrs Arbuckle said the family’s Land Rover Discovery Sport ultimately saved their bacon as it had an SOS system which called the emergency services.

“That’s something we would have been unable to do as my daughter had been playing with my phone in the back seat and it was lost,” she said.

“I didn’t realise that when air bags go off there’s an explosive that sets them off so there was a smell of smoke.

“I was absolutely terrified the car was going to go on fire and we couldn’t get out.”

Mrs Arbuckle said the boot popped open and her husband managed to get free and pull the family to safety.

She said she was extremely grateful to the emergency services who were very sympatheti­c toward her children who were “absolutely frightened”.

She said Sophie and Ellie managed to escape completely unscathed which emphasised the importance of car seats and children being strapped in properly.

 ?? Picture: Kim Cessford ?? Lucky to be alive: the Arbuckle family at home last night and, below, the badly damaged Land Rover.
Picture: Kim Cessford Lucky to be alive: the Arbuckle family at home last night and, below, the badly damaged Land Rover.
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