>> jobson: eh, it'll probably be tomorrow. >> kroft: johnny jobson first experienced eigg in his 20s,er. since then, a lot has changed. one, there is electricity now, which allowed him to move his wife and family here last year and edit a sports journal online from their tiny cottage. it's required some sacrifices, but they love the beauty of the place, and its eccentricities. >> jobson: you'll look at the scenery or you'll see a pod of donsomthrough, andou juucky you are. >> kroft: you ofcters on this l. >> jobson: yeah. >> kroft: were they normal when they came here? >> jobson: ( laughs ) yeah, not all of us. >> kroft: dean wiggin turned up in a kayak 14 years ago, and he's still here. he's very good at fixing things. jobs are extremely scarce, so you have to bring one with you or use your wits to invent one. >> sarah boden: it's one of those places that really gets into your soul, i think. it's quite enchanting. >> kroft: sarah boden runs her uncle's sheep farm on eigg. she grew up here, then left to work as a music journalist in london, where she met her future partner, johnny lyn