The Herald

Edward Sweeney

- BILL HEANEY

Engineer and Loch Lomond cruise boat skipper Born: April 22, 1962; Died: July 24, 2015.

EDWARD Sweeney, who has died of cancer at his home in Balloch, West Dunbartons­hire, aged just 53, was one of the longest serving and best-known luxury cruise boatmen on Loch Lomond.

A wonderful guide to the Bonnie Banks and colourful story-teller known to tens of thousands of people who visit the loch each year, Mr Sweeney was part of the family behind Sweeney’s Cruises which has operated boats on Loch Lomond since the 1880s.

Mr Sweeney was immersed in the business from the age of three when he fell into the River Leven and had to be rescued by his father after a friend, Emilio Giannini, raised the alarm.

When his father got to him to pull him out, the young Ed was clinging for dear life to the edge of a pontoon with his head under the water. Emilio’s parents owned an Italian café at nearby Balloch Bridge and after that incident the two boys became friends for life.

“It has never been forgotten Mio saved Ed’s life that day,” his brother John told friends.

Over the next half century, Mr Sweeney was seldom far from Loch Lomond and in that time he came to know every inch and fathom of the famed 24-mile loch, which is the largest inland stretch of water in Great Britain.

He was an expert on the loch’s 22 islands and 27 islets and could name the wildlife on each of them, from the red-necked wallabies and capercaill­ie on Inchconnac­han to the magnificen­t ospreys which nest in the woods in Inchcaillo­ch.

Mr Sweeney often pointed out to visitors the Highland Boundary Fault which runs south-west through the islands and informed them of the stunning views to be had of this from Ben Lomond and Conic Hill.

Inevitably there were always smiles among passengers when he steered his boat close – but never too close – to the naturist colony on Inchmurrin, the loch’s largest island.

Mr Sweeney was a fountain of knowledge about Loch Lomond, its hugely varied wildlife, its wealth of history, including the adventures of cattle rustler Rob Roy MacGregor, the folklore and the legend: Waves without win’ Fish without fin Floating islands After about 20 years he bowed to technology and gave up doing commentari­es for visitors from behind the wheel. Neil Oliver, the archaeolog­ist, historian, broadcaste­r and writer who has become widely known as the presenter of BBC television’s series A History of Scotland and Coast, took over on tape.

Mr Sweeney also knew where the best music was to be found in lochside villages; which pubs had the best beer and whiskies, and where visitors could find a bed for the night and the best fish suppers.

His nephew John Sweeney told the large congregati­on at his funeral mass, which was celebrated by Father Jim Lawlor at St Kessog’s Church in Balloch, it was seriously reckoned Mr Sweeney had spent more hours on Loch Lomond than anyone else alive – “maybe even more than anyone ever.” He added: “The family take great comfort in the fact that so much of Ed’s life was spent in such a beautiful part of the world.”

Mr Sweeney was born in the family home in Cardross Road, Dumbarton, in 1962. He was the youngest child of Mary and John Sweeney, an engineer, and brother to Jimmy, John and Noreen.

The Sweeneys lived in Dumbarton until Ed was three and they moved to Balloch after his grandparen­ts took over the boatyard. Nearly all of Ed’s life was spent around the boats and he had a fund of stories about all the characters and personalit­ies who lived and worked around the river and Loch Lomond for years. He was one himself. He went to school at St Mary’s, Alexandria, and St Patrick’s High School, Dumbarton, before serving his apprentice­ship at marine engineerin­g firm Mitchell Outboard Services in Glasgow. All the while he was helping sailing boats on Loch Lomond at the weekend, a job which he later started to do full-time.

Mr Sweeney was a talented water and snow skier and he enjoyed scuba diving.

A familiar face in Balloch’s pubs, he made no secret of the fact that once upon a time he might have been partial to a pint of lager but one day he suddenly quit cigarettes and alcohol and took to drinking diet Irn-Bru.

Ever a creature of habit, Mr Sweeney, who never married, could still be found in the pub most nights. He enjoyed holidays in Florida, Spain and Cyprus, where he would hire a motorbike, cruise around the island and go water-skiing and scuba diving.

Mr Sweeney loved sailing the fleet of boats on the Loch and took great pride in the success of the business and in his brother John, who built it up into a major force in Scottish tourism.

One of the earliest ships in the Sweeney fleet was Skylark IX, one of the “little ships” which took part in Dunkirk evacuation and which the family modernised and made a more comfortabl­e vessel before it was sold.

For many years John Sweeney gave Skylark IX’s services free to Dunkirk Veterans for an annual reunion on Loch Lomond and Ed was part of the team who looked after them.

Ed Sweeney is survived by his mother Mary and his siblings, Jimmy, John and Noreen and their children.

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