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Tribute to Ken Gunn, Scotland’s master hotelier of the seas

The man who introduced luxury sailing to the world of Scottish hospitality has died at the age of 67.

Ken Gunn, the global seafarer who skippered stars on the Hebridean Princess, was also co-owner of the multi award-winning Sonas Hotels group on Skye.
Born and brought up in Oban, the son of a sea captain, Ken was educated at Oban High School, Lewis College in Stornoway and Leith Nautical College.

He had close links with St Kilda, the isolated archipelago in the North Atlantic. His Skye-born grandfather was a church minister and his grandmother a school teacher there. They took his mother there when just a couple of weeks old and she lived there for five years.

His first job was a cadet officer with Benline Shipping, making the first of many voyages around the world at the age of 17. In 1974 he joined Caledonian MacBrayne (CalMac) as Second Mate on the MV Columba – a vessel he would later captain as the re-designed Hebridean Princess.

Ken and Anne Gunn at their wedding in Skeabost House Hotel

At the age of 28 he became the youngest Master of the CalMac fleet and plied the waters of Scotland’s West coast for more than two decades.

Prior to launching his first hotel in 2003 with his wife Anne, Toravaig House on the southern peninsula of Sleat, Ken was captain of the five star cruise ship the Hebridean Princess, sailing around the UK, Ireland and Norway. VIP guests included HRH Princess Anne, actor Sean Connery, racing driver Jackie Stewart and singer-composer Chris de Burgh.

The Hebridean Princess, twice chartered by the Queen, including a trip to celebrate her 80th birthday, and was the model for the nine bedroom Toravaig which the couple insisted should be ‘a luxury ship ashore.’

They went on to purchase and develop the nearby Duisdale House, voted Scotland’s Best Hotel in the 2013 Thistle Awards run by national tourism organisation VisitScotland and Best Independent Hotel in the Catering Scotland Awards in 2015.

In 2016 they bought Skeabost House near Portree in the north of the island and recently completed a total refurbishment and extension.

Ken at his happiest, looking after his guests

In the Islands’ section of the 2018 Scottish Hotel Awards the three hotels won six different categories among them. Skeabost, which now has 18 bedrooms, was voted Scotland’s Island Hotel of the Year in 2016 and again in 2017.

He and Anne began offering cruises for hotel guests on the 36 foot luxury yacht Solus in 2005, he as skipper and Anne as First Mate, twice updating it with larger craft, latterly the 50 foot Solus a Chuain (Light of the Ocean). The hotels were the only ones in Scotland with a luxury yacht reserved exclusively for guests. Scores of weddings were conducted on board. He took special pride in taking many guests to St Kilda, his mother’s and grandparents’ former home.

Paying tribute to her late husband, Anne said: ‘Ken was a perfect gentleman and at one with the sea.

‘From a young age he was regularly on the sea in various forms of craft. His contributions to the success of Sonas Hotels were immense. He had a firm focus on attention to detail and insisted on the highest standards.’

He is survived by Anne, a son and daughter, and his stepfamily at Skeabost.

The post Tribute to Ken Gunn, Scotland’s master hotelier of the seas appeared first on Scottish Field.

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