August 17, 2016
Prepared for our ferry ride to Newfoundland, arriving at
9:45am at the ferry dock in North Sydney, Nova Scotia. Greeted nicely, but the lines move
slow. Ferry did leave on time at
11:45am. Very nice ferry, very much like
a “mini cruise ship”,
four decks for vehicles and cargo, three decks for
passengers. Very comfortable, lounges,
bars, restaurant, snack bars, play areas, etc.
We enjoyed playing cribbage, watching dolphins, and observing the
scenery. Arrived at Port aux Basques, Newfoundland at
6:30pm, lost another 30 min in time zone change. Had reserved lodging at Hotel Port Aux
Basques, just minutes from the ferry.
Nice, but expensive. Everything
here is expensive, including a 15% tax on everything. The US dollar is favorable at a 25% disc, but
prices seem to make up the difference.
Ferry "mini Cruise Ship Atmosphere"
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Newfoundland Shore Line
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We found Newfoundland to be a
very large island / province. We had only
allowed 7 days, and quickly learned probably three weeks or more necessary to
see all. So we decided to pick the most prevalent
sites. Beautiful, but lots of
driving. Concentrated on the west coast
and the world acclaimed national park Gros Morne. Awesome Views!
Driving, had to break for a moose
crossing the hwy, (sorry no time for picture) very large, would have won over
the Ford Fiesta, but braked in time.
Lodged in Rocky Harbour, just outside the park. Tomorrow a boat cruise on the Gulf of St.
Lawrence, will be seeing fjords.
Fjord Boat Cruise
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A 10:00am boat tour to the
Western Brook Pond Fjords.
Was a 45 min
walk to the boat through a very nice maintained walking trail past ponds and
marsh lands, bogs and a lot of neat wild flowers. A windy day, some overcast, cool temp of
62. Tour guide narrated us into the
fjord, explaining the development in terms of “millions of years ago”
timeline. Well, for us mid 70 year olds,
what’s a millions years. Anyway, the
scenery was spectacular, lots of waterfalls and a bear sighting. While
still called a fjord, it is actually inland now on fresh water as the path to
the ocean is closed from silt, marsh, bogs, etc. Still the water is some 500’ deep. And of course, the glacier long gone. Amazing the power of mother nature. Tomorrow
, hopefully,
whale watching in St. Anthony. Once again, we are learning weekends book
fast hear, our motel booked full for tomorrow night, so we will move to a
cottage in a less dense area.
45min Trail Walk to Boat Cruise
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Fjord
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Water Fall
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Early departure north for St.
Anthony, 9:00am. A three and one half
hour drive. Hope to book a whale
watching tour. Long drive along coast
line, a rather barren area, small villages, how they survive is beyond us. Arrived at St. Anthony at 1:00pm, lucky to
get on last tour, boat just leaving.
Weather overcast, windy and a cool 60 degrees. Two and ½ hour cruise and whale sightings
within the first hour. No breach, but
lots of “blow holes”
and a few surface breaks and some tail flaps. These are Humpbacks migrating to South
America. This is Iceberg area as well, but we are well past the season. They come all the way from Greenland and are
some 15,000 years in the making. Yes,
15,000 years. Well, our luck was in
place. Still one small iceberg chuck in
the area and our captain was on it. Captain said it was sinking. (for my buddy Mr. Crowe) Maybe he said "shrinking", not sure.
Really neat! Captain circled
several times.
A great experience. Off the boat by 3:45pm and about a 1-1/2 hour
drive to a cottage we reserved for the night.
Rain began, thank goodness not on the boat. Checked in, Tucker’s Cottages, very nice
cottage, new, nicely furnished, very comfortable. Pizza supper.
May stay another night and hike tomorrow.
Whale Watching Boat
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Whale Breaks Surface
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Iceberg Remains
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The cottage was so nice
we
decided to spend another night. They
had a wonderful hiking trail right across the street, St. Margaret trail going
to one of the first settlers in the area.
This road of course is right on the “Viking Trail”, the very first
settlers of this area. Anyway, locals
made a boardwalk from the road all the way to the settlement, some 2-1/2 miles
one way, through the marsh, bogs, and woods right to the St. Margaret’s Bay in
Reef’s Harbour, on salt water.
We spent 1 hour 15 min walking one way, but enjoyed immensely. Beautiful scenery, hoping to spot a moose,
but no such luck. Shari spotted a
sizeable critter, but we could not identify.
Then we opted to find a “Lighthouse” noted in our cottage material. Very rough road in a very remote area, but
found and enjoyed the view. Wonderful
Day! Cottage has a grill, so cooked
steaks in.
Cottage
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2-1/2 Mile Boardwalk
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Remote Lighthouse
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Left the cottage early AM heading
south for our last leg of Newfoundland.
Heading to Corner Brook for a stay at a B & B, a little change for
us
B & B Corner Brook
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. Nice place run by a single gal
representing the owners. A beautiful
travel day, awesome scenery. Looking
back, the seven days of Newfoundland was ample for us, having seen all of the
west coast, concluded we probably saw the best and the rest would be more of
the same, excepting St. John, the capital, would have been nice, but a long way
to drive. Anyway, exploring Corner
Brook, situated on the Humber Arm of the Bay of Islands, off the Gulf of St.
Lawrence.
Swan
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View Corner Brook
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Corner Brook a very nice
community, more active than we’ve seen in others. Paper mill industry here. Found a very nice hiking area around a pond
and marsh. Community project. Swans in the pond. Spent about 1-1/2 hours here, then drove to a
lookout in honor of Captain James Cook, founder and surveyor of Newfoundland,
sent by the British. Morning had a great breakfast with fellow
B&B Guests. Great Visit! Then off to our port for the ferry back to
Nova Scotia.
Arrived at Port aux Basques late
afternoon, so booked a room at a local “Housekeeping Suites” called “Shark Cove
Suites”.
Interesting! Newfoundlander’s do live an interesting
life. Clean and friendly! Ferry leaves 11:45am 10/17, arrive two hours
early again. Returning the RV will feel
Great!! Next adventure will be Prince
Edward Island.
Shark Suites
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1 comment:
Wonderful narrative. We can almost taste and smell the salt air
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