Discovery Trail 2018

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DISCOVERY TRAIL 2018 VISITOR GUIDE NEWFOUNDLAND LABRADOR • CANADA

COUNTLESS

PHOTO opportunities...

Be Prepared to be

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DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide 1


Table of Contents A1 AREA 1 • Chapel Arm ~ Chance Cove.......................... 5 Chapel Arm, Norman’s Cove, Long Cove, Thornlea, Bellevue Beach, Chance Cove

A2 AREA 2 • Southern Harbour ~ Goobies....................... 7 Southern Harbour, Arnold’s Cove, Come By Chance, Sunnyside, Goobies

A3 AREA 3 • Clarenville ~ Random Island.................... 11

South West Arm, HIllview, Hatchet Cove and St. Jones, Adeytown and Deep Bight, Clarenville, Random Island, George’s Brook, Monroe, Harcourt, Gin Cove and Burgoyne’s Cove

A4 AREA 4 • Port Blandford ~ Sweet Bay....................... 17 Port Blandford, Musgravetown, Lethbridge, Winter Brook, Charleston and Sweet Bay

A5 AREA 5 • Trinity & Area (Trinity Bight).................... 33 Trinity, Goose Cove, Dunfield, Trouty, Old Bonaventure, New Bonaventure, Port Rexton, Trinity East, Champney’s East, Champney’s West, Champney’s Arm, English Harbour

A6 AREA 6 • Port Union ~ Little Catalina...................... 39 Port Union (National Historic District of Canada), Melrose, Catalina, Little Catalina

A7 AREA 7 • Maberly ~ Elliston ~ Bonavista................ 43 Maberly, Elliston, Spillars Cove, Bonavista, Cape Bonavista

A8 AREA 8 • Birchy Cove ~ Southern Bay...................... 49 King’s Cove, Duntara, Open Hall, Red Cliff and Tickle Cove, Plate Cove East and Plate Cove West, Summerville, Princeton, Southern Bay

WELCOME TO THE DISCOERY TRAIL................................... 3-4 WHAT WAS RESETTLEMENT?.................................................. 10 NEWFOUNLAD & LABRADOR FUN FACTS............................... 19 DISCOVER HIKING .......................................................... 20-21 DISCOVER BIRD WATCHING............................................ 22-23 ATTRACTIONS & HISTORICAL DESTINATIONS .............. 24-25 AREA MAP......................................................................... 26-27 FESTIVALS & EVENTS....................................................... 28-29 DISCOVER ARTS & CULTURE........................................... 30-31 WHALE WATCHING .................................................................. 32 DO YOU HAVE YOUR DANCING SHOES ON?............................ 41 THE 1914 SEALING DISASTER ............................................... 42 DISCOVER GOLFING................................................................ 47 DISCOVER CRAFTING.............................................................. 48 NEWFOUNDLAND SLANG/SHORELINE TERMS EXPLAINED.. 51 DISCOVER WINTER................................................................. 52 A1

Packet

Published By: THE PACKET The 709-466-2243 Editor: Barbara Dean-Simmons Advertising Sales: Janey Coish, Caroline Frost Graphic Designer: Denise Motty Ad Design: The Western Star The Telegram MPC

No part of this publication may be reproduced without written consent of the publisher. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, the publisher cannot be held responsible for any errors or omissions that may occur. ©2018

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EMERGENCY NUMBERS RCMP Bonavista (709)468-7333 RCMP Clarenville (709)466-3211 or 1-800-709-RCMP(7267) Bonavista Hospital (709)468-7881 Ambulance (709)468-2112 Clarenville Hospital (709)466-5555 Ambulance (709)466-9911

Cover Photo: Jonathan Joy Photo Credits: Barbara Dean Simmons, Janey Coish, Bonnie Goodyear, Caroline Frost, Jonathan Parsons, Chandler Coish, Shalyn Penney, Shawna and Kris Prince-Sea of Whales Adventures, Robert BartlettTrinity Eco Tours, Bonnie McGrath, Jonathan JoyTuckmore Discoveries, Hike the Isthmus Committee, Trinity Historical Society, Ashley Fitzgerald, Andrea Sharpe, Elizabeth Burry, Paul Tilley, Rising Tide Theatre, Town of Clarenville, Town of Arnold’s Cove


Welcome to the

Discovery Trail

DISCOVERY DISCOVERY TRAIL TRAIL || 2018 2018 Visitor Visitor Guide Guide 33


Welcome to the Discovery Trail, on Newfoundland and

Labrador’s Eastern shore. Aptly named, the Discovery Trail because this is where John Cabot is reported to have first made landfall in 1497, and where you’ll find endless opportunities for learning and adventure. The Discovery Trail is easy to find. While John Cabot had to rely on the sun and the night sky to guide him, you need only turn your car West from St. John’s (Take Hwy 1, or the Trans Canada Highway West of the capital city. To come from Port Aux Basques, Corner Brook, or Central Newfoundland, take Hwy 1 East). You’ll want to have your camera charged and at the ready – the Discovery Trail is a veritable photographer’s paradise, from gorgeous scenery to natural wildlife, not to mention the colourful characters and architecture you’ll encounter along the way. If you love to hike, you are coming to the right place. The Discovery Trail offers hundreds of kilometres of trails to experience. In just about every small town there will be Civic celebrations held during the summer, on top of that, there are numerous festivals and events that run year round, so there’s always something to hold your interest on the Discovery Trail. 4 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

All of the photographs you take, will not only commemorate your time here, they will give you years of memories to cherish your trip traveling the Discovery Trail.


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Tickle Bay

Southern Harbour

Chance Cove 201

Bellevue Beach

Little Harbour East

Chapel Arm to Chance Cove

Bellevue Thornlea Long Cove

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201 203

Fairhaven

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Norman’s Cove

Area 1

Chapel Arm 80 202

TCH East to St. John’s

Area 1 of the Discovery Trail is perhaps the leasttravelled, but deserves a place on your Must See list. The TCH (Route 1) will take you over the isthmus – the narrow bridge of land that connects the Avalon Peninsula with the rest of Newfoundland. For a brief moment on the highway you can see both Placentia and Trinity Bays.

tiny town protection from wind and waves. Fishing is the mainstay in Norman’s Cove-Long Cove, and it’s here you’ll get your first glimpse of colourful fishing vessels and gear.

Taking an exit either left or right from the TCH will reward you with equally picturesque communities.

Norman’s Cove-Long Cove is also a great place to step out of the car and stretch your legs. Several hikes leave from town and offer vistas and picnic sites.

On the shores of Trinity Bay, you’ll find Chapel Arm (Route 201), Norman’s Cove-Long Cove, Thornlea, Bellevue, Bellevue Beach and Chance Cove. The towering headlands above Chapel Arm offer the

Find the head of Plumby Cove Trail at Long Rocks Road and follow it to the old Plumby Cove Municipal Park. Lookout Trail leaves from the elementary school and takes you to a viewpoint above town.

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Seaview Trail follows the headland of Chapel Head jutting into the bay. Find the trailhead at the two cemeteries. The towering cliffs often host eagles, osprey and cormorants, while the waters below are home to humpback and pothead whales, who feed on the abundant caplin in the spring and early summer. If the weather is fine, (or even if it’s not) you’ll want to make a stop at Bellevue Beach, two kilometers of Sandy Beach in the bottom of Trinity Bay it is a popular picnicking spot for visitors and residents alike. The lengthy beach is a nice place to while away an afternoon birdwatching or building sandcastles. If you’re camping, there are places to pitch and tent or park your RV, though reservations are recommended, especially during the popular summer weekends.

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There is an unsupervised swimming area if you want to take a refreshing dip. Keep driving, and you’ll find yourself in Chance Cove. This outport will offer fishing vessels and stages – wharves – lined up at the waterline. But what’s the moonscape on the surrounding hills? The Doe Hills are of geological interest. Bare hills dotted with erratics left behind by glaciers are great for exploring on foot, and you’re bound to be rewarded with breathtaking views. Across the TCH and on the shores of Placentia Bay, Fairhaven and Little Harbour East are small towns with big views. It’s worth branching off the main highway to these rural outports to see what you may find at the end of the road.


Caplin Cove

Long Beach

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Goobie’s 210

t Current

Trinity

Bay Harbour to Goobies Southern

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Area 2 Come Visit Arnold’s Cov Sunnyside

Come By Chance

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Harbour, Arnold’s Cove or Come By Chance.

If the rocks could talk, they’d have many tales to share from that time of houses being floated across the bay and families carrying all their worldly possessions aboard their boats to their new homes.

Tickle Bay

Southern Harbour

Chance Cove 201

Bellevue Beach

Little

Visit the Paddy Miller House Resettlement Museum in Southern Harbour to learn more about this interesting and controversial time in the Province’s history.

Bellevue

Area 2 of the DiscoveryHarbour Trail boasts East five busy towns. Thornlea

Southern Harbour

Arnold’s Cove

Long Cove

201 Fishing is still the mainstay in Southern Harbour, but the active community also has203 walking andNorman’s hiking Cove Fairhaven trails.

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With a population of over 1,200, Arnold’s Cove is the service hub of this area.

Its Chapel Arm

While the resettlement program of the 1950s and 202 1960s affected the entire Province, perhaps none felt the move so acutely as the tiny communities on the islands of Placentia Bay. Many residents of these islands and surrounding coves moved to Southern

hiking trails are not to be missed. The Bordeaux trail is a804-km trek that will lead you in the footsteps of the early French settlers. FoundationsTCHofEast the early homes remain, as well as a to St. John’s cemetery dating back to the early 1800s. It’s an easy

Come Visit Arnold’s Cove Come learn about the resettlement of the Placentia Bay islands in Arnold’s Cove.

Come Visit Arnold’s Cove

You can take part in Heritage Week, visit the resettled Drake House or hike our coastal “Bordeaux Trail.” Download the “Arnold’s Cove Resettlement Walk” mobile app for free at Apple’s App Store and on Google Play for Android and Blackberry users. Take a stroll through our community and experience the stories of resettlement through a self-guided tour.

Stories to Tell. Songs to Sing.

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Placentia Bay

Arnold’s Cove

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walk with your choice of picnic sites, and well worth the hike. During the Second World War, Arnold’s Cove hosted American servicemen. The War Path trail, a onekilometer hike overlooking Placentia Bay, traces their footsteps as they patrolled the shoreline on the lookout for enemies in the bay. Both trails are well maintained by the town and are worth your time. For the more athletic, Arnold’s Cove hosts the Fog Trot, a 10-km run each September. Arnold’s Cove is also home to a bird sanctuary, where many migrating birds visit each year. Canada geese, pie ducks, mallards, ruddy turnstones, spoked sandpipers, twillicks, mergansers, plomers, gulls and black ducks make regular appearances. You can also see ptarmigans, cormorants, osprey and bald eagles. 2016 marked the 50th Anniversary of the Resettlement program that was initiated by the Liberal Government of Joseph R. Smallwood. The program saw close to 1000 families who lived in outport communities “Resettled”. For some of them, they simply packed up all of their belongings on boats and left the only home they had ever known abandoned. They chose to settle in homes built in their chosen new locations, for others they packed up their belongings in their boats and floated their homes across the bay, setting up their moved house in a new place. Some welcomed the move, eager to leave the isolation of the small coves and harbours for larger towns and easier access to jobs and medical services. For others, it was heartbreaking to have to leave and still to this day if you were to ask them they would call “Home” their original communities. The Drake House is the oldest house standing in Arnold’s Cove, but it wasn’t built there. It’s an example 7627129

www.sunnysidenl.ca 1 km from Trans Canada

of one of the outport homes that was floated from the community of Haystack to Arnold’s Cove in the 1970s. It is a Registered Heritage Structure.

Come By Chance

This small town is not dominated by the salt water as most coastal communities are in Newfoundland and Labrador. Come By Chance is built along Come By Chance River, a licenced salmon river. Its biggest claim to fame is the oil refinery, which employs hundreds of people from the region. Come By Chance is also known for being the site of one of the Cottage Hospitals developed by the administration of Premier Joey Smallwood in the years after the 1949 Confederation with Canada. The hospital was built in the late 1930s, servicing many towns in Placentia and Trinity Bays. Today it is a town hall and community centre, but the birth certificates of many people in the region say they were born at Come By Chance. The beach in Come By Chance has four fire pits, so it’s a great spot for a picnic or campfire sing-a-long. While cod and lobster and other species of fish are still pursued in Placentia Bay, its waters are also plied by ocean-going oil tankers. Come By Chance is home to a deep-water port and an oil refinery. A transhipment terminal also draws international boating traffic, so the fishers of Placentia Bay now share their waters with some of the largest vessels in the world.

Sunnyside

Don’t overlook Sunnyside. As the name suggests, it’s a welcoming spot. In 1612, Governor John Guy and English colonists greeted the Beothuks, Newfoundland’s Aboriginal people, at Frenchman’s Island. The two groups exchanged gifts and shared a meal and, in honour of the peaceful meeting, Guy named the area Truce Sound.

Hike Centre Hill—the highest peak in eastern Hike Centre Hill—the highest peak in eastern Newfoundland See Hebron Oil Platform in Newfoundland ◆Visit Truce Sound Lookout ◆Hike our harbour Visit Truce Sound Lookout  TruceTruce soundsound Coastal Trail to historic Frenchmen’s Hike Coastal Trail to historic Island ◆ Frenchmen’s Island 

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The town of Sunnyside itself is beautiful, laid out like a ribbon along the water’s edge. Be sure to stop at the Peace Garden, a memorial site to the English and Beothuk meeting over 400 years ago. The Garden and associated Coastal Trail are on Frenchman’s Island, connected to the mainland by a sandspit. While the trail is well maintained, wear footwear that won’t mind getting wet. Following the road to the very end of town, you’ll find the Centre Hill trailhead. This spectacular hike will take you through marshland and wooded areas, before completing a 400-meter climb to the top of Centre Hill. Centre Hill is the highest point in Eastern Newfoundland, and the views from the top are breathtaking in all directions. If you’re up for the challenge (it’s a 10-km trek in total), it is not to be missed. The area formerly known as Truce Sound , now called Bull Arm, is well known for the construction facility of the same name, that builds offshore oil platforms.

sheltered waters of Bull Arm, for its permanent oil production site in the Jean D’Arc Basin 350 miles away. The platform took 5 years to construct, houses approximately 220 workers on rotating schedules and is capable of producing 150,000 barrels of oil per day at peak rates.

Goobies

Right off the TCH you’ll find Goobies. The roadside town used to be a busy railroad station, but now serves as a pit stop for many travellers and the gateway to the Burin Peninsula. The giant moose sculpture at the Irving gas station is a popular photo opportunity for families. (There is a twin statue in Deer Lake on the West Coast of Newfoundland). The Burin Peninsula’s Heritage Run is another premier tourist destination and you can find more information at the Visitor Information Centre in Goobies.

ADVERTISER’S LOCATOR LEGEND Places to Stop •

The building location for this dry dock and fabrication facility was chosen for the steep hills that shelter the site so well and the near shore deep water construction site.

• •

Town of Arnold’s Cove • 709-463-2323 • www.townofarnoldscove.com Town of Sunnyside • 709-472-4506 Town of Come By Chance • 709-542-3240

Please refer to area map for location reference

Town of

Come By Chance

Bull Arm was originally constructed to build the Hibernia Oil Platform in 1990. The site features the largest rebar shop in North America, office buildings, pipe shops, a concrete batch plant and other various cutting and carpentry shops.

In 2017 the Hebron Platform was towed from the

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Construction for the Hibernia Platform began in 1991. The completed platform left Bull Arm in May of 1997 and was affixed into its new permanent location a mere13 days later.

Email: townofcbc@eastlink.ca

The Town of Come By Chance would like to welcome all visitors to come and enjoy our walking trail and for the bird watchers, come see one of the top 10 bird watching areas in Newfoundland. For more information, please contact Town Office at 542-3240.

P.O. Box 89 Come By Chance, NL Canada A0B 1N0 Tel: (709) 542-3240 Fax: (709) 542-3121

Hike The Isthmus Of Avalon

6 breathtaking trails to hike with over 30+ km to challenge you! www.townofarnoldscove.com 709-463-2323

www.sunnysidenl.ca 709-472-4506

www.townofcomebychance.ca 709-542-3198

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What was...

Resettlement?

In the 1950s and 1960s the population and economy of Newfoundland and Labrador was changing. Several communities had been abandoned when residents all moved to larger centres and in 1954 the government began what became known as the Resettlement Program. The resettlement program saw several modifications over the years and by 1975 some 27,500 people from more than 260 communities had been relocated. When people did move from the islands of Placentia Bay to places like Arnold’s Cove during the Smallwood Government’s resettlement program of the 1960’s, some of them brought their homes with them, floating them across the water to be set up in their new locations. To this day the idea of resettlement still conjures a heart-wrenching era for older Newfoundlanders. The stigma of forced relocation is what spurred the government to adopt a mandatory high-consent policy for any community that wanted to resettle. However despite this policy there have been many cases where there has been a lot of resistance and disagreements between families and their neighbours. Back in the day in order to qualify for the rather modest sum of $150, the entire community had to 10 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

agree to move. These days, resettlement is still on the minds of residents of tiny towns in other parts of the province. As recently as 2013, two towns with a combined population of 96 were seriously considering a move. Financial assistance for each household offered in 2013 was $270,000, a significant increase over the scant $150 in 1954. 2016 marked the 50th Anniversary of the start of the Resettlement program of the Smallwood Government. There were a lot of other towns around this area who had to deal with issues relating to the Resettlement but Arnold’s Cove was affected the most. Arnold’s Cove was originally a town of 200 people and that population grew to an overwhelming1200 in only a matter of a couple of years.


Port Blandford

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5 George’s Brook Barton Dunfield Trouty

230

Morley’s Siding

232

Monroe Milton Waterville Old Bonaventure Harcourt Shoal Hr 230 New Burnt Clifton Cove George’s Brook Ireland’s Gin Cove 232 Barton Eye Random Monroe Milton Waterville Harcourt Heights Shoal Hr New Burnt Aspen Bk Clifton Cove Gin Cove Clarenville Random Snooks Hr Petley Heights Aspen Bk Lower Lance Cove Clarenville Elliott’s Cove Snooks Hr Petley Lower Lance Cove Britannia Elliott’s Cove Britannia Robinson’s Weybridge Weybridge Robinson’s Random Island Bight 231 Bight 231 Hickman’s Harbour Deep Bight Hickman’s Harbour Deep Bight Lady Cove New Bonaventure

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North West Brook Clarenvile - Random Island

Irela Ey

Area 3 Random Island

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Queen’s Cove

Goobie’s 210

ift Current

St. Jones Within Hillview Hatchet Cove

Southport Gooseberry Cove 205 Butter Cove Hodge’s Little Heart’s Ease 204 Long Beach Cove Caplin Cove

Ivany’s Cove

North West Brook

Sunnyside

Come By In this Chance part of the region you’ll find the main service Burin centre on the Discovery Trail. Peninsula

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Goobie’s

210

Clarenville has all you need by way of hospital, banks, Arnold’s Current Cove shopping, fuel,Swift restaurants, hotels, a police station, Placentia Tickle Bayand health Bay care professionals. This attractive town Southern Harbour Chance Cove right on the shores of beautiful Trinity BayBy has an Bellevue Come Beach Bellevue the Chance Events CenterLittlewhere you’ll find home hockey Harbour East team, the Caribous, playing throughout the winter on Thornlea the Senior Hockey League circuit. Long Cove 201

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Hodge’s Cove, Caplin Cove, Little Heart’s Ease, Butter Cove, Sunnyside Gooseberry Cove and Southport are yours to discover as you continue on route 204.

Fishing in Little Heart’s Ease dates back to the 1600s, when colonists first arrived from Poole, England. rm

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Norman’s Cove

Trinity Bay

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203

side of Southwest Arm. You’ll pass through North West Brook, Queen’s Cove and Long Beach on the southern side of the arm, where in June the caplin runs draw crowds to the beaches.

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201

Fairhaven

Chapel Arm

Placentia Bay 202

Southport

Gooseberry Cove 205 Southwest Arm Communities

Your source for history, pirates Butter and Cove even a Hodge’s Little Heart’s Ease Queen’s 204 round of golf Cove Long Beach Cove Caplin Route 204 and 205 are picturesque Cove drives along either

Trinity Bay

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Within Hillview Hatchet Cove

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Arnold’s Cove

Tickle Bay

TCH East to St. John’s

Southern Harbour

Chance Cove 201

Bellevue Beach

Little Harbour East

Bellevue Thornlea Long Cove

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201 203

Fairhaven

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Norman’s Cove Chapel Arm 80 202

TCH Ea to St. Jo 7631644

North West Brook

The centre, which also houses a 200-seat theatre, Lady Cove welcomes festivals, trade shows and performing un artists Adeytown St. Jones Random So d throughout the year.

Random Sound

Adeytown Ivany’s Cove

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St. Alban the Martyr Anglican Church in Gooseberry Cove has been standing for over 80 years. The wooden structure has a commanding view of the cove, and is the pride of many still living in the community. At the end of the road, Southport often plays host to icebergs in the spring and early summer. The small town was bustling in summer 2009 when Come Home Year celebrations drew many people and their descendants back to their hometown. Hillview, Hatchet Cove and St. Jones Within are your rewards for travelling Route 205. There are some family farms in this area and you can buy fresh produce from roadside stands in season. If you’re itching to swing your clubs, Hatchet Cove is home to Brookside Golf and RV Park, a nine-hole course with plenty of amenities and an RV park, which would require reservations during the busy summer weekends. St. Jones Within is a sheltered cove used as a haven by fishing vessels and pleasure boats. Lore has it that pirates also found safe haven here during the 1700s.

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Adeytown and Deep Bight

www.clarenvilleheritage.ca.

Adeytown and Deep Bight are connected via a lesstravelled road that runs parallel to the TCH. Once home to many sawmills, Adeytown and Deep Bight are quiet communities these days. Ask a local for directions to the swimming hole on a warm summer’s day.

Clarenville

Historically this area was actually five small towns in the bottom of Random Sound.

Recreation opportunities abound in Clarenville. There are plenty of well-maintained trails to stretch your legs. Take the family for a hike on Bare Mountain for exceptional views of Random Island, and Smith and Random Sounds. The trailhead is behind the Medical Arts building on Manitoba Drive. The Shoal Harbour Causeway Trail connects near the summit, and will take you to a viewpoint overlooking Shoal Harbour. Osprey and Eagles are often spotted from the trail.

As the railway was built and the forestry industry expanded, the towns grew together into what is now known as Clarenville. Shoal Harbour amalgamated in 1994. Clarenville has also been home to a shipyard since 1942. The Splinter Fleet — a fleet of coastal boats built for the coastal trade — took shape here.

The Rotary Trail has several access points, from Elizabeth Swan Park and from the Memorial Drive Bridge. This easy walk follows the Lower Shoal Harbour River before meandering through the treed areas of town.

Clarenville has long been an economic hub, and even hosted the very first Trans-Atlantic telephone cable in 1955. A monument to this stands on Cormack Drive.

Aside from the Events Center attractions, New Curtain Theatre offers professional theatrical productions throughout the year.

A museum operated by the Clarenville Heritage Society is housed in the old Railway station on Masonic Terrace. It is operated seasonally – you can find more information and directions on their website,

Clarenville also hosts an outdoor evening music series at Elizabeth Swan Park. The series takes place all summer and features the best of local and provincial entertainers. Shoal Harbour abuts Milton; a roadside town where

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William Epps Cormack embarked on the first crossNewfoundland exploration by a European, with his Native guide Sylvester Joe. It’s also here where you can cross the causeway to Random Island.

Random Island (Route 231)

The Hefferton Causeway was built in 1954, connecting Random Island to mainland Newfoundland. Eleven communities are home to the people of Random Island. Plan at least half a day to explore the island, and more if you plan to do some beachcombing and hiking in Britannia. Random Heights and Elliot’s Cove are the first two communities you’ll pass through. The road forks at Elliot’s Cove to Snook’s Harbour and Aspey Brook, or you can continue on to explore the rest of the island.

taking advantage of the abundant waters of Smith Sound. A hike leaves Burgoyne’s Cove near the former slate quarry; the trail will take you to the site of a 1953 airplane crash. An American B36 Peacemaker airplane met its tragic end on the hills above the community. All 23 military personnel on board were killed, including Brigadier General Richard Ellsworth. The remains of the airplane are still littered over the hills. The trail, built by the local air cadet squadron, is a short but steep hike. You’ll be rewarded with a view of Smith Sound, as well as a striking propeller monument erected in memory of the deceased.

George’s Brook, Monroe, Harcourt, Gin Cove and Burgoyne’s Cove

Route 232 branches off the 235 at George’s Brook. This road will take you down Smith Sound as far as Burgoyne’s Cove, where a slate quarry used to ship the blue and purple stone worldwide. Look across the water and you’ll see the north side of Random Island, and maybe some seabirds or whales

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ADVERTISER’S LOCATOR LEGEND Places to Stay • Crossroads Cottages • Intersection of TCH & Route 204 • 709-546-2288 • Clarenville Inn • 1-877-466-7911 • www.clarenvilleinn.ca • The Wave Hotel • 709-466-7946 • Lakeside at Thorburn •1-877-330-3319 • Restland Motel • 709-466-7636 Places to Eat • Galley Restaurant and Wheelhouse Pub • 709-466-7636 • www.restlandmotel.ca • Stellar Bistro & Lounge • Clarenville Inn • 1-877-466-7911 • www.clarenvilleinn.ca Tours • Eastern Edge Boat Tours • 709-466-7636 • www.restlandmotel.ca Places to Shop • Crossroads Crafts & NL Liquor Agency • North West Brook • 709-546-2288 • Mercer’s Marine • 709-466-7430 • Cormack Realty • 709-466-2671/7474 • www.cormackrealty.com • Lakeside at Thorburn • 1-877-330-3319 Places to Stop • Town of Clarenville • 709-466-7937 • www.clarenville.net Golf Resort • Brookside Golf Resort • Hatchet Cove • 1-877-778-2230 / 709-546-2777 • www.brooksidegolf.ca Associations • Clarenville Area Recreation Association • 709-466-7937 • www.clarenville.net/cara/ Trailer Park • Lakeside at Thorburn • 1-877-330-3319 • Brookside RV & Golf Resort • 1-877-778-2230/709-546-2777 • www.brooksidegolf.ca Publications • The Packet Newspaper • Clarenville • 709-466-2243 • www.thepacket.ca Please refer to area map for location reference

16 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide


m

New

Tickle Cove Red Cliff Open Hall

Terra Nova National Park

Plate Cove West

Keels Duntara King’s Cove

Blackhead Bay

Cove

235 Stock Cove Knights Plate Cove East Cove

Port Blandford, Musgravetown, 8 Winter Lethbridge, Brook, 6 Charleston and Sweet Bay Plate Cove

d

Clo

d unCannings

o eS

Jamestown

Musgravetown

234

Bloomfield

4

Charleston

Brooklyn

Bunyan’s Cove

Summerville

3

Area 4 Port Rexton

Lockston

Trinity

Goose Cove

Lethbridge

5

230

Morley’s Siding

230

Champney’s English Harbour

Trinity East Dunfield Trouty

New Bonaventure

bring fly-fishing enthusiasts to the area, as there are Old Bonaventure three registered salmon rivers to choose from. You do Ireland’s however need a license to fish for salmon. Eye

230

Milton Shoal Hr

Lockston Path Provincial Park

Princeton Southern Bay

Portland

233

Port Blandford

Sweet Bay

Winter Brook

Cove

Newmans Cove Amherst Cove Little Catalina Upper Amherst 237 Cove Catalina Port Union Melrose

George’s Brook 232 Barton

Monroe Waterville Harcourt New Burnt Clifton Cove Gin Cove

Route 233 will take you through Bunyan’s Cove, and past Malcolm Brown Memorial Park in Musgravetown. Lower Lance Cove Britannia The park welcomes overnight campers, as well as a dayRandom Island Here you’ll find more agriculture than commercial Hickman’s Harbour use swimming and picnic area. Deep Bight fishing, as the warm, shelteredLadyarea, which is far from Cove d un Adeytown offer excellent the biting North Atlantic winds, growing St. Jones Random So Tour Cannings Cove, Musgravetown and Bloomfield, as Within Southport conditions. SeveralIvany’s family farmsHatchet inCove the area produce Cove Hillview Gooseberry Cove well as Lethbridge, and Morley’s Siding. Route 234 will North West Butter Cove eggs, dairy andBrook produce that supply grocery stores, Hodge’s Little Heart’s Ease reward you with Brooklyn, Portland, Jamestown and restaurants and, yes, evenQueen’s roadsideLongvegetable Cove Caplin Beach Cove stands. Winter Brook. Random Heights

Aspen Bk Snooks Hr Petley Elliott’s Cove Weybridge Robinson’s Bight 231

Clarenville

205

204

Cove

On the TCH, Port Blandford is where you’ll find the Brooklyn is home to St. Andrew’s Anglican Church, Goobie’s Terra Nova Golf Resort. It is also the gateway to Terra Trinity standing since 1879. The William Pye House in Brooklyn Bay Swift Current Nova National Park. Winter months bring many and the John Hancock House in Portland are authentic snowmobilers to the area, not toSunnyside mention folks wanting examples of late 19th century and early 20th century Come By to try their luck Chance with a little ice fishing. Summer months architecture in the area.

Burin Peninsula

2

210

rm

ll A

Bu

Placentia Bay

Arnold’s Cove

Tickle Bay

Southern Harbour

Chance Cove 201

Bellevue Beach

Little Harbour East

Bellevue Thornlea Long Cove

73

201 203

Fairhaven

1

Norman’s Cove Chapel Arm 80 202

Town of

TCH East to St. John’s

usgravetown

Come visit & enjoy our beautiful

MALCOLM BROWN MEMORIAL PARK A quiet place to camp, fish, swim or just relax! us grav etow n for camping and an There are non-serviced sites excellent play area for children. Seasonal sites and trailer dumping services available. Cook Outdoors in our Chalet!

709-467-2726

COME & ENJOY OUR OCEAN VIEW HOUSEKEEPING COTTAGES, 1 & 2 BEDROOM 7620536

On Route 233 off the Discovery Trail

Aspen by the Sea Cottages

62 OCEAN VIEW CRESCENT, BROOKLYN

467-5219

7627063

DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide 17


ADVERTISER’S LOCATOR LEGEND Places to Stay • Aspen by the Sea Cottages • 709-467-5219 • By D’Bay Cabins • 709-543-2637 Trailer Park and Fun Park • Malcolm Brown Memorial Park • 709-467-2726 • Terra Nova Park • parkscanada.gc.ca • 1-877-654-2737 Service Stations • Corner Stop Irving & Kwik Way • Port Blandford • 709-543-2341 Places to Stop • Town of Musgravetown • 709-467-2726 • Terra Nova Park • parkscanada.gc.ca • 1-877-654-2737 Please refer to area map for location reference

Back on Route 230 heading East, you’ll come to Charleston, a small, picturesque community just off the main route. In 2010, the Barbour Bridge at Charleston was damaged by Hurricane Igor, severing road access to the rest of the Bonavista Peninsula. Take a side trip to Sweet Bay, where the road is built right at the water’s edge. There will be sure to be photographic opportunities along the way, so keep your camera at the ready.

The

Corner Stop

Convenience Store, Gasoline & Diesel, Coffee, Snacks, and Visitor Information. Take Out & Dairy Bar. Located at Port Blandford Intersection just East of Terra Nova National Park

Tel: (709) 543-2341

ATM Machine

Port Blandord

709-543-2637 The most “doggone” pet-friendly cabins in Newfoundland

18 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

7631648

A 4


Newfoundland & Labrador

FUN FACTS

• The official name for our Province is Newfoundland and Labrador • We actually have our own time zone – we are 90 minutes ahead of ET and 30 minutes ahead of AT • St. John’s is in fact the oldest city in North America • Water Street in St. John’s is the oldest street in North America • The most Easterly point in North America is Cape Spear, which is about a 20 minute drive from downtown St. John’s • Newfoundland and Labrador has a total area in KM of 405,250. We are of comparable size to the state of California, USA and are ranked 10th in Canada in size. • The island of Newfoundland does not have the following groundhogs, porcupines, deer, skunks or snakes – we do have plenty of Moose and Caribou. • There are approximately 30 different varieties of marine mammals in the waters surrounding the island of Newfoundland and Labrador • The Discovery Trail is approximately 355km in total • Our stunning coastline is approximately 28,900 km in size. • The capital city is St. John’s • Our Provincial bird is the Atlantic Puffin (see pic). This stunning bird is a joy to watch and you can do this in many locations on the Discovery Trail. • Population of Newfoundland and Labrador as of the census from April, 2016 was 528,448. • Newfoundland and Labrador was the 10th Province to join Confederation and that happened in 1949. Joseph “Joey” Smallwood became the first premier of the Province. • We do have an official dog breed – The Newfoundland Dog (see pic). • Our Provincial Flower is the Pitcher Plant. This beautiful flower has a wax like texture to its petals, is green and deep wine in colour and can be found mostly in boggy, marshy ground areas. (see pic) • Official game bird is the partridge. There are two different species found on the island. The Rock and the Willow Ptarmigan. They can be found in open, barren back country. • English is the primary language spoken here however there are more variations of English spoken here than any other place in the world. The sheer volume of dialects will leave you mind boggled. It isn’t only the dialects you will need to worry about, but also the different phrases and words/wording that is used. (Newfoundland Slang on page 51) DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide 19


Discover HIKING

Bordeaux Trail – During your hike along our famous Bordeaux Trail you can catch a glimpse of the magnificent coastal scenery and historical landmarks. You may also view one of the numerous oil tankers that travel to and from the nearby Transshipment Terminal and Oil Refinery. This trail is 4.5 km (12 km return including loops) and is an easy to moderate hike. War Path/ Otter Rub Trail – During the Second World War Arnold’s Cove became part of the huge defense system in Newfoundland. The American Military arrived in 1941 and set up anti-aircraft units and watch towers at this point and this is where the trail got its name. This trail is 1.0 km (2 km return) and is a moderate hike.

Old Cabot Highway to Arthur’s Hill - This Trail provides walkers and hikers with a special blend of wilderness adventure, outstanding natural beauty, wildlife and history. The view from the top of the hill is worth the climb. This trail is 2.0 km (4 km return) and is a moderate hike. Centre Hill Hiking Trail –With an elevation of 384 metres, Centre Hill is the highest point in eastern Newfoundland and a great hike. The trail starts with a moderate climb, crosses a river, winds through forest, marsh and bog, then ends with a steep 400-metre climb to the top where you will be rewarded a panoramic view that (on a sunny day) includes a glimpse of five bays. . This trail is 5.0 km (10 km return) and is a moderate hike. The trailhead is near the end of the main road in Sunnyside and is well marked. Truce Sound Coastal Hiking Trail – The trail begins with an uphill climb but soon descends to the shoreline and follows the coast to Frenchman’s Island. A Peace Garden Memorial on the island is dedicated to the Ancients Peoples that once roamed our shores. In 1612, English and Beothuk (an extinct group) met here, laughed, danced and shared a meal. This trail is 1.5 km (3 km return) and is an easy to moderate hike. Cleary Walking Trail - The trail is located in the town of Come By Chance, please follow the markers for directions. A spectacular view of our salmon river can be seen throughout the first section. The second and third sections are equally as picturesque as the first boasting views of Placentia Bay and our marina. This trail is 3.7 km (7.4 km return) and is a medium impact hike. Exit route 268 to Come By Chance from TCH and continue for 3 km along the main road. The Trailhead is located at the end of the 20 DISCOVERY DISCOVERYTRAIL TRAIL| |2018 2018Visitor VisitorGuide Guide 20

community.

Rotary Trail – The Rotary Trail is unique as urban trails go in Clarenville. It starts in commercial surroundings at the Memorial Drive Bridge over the mouth of the Lower Shoal Harbour River where it tumbles over its last fall before reaching the sea. The successive links offer hikers a variety of routes without having to retrace their steps. The last link spans the brook where it has cut an impressive little gorge in the bedrock. The degree of difficulty is low along both the Lower Shoal Harbour River and Dark Hole Brook.

Bare Mountain Trail – This 3 km loop through lush forests punctuated by rocky promontories is located in Clarenville. It starts and ends at the Manitoba Professional Building on Manitoba Drive. As its name implies, it is hill walking at its best but it is not hill climbing. The route follows contour lines wherever it can to make the ascent as easy as possible. The best view of all is at the summit that is 157.2 metres above sea level. Shoal Harbour Causeway Trail – This Clarenville trail saw construction start in the summer of 2006 with the development of the trail and pedestrian bridge parallel to the causeway in Shoal Harbour. A set of steps leading to two viewing decks overlooking beautiful Random Sound were built. These decks have story boards depicting the heritage and nature of the area. Wellness Trail – As if it were a metaphor for a healthy lifestyle, the Wellness Trail in Clarenville has no designated beginning or end. You can start at the high school or the town hall or even use it as a bridge between the Rotary Trail and the Bare Mountain Trail. It basically forms a cross pattern tending roughly towards four major compass points. Nut Cove Trail – This trail was constructed by the Clarenville Air Cadet squadron and leads you up to the remains of an American B36 Peacemaker plane that crashed in 1953. Many people from Burgoyne’s Cove attempted to rescue anyone that may have survived the crash on that stormy winter night but there were no survivors. All 23 airmen died in the crash. There is a monument at the top of Nut Cove Hill in memory of all of the men that died including Brigadier General Richard Ellsworth. In South Dakota the Air Force base was named after him now being called Ellsworth Air Force Base. There are many parts still littered all over the area.


on the Discovery Trail

Skerwink Trail – This hiking jewel of the region, is internationally recognized and was ranked amongst the top 35 trails in North America and Europe by Travel & Leisure magazine (2003). The 5.3 km coastal loop begins near St. Andrew’s Church in Trinity East and provides an opportunity to view and photograph seabirds, eagles, sea stacks, icebergs and whales (in season) as well as surrounding communities. Difficulty level is moderate to difficult.

Gun Hill Trail – This hiking trail consist of two short trails (Upper and Lower) both provide you with breathe taking view of the historic Town of Trinity and surrounding area. The upper trail (1 km) takes you to the top of the central point of the Town of Trinity, Gun Hill. The lower trail (2 km) gives you a different view of Trinity. Parts of the trail are a little difficult but well worth the hike. Upper Gun Hill is moderate to difficult and Lower Gun Hill is easy to moderate. Murphy’s Cove-Lodge’s Pond Trail – This entrance to this trail is located next to St. Catherine’s Haven in Port Union. The 7.7 km coastal loop trail will take you through the abandoned community of Murphy’s Cove and overlooks the Green Island Lighthouse. There are viewing platforms where you can photograph whales, seabirds and fishing vessels. At the halfway point you can use the lookout to view the Green Island Lighthouse which is one of the last remaining manned lighthouses in the province. It is a moderate hike. Klondike Trail – Is located on the northern section of Elliston. Years ago the trail was used regularly as a horse and cart trail. The hike of 3 km takes you from forest to wetlands, heath lands to sea. Watch for our provincial bird, the Puffin. You may also see whales, kittiwakes and other sea life as well as spectacular coastal scenery. This in an easy to moderate hike. Cape Shore Trail – This trail is a 3.5 km hike along the coastline the runs parallel to the main road from the Town of Bonavista to the Cape. You will enjoy a leisurely walk on a marked trail to the Cape Bonavista Lighthouse. Stop for a picnic along the way at the John Cabot municipal Park. This is an easy hike where you will enjoy the rugged coastline, keeping your eyes open for birds and whales (in season). Lighthouse Trail – This trail was once a country road. It is now restored, the path consists of a 1.7 km inner loop and a 3.5 km outer loop. The trails provide a stunning views of Bonavista Bay. The hike for the inside loop is easy and the outside loop is a moderate level of difficulty. Fox Island Trail – This hiking trail is a 5.5 km hike. The trail has beautiful coastal scenery and surrounding communities. Take the time to walk down and view the fishing stages and maybe get your opportunity to chat with a local resident. It is and easy to moderate hike.

HIKE LOCATIONS

Do you have a love and passion for the outdoors? Well you have certainly come to the right place! The Discovery Trail offers some of the most beautiful hiking trails in the Province. The trails vary in difficulty and in length from an easy 1km jaunt to an advanced 15 km return hike. Check out the websites for each town in each area for a more detailed description of each trail and where you will find the trail head for each of the trails listed below. Use the center Map in the guide to view all of the towns located in each area! Have fun exploring! AREA 1 – Chapel Arm – Chance Cove • Plumby Cove Trail • Lookout Trail • Sea View Trail AREA 2 – Southern Harbour - Goobies • Centre Hill Trail • War Path/Otter rub Trail • Old Cabot Highway to Arthur’s Hill • Truce Sound Coastal Hiking Trail • Cleary Hiking Trail • Bordeaux Hiking Trail AREA 3 – Southwest Arm – Burgoyne’s Cove • Bare Mountain Trail • Rotary Trail • Wellness Trail • Shoal Harbour Causeway Trail • Nut Cove Trail AREA 4 – Port Blandford – Sweet Bay • Terra Nova National Park-14 hiking/biking trails • Eagle Creek Trail AREA 5 – New Bonaventure – English Harbour • Skerwink Trail • Gun Hill Trail • Fox Island Trail AREA 6 – Melrose – Little Catalina • Murphy’s Cove-Lodge’s Pond Trail AREA 7 – Maberly - Bonavista • The Klondike Trail • Cape Shore Trail AREA 8 – Southern Bay – Birchy Cove • King’s Cove Lighthouse Trail • Tickle Cove Pond Trail

DISCOVERYTRAIL TRAIL| |2018 2018Visitor VisitorGuide Guide 21 21 DISCOVERY


Discover BIRD WATCHING In Newfoundland we have more than 225 species of nesting birds. The North Atlantic Ocean provides an ample supply of food while our rugged and rocky coastline provides lots of rocky crooks and crannies for the birds to nest. Take a stroll along any of our many hiking trails in the area and you will have prime viewing for many of these nesting sites. Why not take a boat, zodiac or kayaking tour and get to see many of these sea birds right in their own environments. Sea Birds like Common Tern, Gannets, Guillemots and Murres will amaze you with their diving abilities.

Atlantic Puffin

The Atlantic Puffin was named as Newfoundland’s Provincial bird in 1992. The Puffin nests on the islands and coast near Maberly and Elliston each spring. The puffin site, as it is known locally, is one of the premier places in the world to see these colourful beaked birds. First-time visitors are often surprised by how small the birds really are. Less than 30 cm long, these members of the auk family are better suited to swimming than flying. They live in large colonies and they spend most of the year at sea. They stay on land soles for breeding season. Their iconic brightly coloured, striped beak is only seen in breeding season. When the birds return to the open water, they will shed their colours for more muted shades. Adult puffins are burrowers, digging as much as two meters into the earth to lay their egg. When the chicks emerge, they are easy prey for gulls and other birds. The chicks that do survive take their first flight from the cliff tops down to the sea. The young will spend as many as five years offshore before returning to land to nest. They find their food underwater, and feast on the plentiful caplin that inhabit our waters each year.

Northern Gannets

Northern Gannets are one of the 22 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

largest of the seabird family. It feeds mostly on small type fish such as caplin and herring. They dive headfirst into the sea from heights sometimes more than 90 feet. They have a wing span of aprox 60- 70 inches. You will find these birds on rocky cliffs by the sea.

Gray Jay “Whiskey Jack”

The Gray Jay has such a sweet, irresistible face. Which is why it has been recently been named as the National bird of Canada. It is a friendly bird that can rarely been found outside of Canada. They have been known to feed right out of your hand. It is smaller than its cousin the Blue Jay. The colouring is gray and black and white. These birds can be seen in the forest and love the evergreen trees for nesting.

Osprey

Bellevue Beach and Shoal Harbour are both home to a large population of Osprey. This bird of prey feed mainly on fish, and are known locally as fish hawks. Their sharp eyesight affords them a clear view of underwater prey. They can be observed hovering over estuaries and shallow waters, sizing up their meal, before plunging feet-first to snatch a fish with their sharp talons.

Bald Eagles and other species

There are also plenty of bald eagles in the region, and you’ll be fortunate to catch a glimpse of one soaring over the waves, or perched atop a tree. Common Goldeneyes, Greater Scaups, Sanderlings and Mergansers frequent the shoreline, while a stroll on any of our forested trails may reward you with sightings of, Boreal Chickadee, Pine Grosbeak and warblers.

Canada Geese

Canada Geese are frequent visitors at sanctuaries located in Port Blandford and Clarenville. They have an average life span of approximately 24 years and can weigh as much as 20 pounds when fully grown. They are a large


Feathered Friends

bird with black heads and necks with white areas on their face. Their bodies are brown. After the goslings hatch like most babies they basically only eat and sleep. They stay with their parents for their first year of life.

Common Tern

This bird is a medium sized waterbird. The wings are white with dark tips and they have a long tail with many feathers their bill and feet are bright orange. They are great fishers and can often be seen plunging from high above the sea into the water to catch little fish like caplin.

Common Murre/Guillemot

These birds live in very large colonies. The Murre/ Guillemot dives sometimes more than 550 feet for food and can swim underwater for long distances of up to 100 feet. They are however not great fliers. They are not as agile as some of the other sea birds around this area. When the female lays her eggs, they are not laid in nests like most other birds. The eggs laid and incubated directly on the rocky cliffs that they live on.

Horned Lark

They are a small songbird with short necks and rounded heads. Their feathers on the top of their heads sometimes breaks into two making them look like horns. This is a very social bird, they can be found in large flocks. They look for small seeds and bugs.

Yellow Rumped Warbler

These beautiful birds of mixed charcoal grays, bright white and yellow with markings of black travel in huge flocks. They have a very unique chirp that is sharp in pitch.

DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide 23


Attractions and Historical Destinations ARNOLD’S COVE Drake Heritage House Located on the Main Road in Arnold’s Cove, is open for the summer tourist season from June 24 until Sept. 4. The Drake House was built in the 1890s in Haystack, Placentia Bay. This house was one of those that was floated from the Merasheen Islands to new locations during the Resettlement program of the 1960s, that saw entire communities in isolated areas uprooted and moved to larger centres on the island of Newfoundland. SUNNYSIDE Truce Sound Lookout About one km off the Trans Canada Highway you will find Truce Sound Lookout, a viewing platform, with storyboards, they tell the history of this area. Peace Garden Memorial Unveiled in 2012, the Peace Garden Memorial commemorates the meeting of John Guy and the Beothuk on Nov. 6, 1612. Centre Hill Trail A five-km hike to the highest point of land in Eastern Newfoundland. From the top you can see Trinity, Placentia and Bonavista Bays and part of the Burin Peninsula. COME BY CHANCE War Memorial In honour of Private Alexander Gilbert, killed during the First World War, a memorial was constructed on Jimmy Gilbert’s meadow. In 2009 the memorial was moved and placed next to the Come By Chance Anglican/United Church, where it still stands today.

Bird Estuary The estuary is listed as one of the top 10 bird watching sites in the province. Salmon River The Come By Chance River is a prime spot for Atlantic salmon. Easily accessible via the Come By chance beach, it is a fast and efficient way to enjoy the art of flyfishing as well as the enjoyment of the outdoors. CLARENVILLE Marina Sail into beautiful Random Sound and dock at our Marina, located on Marine Drive. The Marina was created thanks to the efforts of the Clarenville Rotary Club. Transatlantic Cable Monument The Transatlantic Cable Monument on Cormack Drive was erected in the summer of 2005 to commemorate the 50th Anniversary of the landing of the first Transatlantic Telephone Cable connecting North America to Europe. Next to the cable monument are two interpretive signs containing information about early communications history. War Memorial Located on Pleasant Street across from the Town Hall is the War Memorial that honours people from the area who lost their lives in World Wars I, II and the Korean War. Clarenville Heritage Society Museum The museum on Masonic Terraace off Marine Drive is housed in a building that was the former train station. The museum includes a number of collections about Clarenville’s history. Call 709-466-7489 or visit www.clarenvilleheritage.ca for details.

24 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

Canada Goose Sanctuary At the Lower Shoal Harbour River, near Cormack Drive, or near the United Church in Shoal Harbour, just past the Clarenville-Shoal Harbour causeway are great spots to watch or get photos of Canada Geese, ducks and other waterfowl. Wiseman’s Mill Wiseman’s Mill located on Balbo Drive is the site in which four brothers, Gordon, George, Ernest and Alison Wiseman, operated a Saw Log Mill between 1918 and 1949. TRINITY For more information on the historic sites in Trinity that are under the Trinity Historical Society all open mid-May and are open until mid-October. Admission fee is charged and hours of operation are seven days-a-week from 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. For more information please email: info@trinityhistoricalsociety.com or visit our website: www.trinityhistoricalsociety. com. Green Family Forge This site is fully operational as a living history museum. Drop in to see what our blacksmith may be making today and purchase some of his wares. The Cooperage Transportation and storage of fish and other goods was a crucial part of living in outports during the early years. It would be the local cooper’s skilled hands to make casks and tubs for this essential task. Trinity Museum Built in the 1880s in saltbox style by the DeGrish family, the building was acquired by the Trinity Historical Society and used as a museum since 1967.


on the Discovery Trail Lester-Garland House Reconstructed in 1996-97 to the design, structure and architectural details of the house first built in the 1760s and refurbished in 1819, this Georgian style house was the first structure of its kind in the province. Used today as a museum, learning centre and home of the archival collection of the Trinity Historical Society. St. Paul’s Anglican Church Neo-Gothic wooden church built in 1894, featuring arched windows and a tower with a spire in the Gothic Revival architectural style. Self- guided tours. Trinity Mortuary Chapel A wooden, Gothic Revival church built in the 1880s. Deeply pitched gable roof, arched windows, and stained glass memorials in honour of local men who fell in the First World War. Hiscock House Provincial Historic Site The home of Emma Hiscock (circa 1910). Guides in period costumes performing everyday chores. Open daily, 10:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. from late spring to early fall. Call (709) 464-2042. Roman Catholic Church of the Most Holy Trinity Self guided tours of this Wooden, Gothic Revival Style church built in 1833, with tower being added in 1880. Rising Tide Theatre A full season of plays, dinner theatres, and special events produced by Trinity’s professional theatre company. The New Founde Land Historical Pageant and guided walk. Call (709) 464-3232 for show schedules.

PORT UNION The Factory Guided tours offered daily at the Factory, on the Port Union waterfront. Factory open 9 a.m. - 10 p.m., May to September. Call (709) 469-2207.

The Garrick Theatre Located on Church Street, Bonavista. For information on upcoming events at the Garrick, visit their website at garrickboxoffice@aibn.com or call 709468-5777.

The Bungalow The home of Sir William Coaker sits on a hill opposite the Factory. Guided tours of the Bungalow are offered weekdays.

Mockbeggar Plantation Provincial Historic Site 19th century house and grounds which served as a salt fish store, salmon packing house, barter shop, temporary Methodist Church, Salvation Army Corps headquarters, and of course, home residence of Frederick Gordon Bradley. Open daily, 10 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. from late spring to early fall. Call (709) 468-7300.

ELLISTON Sealers Interpretation Centre Home from the Sea: Through interpretation including artifacts, art and multimedia you will experience a sealers world. Call (709) 476-3003 or email info@homefrom thesea.ca or visit the web site homefromthesea.ca. Root Cellars 135 traditional root cellars built into the grassy hills of Elliston. The Bird Island Puffin Festival takes place in this “root cellar capital of the world” in mid-July. James Ryan Shop: A restored shop designed by prominent merchant James Ryan that operated as a mercantile premises from circa 1900 to 1978. BONAVISTA Ryan Premises National Historic of Canada Site This site commemorates the 500 year history of the fishery along the East Coast of Canada. For details, please call (709) 468-1600. Ye Matthew Legacy A magnificent full-scale 65-foot replica of John Cabot’s Matthew. Call (709) 4681493.

Cape Bonavista Lighthouse Provincial Historic Site A guided tour of a restored late mid-19th century lighthouse with living quarters furnished and decorated as they would have been in the 1870 period. Open daily, 10 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. from May to October. Call (709) 468-7444. Memorial United Church The largest wooden church in Eastern Canada, constructed in 1918 in the Classical Revival style. The Dungeon On the road between Lance Cove and Bonavista you’ll find one of nature’s carvings - the Dungeon. It is a circular opening in the cliff with two seaward-side channels where the sea roars through. It is approximately 300 feet across and 15 metres deep. Tidal action has created a natural beach. You can swim or go through the channels in a small punt.

DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide 25


26 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

3

Thorburn Lake

233

Lady Cove Random Sound

Open Hall

Red Cliff

230/235 Junction

5

Old Bonaventure

Ireland’s Eye

New Bonaventure

230

6

235

238

7

Maberly

Elliston 230

Spillar’s Cove

Newmans Cove Amherst Cove Little Catalina Upper Amherst 237 Cove Catalina Port Union Melrose

Birchy Cove

H

Bonavista

Champney’s English Harbour

Port Rexton

8 Trinity East Dunfield Trouty

Trinity

Lockston Goose Cove

Summerville

Princeton Southern Bay

Lockston Path Provincial Park

Plate Cove

Stock Cove Knights Plate Cove East Cove 235

Keels Duntara 235-20 Blackhead King’s Cove Bay

235-19

Tickle Cove

Plate Cove West

Random Island

Charleston

230-14

Sweet Bay

Long Islands

Burgoyne’s Monroe Waterville New Cove Harcourt Burnt Clifton Cove Gin Cove Random Heights Sm Aspen Bk ith Sound Snooks Hr Petley Lower Lance Cove Elliott’s Cove Britannia Weybridge Robinson’s Bight 231 Hickman’s Harbour

Morley’s Siding

Brooklyn

234

Portland

Winter Brook

Jamestown

Lethbridge

George’s Brook 232 Barton

Deep Bight

H

Clarenville

Milton Shoal Hr

230

4

Bloomfield 230

Musgravetown

Cannings Cove

d oun

nd

ou an S

m

New Terra Nova National Park

eS

d

Clo

Bunyan’s Cove

Port Blandford

TCH West to Gander

Bonavista Bay

Cape Bonavista Cape Bonavista Lighthouse Dungeon Provincial Historic Site Provincial Park


Southern Harbour

Arnold’s Cove

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201

Tickle Bay

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Bellevue Beach

Chance Cove

Sunnyside

Little Harbour East

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Queen’s Cove

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Arm

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Chapel Arm

Norman’s Cove

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Long Cove

Thornlea

Bellevue

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Grand Bank

Gander

St. John’s

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Hospital

Map Concept/Design © Randy Musseau

Route #

National Historic Site

National Park

Airport

Trans Canada Highway

Highway

Community

LEGEND

ISLAND OF NEWFOUNDLAND Newfoundland & Labrador, Canada

Port aux Basques

Corner Grand FallsWindsor Brook

St. Anthony

Discovery Trail

TCH East to St. John’s

Trinity Bay

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St. Jones Within Hillview Hatchet Cove

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Fairhaven

Goobie’s

Come By Chance

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Placentia Bay

Woody Island

Swift Current

Burin Peninsula

Photo courtesy Ed Vincent

North West Brook

Ivany’s Cove

Adeytown

Bu

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Festivals and Events APRIL TO OCTOBER

The New Curtain Theatre offers a variety of productions throughout the year. Their home is at the former Milton-George’s Brook United Church in Milton; it is a unique performing space and worth a visit. On the first Saturday of each month the MiltonGeorge’s Brook Community Cultural Centre also has Community Market, featuring local and visiting vendors who sell their wares. While you are at the Market stop by the Curtain Call Market Café for a quick bite to eat. For more information please contact – communitylegacyfoundation@gmail.com or call 709-466-7490.

MAY TO OCTOBER

Music lovers get ready! The Garrick Theatre in Bonavista hosts a music festival each summer called the Saturday Summer Music Series. On Saturday nights, from May to October, the Garrick will stage some of Newfoundland’s finest musicians. It will be a multi-genre festival with music of all types and something for everyone. For more information, call or visit online on Facebook and Twitter. Tickets can be purchased online at www. garricktheatre.ca or contact the box office.

JUNE TO SEPTEMBER

The Seasons in the Bight Theatre Festival features Rising Tide’s award-winning blend of history, drama, and culture, set amidst the magnificent backdrop of historic Trinity with some of the province’s finest professional artists offstage and on. Box office opens midApril. T: (709) 464 3232 TF: (888) 464 3377 Email risingtide@nf.aibn.com Website: www. risingtidetheatre.com

JUNE

Drake Heritage House in Arnold’s Cove opens for the tourist season June 24 to September 4. The craft shop will also be open.

JULY 1 – SEPTEMBER 18

Honouring Our Own – WWI exhibit featuring local people who served. Exhibit is in Trinity at the Lester Garland House on the second floor.

JULY 1

JUNE TO AUGUST

Thursday Nights Clarenville Arts Under the Stars offers free series of entertainment performances on Thursday nights at 7 p.m. at the Elizabeth Swan Park throughout the summer. In case of rain, events are held in the Eastlink Events Centre. Contact Clarenville Town Hall at 709466-7937.

Memorial Day (Beaumont Hamel) ceremonies at War Memorials in Clarenville and Bonavista and elsewhere in the region. In remembrance of the First Newfoundland Regiment soldiers who fell at the Battle of Beaumont Hamel, France, on July 1, 1916. Services begin at noon in most locations. Check with local Town Halls for details. Canada Commemorates its Birthday with Celebrations *Town of Arnold’s Cove – Visit www. townofarnoldscove.com or call 463-2323. *Town of Sunnyside - Visit www.sunnysidenl. ca or call 472-4506. *Town of Come By Chance - Visit www. townofcomebychance.ca or call 542-3240.

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*Town of Clarenville - Visit www.clarenville. net or call 466-7937. *Town of Port Blandford - Visit www. portblandford.com or call 543-2170. *Town of Musgravetown - Contact 467-2726 *Town of Trinity Bay North - Visit www. trinitybaynorth.com or call 469-2571. *Town of Trinity – Visit www.townoftrinity. com or call 464-3836. *Town of Bonavista - Visit www. townofbonavista.com or call 468-7747.

JULY 16-22 (Clarenville Day is July 18)

Clarenville Days Celebrations Activities will include kitchen party, folk festival, pancake breakfast, fish and brewis, community barbeque, kiddy bike parade, pet show, fireworks, boat parade, dances, games and fun. Activities will be held at various locations in the community along with Fun Day at the Elizabeth Swan Park on Wednesday, Contact the Town of Clarenville at 709-466-7937 or info@clarenville.net.

JULY 15-22

Elliston Bird Island Puffin Festival An event featuring live local entertainment and traditional meals including a Jiggs Dinner cooked with vegetables stored over the winter in a root cellar. The festival also promotes up and coming talent through the Peninsula Idol. Other events include beach barbecue, motorcade and a hike.

JULY 21

Fog Festival Arnolds Cove Annual Fog Festival has many activities that the whole family will enjoy! Activities are for all ages and will take place at the Recreation Complex. There will be live music entertainment on the rink starting at 7pm. For more details contact www. townofarnoldscove.com or call 463-2323.

JULY 20-22

Port Rexton Festival. Great Community fun for the whole family! For details, please contact the town hall at 464-2006.


JULY 27-29

Bonavista Day Celebrations The schedule is jam-packed! With events for children, seniors and everyone in between, there is something for all ages. The town celebrate this multiple-day event with food, fun, games of chance, a garden party, live entertainment and of course fireworks. Come out and enjoy the celebrations. You will have a chance to visit old friends and to meet new ones. For more information, visit www. townofbonavista.com or call the Town Office at 468-7747.

of different sporting events. Possible events are ball hockey, basketball, bowling, track and field and more. Contact the Town of Clarenville at 466-7937 for more information.

AUG. 10-12

Trinity Bay North Summer Festival Trinity Bay North hosts their annual summer festival. Featuring plenty of things to keep your family entertained! For more information please contact the town at 709-469-2571 or visit their website www.trinitybaynorth.com.

AUG. DATE TBD

Sunnyside Soiree Activities include a traditional dinner and kitchen party, kids events and activities, a dance and a folk festival. To be held at Badger Brook walking track and/or Sunnyside Lions Club. The Soiree Dance will be on August 4th, Trigger Finger is the band for the night!

AUG. 17

July 8 - 13

Arnold’s Cove Heritage Week Arnolds Cove Annual Heritage Festival has many activities that the whole family will enjoy! For more details contact www. townofarnoldscove.com or call 463-2323.

July 30 – Aug 5

Bonavista, Church Street Festival The Church Street Festival is a cultural event designed to revitalize the main street in Bonavista from Ryan Premises to Swyers Store. Few old main streets have survived in Newfoundland, especially in the outports where they have been left to decay in favor of suburban style development out on the highroads. Watch for daily activities along Church Street during the festival. For more information, call 468-5777 or 468-2880.

DATE - TBD

2018 Vista Regional Summer Games Young athletes from Clarenville and surrounding areas will take part in a variety

The 18th Annual Trinity Historical Society Auction and Garden Party Starts at 3 p.m. at the Trinity Museum Garden, Church Road. A wide variety of items will be up for bids – antiques, books, furniture, gift certificates, hand crafted items. For more information contact Jim Miller at 709-4643599 or ttci@nf.sympatico.ca or visit our website www.trinityhistoricalsociety.com or check us out on Facebook under Trinity Historical Society.

AUG. 18-19

Trinity Festival Come and join us in Trinity for two days of fun filled activities. Games of chance, barbeque, music and volleyball, dance on Saturday night. Fireworks at dusk at the waterfront in Trinity on Sunday. For more information contact the Town of Trinity at 709-464-3836.

AUGUST 25-26

Cultural Craft Festival Cultural Craft Proudly Presents a craft festival at the Coaker Factory, Port Union. For more information visit www.culturalcraft.com or on Facebook or twitter @culturalcraft

SEPTEMBER 14-15

Elliston Roots, Rants and Roars Festival A regional celebration of the natural gifts of Newfoundland & Labrador Food, Culture, Land and Sea.

*PLEASE NOTE THAT SOME OF THESE DATES AT THE TIME OF PRINT WERE TENTITIVE for more information please contact the communities for confirmation of dates.

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Discover Taking a cultural tour of Newfoundland’s East Coast is easy. Just set your sights on The Discovery Trail, where arts and cultural experiences abound. On the Discovery Trail there are many little artisan shops, featuring arts and crafts, jewelry and rug hooking. In Clarenville, the Annual Arts Under the Stars concert series is known for attracting high-caliber performers from across the province. The Thursday night shows are held under open skies in Elizabeth Swan Park, and are attended by entire families. Keep an eye out for the posted schedule, and plan to attend. Also in Clarenville, the Eastlink Events Centre hosts sporting and cultural events in their stadium and adjacent theatre. The New Curtain Theatre offers a variety of productions throughout the year. Their home is at the former MiltonGeorge’s Brook United Church in Milton it is a unique performing space, and worth a visit. The Second Saturday of each Month the Milton-George’s Brook Community Cultural Centre also has a Community Market and while you are there stop by the Curtain Call Market Café for a quick bite to eat. For more information please contact communitylegacyfoundation@gmail.com or 709-466-7490. Meanwhile, community and church groups in almost every

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small town host annual variety shows. You may not catch all the jokes, but you’ll appreciate the humour and enjoy the opportunity to see local undiscovered talent. Rising Tide Theatre is a professional theatre company based in Trinity. The Theatre offers a full catalogue of productions each year. Some of the productions carry on into September. Naturally, the Trinity Pageant offers many tableaus of life in outport Newfoundland before modern conveniences came to our shores and will give you the broadest idea of Newfoundland of yesteryear, but any play by this awardwinning company will leave you feeling full of love and emotion for this place. In Trinity and area, for movie buffs, Newfoundland’s stark landscape has served as the backdrop to many silver screen productions. Kevin Spacey and Jullianne Moore starred in The Shipping News, which was filmed in and around Trinity. You can visit the set of the film adaptation of Random Passage by Bernice Morgan at New Bonaventure. In 2013, an English remake of The Grand Seduction was filmed in Champney’s. The Grand Seduction featured actors Gordon Pinsent, Taylor Kitsch and Brendan Gleeson and also many locals. As for home-grown culture, people who call the Bonavista Peninsula their home are living it every day. Salt air and


ARTS & CULTURE

hard work are as much a part of life here as you may expect. That is, ever-present and all-encompassing. Bonavista has hosted film crews for everything from documentaries to music videos. Don’t forget your camera! Also in Bonavista, the newly-restored Garrick Theatre is a multi-purpose performance space for theatrical productions, as well as hosting dance and speaking tours, and even the latest cinematic blockbuster.

While you take in the cultural attractions and hike spectacular trails, take the time to read the storyboards to learn about local legends and lore. But best of all, take the time to engage in conversation with the shopkeepers and hikers you meet along the way. You never know when your next inspiration will strike.

Route 235 from Bonavista to Southern Bay is less trodden by tourists, but the arts are thriving here just as well. In Duntara, visit the 2 Rooms Contemporary Art Projects historical saltbox house which was hand built in 1881, it was used originally as a fisherman’s house. The home is now renovated and used as a gallery and museum. Many more local artists and craftspeople make their homes and art with vistas of the Atlantic Ocean for inspiration. Try a cup of culture for yourself. A ‘boil up’ is the local term for a picnic. Boil the kettle over a small fire in the woods or down on the landwash, and enjoy your cup of tea with only the sound of waves and gulls to keep you company.

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There she Blows!

WHALE WATCHING ON THE DISCOVERY TRAIL

The Humpback Whale is perhaps the region’s most visible whale. These immense mammals return from their breeding and calving grounds in the Caribbean. They are identified by their humped dorsal fin and huge tail, which they display only on deep dives. DID YOU KNOW the white markings on the humpback whale’s tail are similar to your fingerprint? Each one is unique to that whale, and serves to identify each animal for whale researchers and scientists alike. Their blow, or spray, is balloon-shaped. Scan the horizon for these tell-tale mists to see a humpback at play. FIN WHALES are the largest of the whales you’ll spy in Newfoundland waters. These can measure up to 20 meters in length! They are less demonstrating than the humpback, but you’ll still be most impressed with their sheer size if you are lucky enough to see one. SPERM WHALES have only recently been recorded in the area. Shawna and Kris Prince of Sea of Whales Adventures have identified several retuning to the area each year. These are not normally seen from land, as they prefer much deeper waters typically found offshore. However, Bonavista Bay has some deep channels that have made a few Sperm Whales accessible to whale-watching tours. MINKE WHALES are shy creatures. They will normally steer clear of fishing vessels and tour boats, but these have been spotted in Summerville Arm. And Southern Bay, Just don’t blink! These whales move quite quickly, and only surface for a moment at a time. PILOT OR POTHEAD WHALES ARE TOOTHED WHALES that travel in large groups. It is not unheard of to see 100 or 32 DISCOVERY DISCOVERY TRAIL TRAIL || 2018 2018 Visitor Visitor Guide Guide 32

more at once! These used to be very a common sight in Trinity and Bonavista Bays. ORCAS OR KILLER WHALES Better known on Canada’s West coast, Orcas do live in the North Atlantic as well. It is rare to see a pod of these black and white creatures, but there are generally a few sightings every year by fishermen or tour boats. Maybe you’ll be one of the lucky ones this year! WHITE BEAKED DOLPHINS, WHITE-SIDED DOLPHINS, AND HARBOUR PORPOISES Visitors are often surprised to hear there are dolphins in these cold northern waters, but there are – and many of them at that! It is not unusual to see a superpod of hundreds of dolphins congregate in the fall of the year. White sided dolphins are known locally as squid-hounds for their appetite for squid. Bob from Trinity Eco Tours has had many great encounters with these amazing creatures. BELUGA WHALES are not habitual inhabitants on Newfoundland’s east coast, but the odd young white whale has been known to wander from their pod and end up around the bays and wharves of the Discovery Trail. If seeing Whales is in your travel plans, there are several Tour Operators in the Area that can help you cross seeing them up close and personal off your “Bucket List”.


Sweet Bay

Summerville

Lockston Path Provincial Park

Princeton Southern Bay

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Port Rexton Lockston

Trinity

Goose Cove

5

230

Champney’s English Harbour

Trinity East Dunfield Trouty

Trinity, Goose Cove, Dunfield, Trouty, Old Bonaventure, New Bonaventure, Port Rexton, Trinity East, Champney’s West, Champney’s East, and English Harbour

Area 5

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TThe tiny town of Trinity comes alive in the summer months. SoundTourists flock to the area, and many people om Rand from this Province and beyond have summer residences Southport here. Much of the town has been preserved, and the best Gooseberry Cove way to see it all is on foot. Butter Cove

Little Heart’s Ease The n

Trinity Historical Society celebrated its 50th Anniversary in 2014, and the work they’ve done over the past five decades is admirable.

Trinity Bay

The colourful town is home to several historic points of interest, including the Lester Garland Premises, the Cooperage, the Green Family Forge, the Court House, Gaol and General Building, Fort Point Military Site and the Trinity Archives and Museum, all owned and operated by the Trinity Historical Society. There’s also the Hiscock House Provincial historic site, as well as the impressive Anglican Church, the Roman Catholic Church and the Trinity Mortuary Chapel. Equally visible in town is the Rising Tide Theatre Company. This professional troupe offers dozens of productions each summer and fall, including the longrunning New Founde Lande Pageant, a historical jaunt around town with jovial actors and somber scenes highlighting the highs and lows of the early years in Trinity. It, and Rising Tide’s other impressive offerings, are not to be missed.

ExpEriEncE culturE and History

Trinity Historical Society 7620544

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Discover the Trinity Experience www.trinityhistoricalsociety.com 709•464•3599

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ornlea Long Cove

73

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man’s

Chapel Arm 80

TCH East to St. John’s

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A popular tourism hub, this is the place to seek out whale watching tours, sea kayaking adventures, and guided walks around town, as well as quaint shops offering lots of homemade Newfoundland treasures for sale. The movie “Maudie” starring Ethan Hawke and Sally Hawkins was partially filmed in Trinity and other small communities in the area. If you have seen the movie you will have to watch it again to see if you can spot the areas used for filming.

Goose Cove, Dunfield, Trouty, Old Bonaventure and New Bonaventure

Route 239 continues through the communities of Goose Cove, Dunfield, Trouty, Old Bonaventure and New Bonaventure. This area was hit hard by Hurricane Igor in 2010, and debris and rock that were carried downstream by rushing floodwaters are still visible in the area, particularly in Trouty. Dunfield’s Admiral’s Fort Point was integral to the defense of Trinity in the 1700s. The gravel road to the point has some sharp turns and steep inclines, but is worth it for a step back in time to early military operations in Newfoundland.

Filming of the movie “The Grand Seduction,” took place in this area in the summer of 2012. Scenes were shot in a number of small communities in the area of Trinity Bight such as Champney’s, Bonaventure and English Harbour. One of the many scenes from the movie took place at “Joes Place” which is bar that was constructed for the film and then gifted to the community. “Joes Place” is located in the community of New Bonaventure, stop by for a great photo opportunity! The Grand

• Spacious fully equipped modern accommodations • Minutes from Rising Tide Theatre & historic sites • Hike Skerwink Trail from our door • Short walk to Port Rexton Brewery

Now offeriNg oNliNe BookiNgs www.sherwoodsuites.com • 1-877-464-2133

7620574

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ocean view dining 4.5 star rooms and suites 877.464.3240 www.fishersloft.com

7631650

Your Home Your Home Away From HomeHome Away From

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Seduction cast included renowned Newfoundland actors Gordon Pinsent, Cathy Jones, and Mark Critch. Taylor Kitsch (star of the Hollywood film Battleship) and Irish actor Brendan Gleeson were also big names on the cast as well as a number of locally talented actors. The film is a remake of the successful 2003 Quebec film “Seducing Doctor Lewis” better known by the original French title “La Grande Séduction”. This movie sees Pinsent playing the role of an old timer in a dying small town. Together with the mayor, played by Brendan Gleeson, and the bank manager, played by Mark Critch, the trio, with the assistance of the town’s people, hatch a plan to seduce a young doctor into living there permanently. The kicker? If they fail to secure a resident doctor, an oil and gas corporation will choose another town to set up shop, all but eliminating any hope the town has of salvation and economic independence. In total Fifty-one crewmembers were hired from the Province, with 70 local extras also being called on to fill background roles. The film made its debut at the Toronto Film Festival in 2013.

the now abandoned communities of Kerley’s Harbour, White Point and George’s Cove. There is also a Tea Room offering homemade delicacies. A six-kilometer hike leaves from the Random Passage site to British Harbour, another community that was resettled in the 1960s. The first two kilometers are relatively easy, and bring you to Kerley’s Harbour. The next four kilometers to British Harbour are a little more difficult. Be sure to come prepared and bring extra bug repellant as the trail passes through thick forest at times.

Port Rexton and Trinity East

From Trinity, you certainly noticed the community across the water. That’s Trinity East, and it’s here you’ll find the trailhead for the world-renowned Skerwink Trail.

“Be Natural - Hike our Shores”

7620549

PORT REXTON

HEART OF THE BIGHT

Where land, sea & old friends meet 709-464-2006

New Bonaventure, Trinity Bay (Route 239)

MID MAY TO MID OCTOBER DAILY TOURS 10:00 AM & 2:00 PM

Adults $90.00 including HST 16 yrs and under $60.00 including HST

Tel: 709-464-3856 709-464-7131 and 709-464-7129 bruce@ruggedbeautyboattours.net www.ruggedbeautyboattours.net

7631651

New Bonaventure also boasts the Random Passage Film Site. Constructed in 2000 for the mini-series based on Bernice Morgan’s book of the same name, the site is now a tourist attraction for visitors to learn what life was like on these shores in the early 1800s. The Admission area for the site is housed in the original school building that would have been built to serve New Bonaventure and

Take a three hour journey back in time by sea to the enchanting and long abandoned communities of Kerley’s Harbour, Ireland’s Eye and British Harbour. Hear stories of the past and see old photos. Possible sightings of eagles, seabirds, whales, waterfalls, wild flowers & icebergs.

A professional theatre company since 1978.

SEASONS

2018 IN THE BIGHT Trinity, Newfoundland

7628305

An award-winning blend of drama, history and culture, performed in one of the province’s most captivating settings.

Toll-free: 1-888-464-3377 Local (709) 464-3232 risingtidetheatre.com

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A 5


A 5

Champney’s West, Champney’s East, and English Harbour

Fox Island Trail is less popular than the Skerwink trail, but equally rewarding. It hugs the shoreline in Champney’s West, where you’ll see the same jawdropping beauty you’ve become accustomed to but never grown tired of. At Fox Island (not really an island, but a large headland attached to the mainland by a rocky isthmus) you can

English Harbour is home to the English Harbour Arts Association, housed in the historic All Saints Anglican Church. The wooden structure built in 1889 casts an impressive eye over the town and bay. You can also leave town on foot and walk the five-km old road to the Horse Chops, a dominate headline in Trinity Bay.

@hikediscovery

Gun Hill Trail - Trinity Klondike Trail - Elliston Cape Shore Trail - Bonavista Lighthouse Trail - King’s Cove Fox Island Trail - Champney’s West Skerwink Trail - Port Rexton/Trinity East Murphy’s Cove to Lodge’s Pond Trail - Port Union

7621614

Trinity East and Port Rexton are welcoming towns that enjoy many visitors thanks to the nearby draw of Trinity. The other attraction is Lockston Path Provincial Park, just a short distance on the graveled Route 236. The Provincial park day use area is nice for swimming and picnicking, and also offers a 2-km trail well suited for families.

scramble up a steep incline and enjoy the view of Trinity Bight from above. The pond at the base of the climb is home to otters, and you may spy other wildlife such as foxes and birds along the trail.

The Eriksen Premises Our restaurant features a relaxed atmosphere serving Traditional cuisine • Catering to special dietary needs upon request • Gift shop featuring Newfoundland crafts, art & jewellery

4-Star ★★★★ Accomodations 36 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

709-464-3698 or 709-464-7524 www.newfoundlandexperience.com

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The five-km trail loops around the headland between Trinity East and Port Rexton. You could see seabirds, eagles, whales, sea stacks and icebergs, depending on the season. You’re sure to meet like-minded visitors and locals alike on this well-maintained and well-marked trail.


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ADVERTISER’S LOCATOR LEGEND Places to Stay • Fishers’ Loft Inn • Port Rexton • 1-877-464-3240 • www.fishersloft.com • enquiries@fishersloft.com • Sherwood Suites & Motel • Port Rexton • 1-877-464-2133 • www.sherwoodsuites.com • Erikson Premise • 709-464-3698 • www.newfoundlandexperience.com • Trinity Eco Tours Home • 709-464-3712 • www.trinityecotours.com Places to Eat • Dock Marina Restaurant • Trinity • 709-464-2133 • www.dockmarina.com • Sweet Rock Ice Cream Shop • www.sweetrockicecream.com • Fishers’ Loft Inn • Port Rexton • 1-877-464-3240 • www.fishersloft.com • enquiries@fishersloft.com • Sophia’s Casual Dining • 709-464-3698 Theatre • Rising Tide Theatre • Trinity • 1-888-464-3377 • www.risingtidetheatre.com • risingtide@nf.aibn.com Tours • Atlantic Adventures • Trinity • 709-464-2133 • www.atlanticadventures.com • Sea of Whales • Trinity • 709-464-2200 / 427-1217 • www.seaofwhales.com • Trinity Eco-Tours • 10 Main Road • Trinity • 709-427-6788 • www.trinityeco-tours.com • bartlett60@hotmail.com • Operating May 15 to Oct 15

Rugged Beauty Boat Tours • 709-464-3856 • www.ruggedbeautyboattours.net

Places to Shop • • • • •

Mirabella by Elizabeth Burry Studios • 709-697-1061 • www.elizabethburry.com Aunt Sarah’s Chocolate Shop • 709-436-2015 • www.auntsarahschocolate.ca Dock Marina Gallery • Trinity • 709-464-2133 • www.dockmarina.com Fishers’ Loft Inn • Port Rexton • 1-877-464-3240 • www.fishersloft.com • enquiries@fishersloft.com Erikson Premise • 709-464-3698

Places to Stop • • •

Town of Port Rexton • 709-464-2006 Town of Trinity • 709-464-3836 Town Historical Society • www.trinityhistoricalsociety.com

Please refer to area map for location reference

Trinity, NL

Fresh Seafood • Traditional Dishes • Casual Cusine Newfoundland Art & Photograhs • Quality Handicrafts Sails, Whales, Birds & Bergs 709-464-2133 • 709-464-2596 (off season) dockmarina@hotmail.com • www.dockmarina.com

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ve

Blackhead Bay

Cove

k Knights Cove

8

Newmans Cove Amherst Cove Little Catalina Upper Amherst 237 Cove Catalina Port Union Melrose

6

Port Rexton

230

Port Union, Melrose, Catalina and Little Catalina

Area 6

on dark rocks even on seemingly calm days. Winter storms here are spectacular, with ocean spray flying over the roads. It’s a picturesque community on fine summer days.

Champney’s English Harbour Port Union, Catalina and Melrose amalgamated under one municipality, Trinity Bay North, in 2005. Little Trinity East unfield Catalina joined several years later. The region has struggled under difficult economic times in recent uty years, with the decline of the commercial cod and seal fisheries. A shrimp plant, operated by Ocean Choice International, was heavily damaged by Hurricane Igor in 2010 and the company decided to shut down that venture location for good less than a year later.

Port Union’s claim to fame is being North America’s only Union-Built town.

All the same, the area has a thriving community spirit and several claims to fame.

The Sir William Ford Coaker Heritage Foundation has been steadily working to restore the original site of the plant and company houses, as well as Coaker’s residence, The Bungalow.

The coastline of Melrose is unique, with waves crashing

Sir William Coaker was the driving force behind the Fisherman’s Protective Union (FPU). He spearheaded the union, garnering support for the FPU up and down Newfoundland’s east coast in the early 1900s. The town was founded in 1916, where the union’s trading company, salt fish plant and electric company were headquartered.

Enjoy coastal vistas &

geological treasures in our historic communities

Tour our fishing community with rugged shoreline, Melrose

• Hike Murphy’s Cove to Lodge’s Pond Trail • Hike Little Catalina to Maberly Trail • Visit Port Union National Historic District Only Union Built Town in North America

Have questions, stop in at the

MELROSE, PORT UNION, CATALINA, AND LITTLE CATALINA Municipality of Trinity Bay North P. O. Box 91 Port Union, NL A0C 2J0 Ph: (709)469-2571 • Fax: (709)469-3444 Web: www.trinitybaynorth.com

Swim glacier created Look Out Pond, Catalina

See Arch Rock, Little Catalina

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Visitor Information Centre at The Women’s Institute Craft Shop located on Route 230 between Melrose and Port Union

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A 6

Tour the historic street as well as the Factory for more on the fascinating history of this unique town and its founder. The Factory building was also home to the Fisherman’s Advocate newspaper and printing press. During its peak in 1913, the Fisherman’s Advocate had a daily circulation of 11,000! The old town site of Port Union holds the distinction of being both a National Historic District and Provincial Heritage District. Not far from the site, you’ll find the Murphy’s Cove – Lodge’s Pond trail. This eight-km loop is a fairly easy hike and offers typical scenery from the area. Along the way you will pass through the abandoned settlement of Murphy’s Cove. The Port Union Women’s Institute has a craft store in a small log-building when you first enter town. You’ll find locally-stitched quilts and other textile goods here. The sheltered harbour at Catalina has been a port for vessels travelling the east coast for centuries. The first public library outside of St. John’s opened here in 1937. You can learn more about the history of the area and early settlers’ life with a visit to Arch’s Dream Museum,

housed in the original two-room school. A short jaunt to Little Catalina and you’ll find yourself in another picturesque fishing village. The 17-km Little Catalina to Maberly coastal trail begins at the end of the road. The trail was formerly well travelled by locals who would go berry-picking and hunting along the coast. It is a lengthy hike so be sure to pack sufficient supplies for a day on the trail, and arrange transportation to or from the trailhead as this trail does not loop.

ADVERTISER’S LOCATOR LEGEND Attractions •

Sir William F. Coaker Heritage Foundation • The Factory Port Union National Historic District of Canada • 709-469-2207 • www.historicportunion.com

Places to Shotp • Wild Cove Pottery • 709-740-6925 www.wildcovepottery.ca

Places to Stop • Municipality of Trinity Bay North •

709-469-2571 • www.trinitybaynorth.com

Please refer to area map for location reference

Visit the Port Union National Historic District of Canada

7633611

Immerse yourself in the history as you step back in time to explore the legacy of Sir William Ford Coaker and the Fishermen’s Protective Union. Enjoy the sea air as you take a picnic lunch and stroll leisurely around the Shipyard Park boardwalk.

Sir William F. Coaker Heritage Foundation Tel. (709) 469-2207 • Fax. (709) 469-2509 40 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

like us on facebook follow us on twitter

Pottery inspired by the subtle textures and colours of the Newfoundland sea and sky.

7633314

Canada’s only union built town. Visit the restored Factory Building, once home of “The Fisherman’s Advocate” newspaper.

Wild Cove

POTTERY 102 Main Street Port Union

Email: info@wildcovepottery.ca Web: www.wildcovepottery.ca


Do you have your

DANCING SHOES ON...?

There is no doubt about it, music is born in us. However not all of us have the talents required to take the stage in front of hundreds of concert goers or to cut an album, but that doesn’t take away the enjoyment we garner from the simply pleasure of listening or singing along to music. At every gathering where music is present, whether it be at a local community festival, outdoor concert or a kitchen party, even if we don’t admit it for fear of being embarrassed by our lack of talent or abilities at keeping proper time, we are secretly all musicians at heart. We all at some time or another have crooned along with our talented guitarist friends or family around a camp fire. We are feet stompers and hand clappers keeping time to the strains of the accordion, the beat of the *bobhran or the jingling of an *ugly stick. Throw a fiddle in the mix, strumming out a Newfoundland jig and you can be guaranteed we’ll be up on our feet quicker than two shakes of a lamb’s tale looking for a partner to get on the dance floor with. Now us Newfoundlanders sure have a long history of music. We’ve used it to tell our stories for generations. Whether it be the story of the Bonavista tidal wave told in “Great Big Sea’s Hove in ‘Long Beach” or the story of boatbuilding traditions with ‘Luckey’s Boat.” It is and always will be in the background of our life, you can hear a certain song and draw upon a specific memory for it, where you were when you first heard it or who you danced to it with the first time. Music is a part of our spirited celebrations, with the lively rhythms being played in many community halls, kitchens or sheds across this beautiful Province. The foot stomping and sing alongs often continue until the wee hours of early morning! Folks will start to walk home from their local community halls where they started the party, only to on a last minute whim because someone reluctantly decided they didn’t want the party to end, suggest that everyone resume it in someone’s kitchen or shed. We enjoy clinging to the enjoyment of a good party and never want the memories being created to end. In your trek across the Discovery Trail, here’s hoping that you get to experience music in the presence of some our very talented music makers! Music makes people happy! So don’t let your lack of so called talent stop you! Keep singing and clapping along even if that means you miss a few beats or have to fake a few words along the way! *BOBHRAN – is a Irish Frame Drum used frequently in Newfoundland Music, since a lot of Newfoundland Folk Music is Irish based (see photo) *UGLY STICK – is a Traditional Newfoundland musical instrument homemade out of a broom handle, old shoe or boot with other household items such as bottle caps, bells or tin cans nailed to it. It is fashioned into a crazy looking thing hence the reason for its funny name! (see photo) DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

41


T

or ts he ne

The 1914

SEALING DISASTER The Newfoundland and Labrador seal fishery was a lucrative industry but also a very dangerous one. In the Spring of 1914 that danger turned to disaster for the Sealing Ships, SS Newfoundland and the SS Southern Cross. This bronze statue (see image) at Porter’s Point in Elliston was sculpted by Newfoundland artist Morgan MacDonald, and profoundly captures the images of a father and son as they lived out their final moments. Reuben Crewe had never intended to go to the ice that year. After years of heading out for swiling for the Spring, he had decided it was time to retire. But when his son, Albert John, who was just 16, announced he was going on his first ‘swiling’ expedition, the father decided it best to go along to look after his boy. The Crewes were among the 166 men — many of them from the Elliston and Bonavista area —who left got off the SS Newfoundland on March 30, 1914, to head to the SS Stephano seven miles away to harvest seals. A winter storm blew in and 34 of the men decided to turn back, while the other 132 continued on. The captain of the Stephano, Abe Kean, told the men to harvest 1,500 seals before returning to the SS Newfoundland, captained by Kean’s son, Wes. As recounted in her novel Death on the Ice, Newfoundland author Cassie Brown wrote that the men were given a lunch on the Stephano and then sent ‘over the side’ again to hunt seals and make their way back to the SS Newfoundland. The captain of each ship made the grievous error of assuming the men were safely aboard the other ship when the storm blew in. They were both wrong. At that time there ships did not have wireless communication and neither captain realized the peril the men were in. The 132 men and boys, some as young as Newfoundland, after hunting seals in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. 16 who were on their first trip to the ice, got lost in the blizzard One hundred and 73 men were lost with her, many of them for 48 hours. from the Conception Bay area. Their families, like the families By the time they were discovered, 78 of them had perished, of Elliston and Bonavista, felt the impact of that loss for years dead from hypothermia. Some of them had fallen into the sea afterwards. and their bodies were never recovered. The ones who survived The Sealing Disaster is a story that has remained ingrained in were just barely alive. They escaped death by huddling together the minds of the Newfoundland people for 100 years. Thanks to for warmth, continually moving around to keep their blood the hard work and dedication of a lot of people — from Elliston circulating. and further afield — there is now a museum in the seaside Meanwhile, that same Spring, the SS Southern Cross went community to memorialize those lives lost and the way of life down as the ship was making its way back to home port in Moving that was a reality by a century ago. forward Moving forward by PAST EMBRACING OUR EMBRACING OUR PAST Moving forward by As a museum, ar t gallery and space for As a museum, ar t gallery and space for ref lection, the Centre is unique in its EMBRACING OUR PAST ref lection, the sealers. Centre isDiscover unique inthe its singular focus on singular focus on sealers. Discover the

As museum, ar t that gallery and space for livesa lives and work that have helped define and work have helped define ref lection, the Centre is unique in its us as people. us as people. singular focus on sealers. Discover the lives and work that have helped define us as people.

- OCTOBER by Moving Route 238, MAY MAY - forward OCTOBER Route 238, 9:00am - 5:30pm Elliston 9:00am - 5:30pm Elliston EMBRACING OUR PAST

- OCTOBER Route As a MAY museum, ar t galler y and238, space for 9:00amthe - 5:30pm ref lection, CentreElliston is unique in its singular focus on sealers. Discover the lives and work that have helped define us as people.

7636138

homefromthesea.ca 709.476.3003

MAY - OCTOBER 9:00am - 5:30pm

Route 238, Elliston 6564604

6564604

42 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide 6564604

homefromthesea.ca 709.476.3003

homefromthesea.ca 709.476.3003 homefromthesea.ca 709.476.3003


Cape Bonavista Cape Bonavista Lighthouse Dungeon Provincial Historic Site Provincial Park

Bonavista

7

Blackhead Bay

Birchy Cove

235

Spillar’s Cove

230

Maberly 238

6

This region of the Discovery Trail is packed with sights and activities. Let’s begin in Maberly and Elliston, home to the world’s most accessible Atlantic Puffin breeding site.

Port Rexton

230nest on the islands just offshore, but they are These birds so close the birds and their young are easily seen with theChampney’s naked eye. Bring a pair of binoculars or a camera equippedEnglish with a zoom lens for optimal viewing. If the site

Harbour

Area 7

Elliston

Newmans Cove Amherst Cove e Little Catalina Upper Amherst 237 Cove KnightsThe Tip of the Peninsula Catalina Cove Port Union Maberly and Elliston Melrose

8

Elliston, Maberly, Bonavista and Cape Bonavista

is quiet, you may be fortunate enough to have puffins strut within a few feet of you. Sandy Cove Beach is not far from the puffin site. As the name suggests, the sandy beach is a welcome spot for a picnic lunch, or a bit of beachcombing. The Elliston Municipal Park is a stone’s throw away. Each July the park is the setting for the annual Bird Island Puffin Festival. The music and entertainment is top notch, and the crowd is out for a good time. Be sure to get a taste of a Jiggs Dinner, served up each day during the festival. Elliston is also the Root Cellar Capital of the World. There are hundreds of cellars around town, many of which are still in use today. Some of cellars are nearing 200 years old. They are a great example of early engineering and food security, as this was where families would store their garden goods

Trinity East nfield y

nture

Root Cellar Ca

The Bird Island Puffin Festival July 15 - 22, 2018 • One of the Closest Land’s View of Puffins • Visitor Information Centre • Elliston Adventure Craft & Gift Store • Hiking Trails • Sandy Beach • Municipal Park

Roots, Rants and Roars Fall Festival

September 14 - 15, 2018

For More Information, please contact Tourism Elliston Inc. Tel: (709) 468-7080 Fax: (709) 468-5837 Email: rootcellars@persona.ca or visit our website at: www.rootcellars.ca

7631656

F ELLISTON THE TOWN O ! pital of the World

DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide 43


A 7

like potatoes, carrots and beets for the winter. Elliston has some unique geological features as well. Elliston Ridge is thought to have been ice-free during the most recent ice age. The result is Felsenmeer, or sea of rocks – a massive jumble of shattered boulders created by the freezing temperatures. The ridge is accessible via Mark’s Path Trail or the Elliston Ridge Trail, two trails remnant of the US Military presence here during the Cold War. Elliston is home to the Sealing Disaster memorial. The 1914 sealing disaster claimed the lives of 78 men stranded on the ice during a vicious winter blizzard. Another 173 men went down with their sealing ship, the SS Southern Crossing that same season. It was a tragic loss of life for many Newfoundland communities. Elliston worked for many years to build a monument to these lost lives. Eight of the men who perished were from this community, though many other towns in Newfoundland felt the loss acutely. The interpretation centre opened and the monument was unveiled in 2014. The fall features a very unique festival to the area “Root’s Rant’s and Roars”. If you are a foodie then you won’t want to miss this stop. The weekend long event sees hundreds of visitors each year. You will Hike, Eat and party like a true Newfoundlander! Due to the overwhelming demand you will want to purchase your tickets and accommodations early because tickets always sell out fast!

Bonavista

It’s here where John Cabot is thought to have first spied land in the New World during his 1497 voyage from Britain. His account of abundant cod stocks enticed centuries of settlers from England and Ireland to come fish in the summer. Bonavista is the best place in Newfoundland to see the evolution of this international industry. The Ryan Premises National Historic Site of Canada is the place to

Lancaster Inn B&B

learn about the salt fish trade and the merchants who dominated the landscape in Bonavista and surrounding areas for centuries. The Mockbeggar Plantation is another opportunity to immerse yourself in history. The original fish store (a place for storing salt fish) was built around 1733. If walls could talk, that building, standing now for almost 300 years, would surely have stories to tell. It was home to John Bradley, one of the people who worked alongside Joey Smallwood to bring this Province into the Canadian Federation. The Bonavista Historic Townscape Foundation has done a lot of great work encouraging and maintaining Enjoy Bonavista’s newest and most modern B&B. Five bedrooms, all with ensuite, one with Jacuzzi and fireplace, queen size beds, luxury linens, cable tv/dvd players, iron & ironing board and sitting area in all rooms. Wireless internet services available. Hot breakfast with homemade breads & jams. • Open year round • • Non-smoking; no pets •

219 Confederation Drive

(first B&B as you enter Bonavista on Route 230) 7631657

44 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

Call: 709-468-5656 or Email: lancasterinn@bellaliant.com

www.lancasterinn.ca


A 7

restoration in the town. Church Street is lined with period structures that have been lovingly restored to their former residential or mercantile glory. The restored structures now house new businesses bringing new life to what was once a sad lifeless street. The Garrick Theatre is a relatively modern addition, built in 1945. Home to a cinema and multi-purpose theatre, The Garrick has many entertainment offerings throughout the year. It is now owned and operated by the Bonavista Historic Townscape Foundation. A short walk from the Garrick you’ll find the Matthew Legacy site, which houses a full scale replica of The Matthew, the vessel that first brought John Cabot and his crew to Bonavista.

Cape Bonavista

Follow Route 230 all the way to the end, and you’ll find yourself at Cape Bonavista, home to the Cape Bonavista Lighthouse. The Provincial Historic Site is a must-see. The original lamp, first lit in 1843, used seal oil as fuel. Learn about lightkeepers’ lives and the important and difficult job they had. Guided tours are available. You may also see puffins, whales and icebergs, in season. It truly is not to be missed. Branch off the main road and follow the signs to The Dungeon, a massive collapsed sea cave formed by relentless wave action of the North Atlantic. There are information panels and a viewing deck. The geology here has to be seen to be believed.

NIT Y TR I

BO

HOMESTYLE CHOCOLATE & ICE CREAM IN TRINITY AND BONAVISTA NAVISTA

Drop by Aunt Sarah’s Chocolate Shop & Sweet Rock Ice Cream for a tasty treat! Aunt Sarah’s Chocolate Shop, 7 Dock Lane, Trinity Sweet Rock Ice Cream, 102 Church St., Bonavista Sweet Rock Ice Cream, 14 High Street, Trinity www.auntsarahschocolate.ca www.sweetrockicecream.ca 7631658

42 Campbell St. Bonavista phone: 1-866-468-7982 info@harbourquarters.com www.harbourquarters.com

DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide 45


A 7

ADVERTISER’S LOCATOR LEGEND Places to Stay • •

Harbour Quarters Inn • Campbell St, Bonavista • 1-866-468-7982 • 709-468-7982 • www.harbourquarters.com • info@harbourquarters.com Lancaster Inn • 219 Confederation Dr, Bonavista • 709-468-5656 • www.lancasterinn.ca • lancasterinn@bellaliant.com Harts Haven • 709-468-6776 • hartshaven@live.ca

• Places to Shop • Elliston Adventure Craft Store • Elliston • 709-468-7080• www.rootcellars.ca • Sweet Rock Ice Cream • 709-436-2015 • www.auntsarahschocolate.ca Tours • Discovery Sea Adventures • 709-470-0322 • www.discoveryseaadventuretours.com

Places to Eat • Skipper’s Restaurant • Harbour Quarters Inn • Bonavista • 1-866-468-7982 • 709-468-7982 •

• www.harbourquarters.com Baie Vista Restaurant • 11 Campbell St, Bonavista • 709-468-5600 • www.lancasterinn.ca • lancasterinn@bellaliant.com Nanny’s Root Cellar Kitchen • 709-468-5050

• Attractions • •

Garrick Theatre • Church St, Bonavista • 709-468-5577 • www.garricktheatre.ca • garrickboxoffice@aibn.com Home from the Sea Sealers Interpretation Centre • 709-476-3003 • info@homefromthesea.ca • www.homefromthesea.ca

Places to Stop • Town of Elliston • 709-468-2649 • www.rootcellars.ca • Town of Bonavista • 709-468-7747 • www.townofbonavista.com Please refer to area map for location reference

Nanny’s Root Cellar Kitchen Traditional Newfoundland Cuisine

7633069

Hart’s Haven

1 Temperance Street, Bonavista, NL

(709) 468-6776 / 470-0335 • hartshaven@live.ca

7633966

46 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

7631655

4 Season Vacation Home

The Orange Hall, Elliston (709) 468-5050


Discover

GOLFING

on the Discovery Trail

There are three very picturesque spots to hit the Links on the Discovery Trail. Remember to bring your camera, you won’t want to miss the opportunity to capture a photo of the beautiful scenery while you golf.

Brookside Golf Course and RV Park located at Hatchet Cove (Area 3). This nine-hole course invites people to stay and play at their new adjacent RV Park. The hilly course is just 11 kilometers off the Trans Canada Highway, overlooking Trinity Bay.

The View Golf Resort is a full-service resort in Princeton on Route 235 (Area 8). Accommodations, lounge and restaurant are on site. The 9-hole course offers breathtaking views of Bonavista Bay. You’ll want to play two rounds in order to take in all the views.

Terra Nova Golf Resort at Port Blandford (Area 4) boasts two courses. Twin Rivers is an18-hole course, while Eagle Creek offers a 9-hole challenge. The resort has accommodation, dining, and everything you’ll need for a golfing retreat during your travels.

DISCOVERY DISCOVERY TRAIL TRAIL || 2018 2018 Visitor Visitor Guide Guide 47 47


Crafting

Crafting

A PART OF OUR HISTORY Crafting is part of the history and culture of Newfoundland and Labrador, and as you travel along The Discovery Trail you will find many talented artisans from a variety crafting skills and genres. This province is known particularly for many varied types of arts and crafts. The artists who create these items may use different mediums for their crafts, but they all have one thing in common, passion. Depending on which community, craft shop or museum you visit on your travels, you could meet a rug hooker, a cooper, painter, spinner, sculptor, blacksmith, quilter, soaper or a jewellery designer. The many talented artists in this area, use a variety of mediums for their craft, ranging from: wood, seal

48 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

skin, beach glass, iceberg water, locally grown plants to hand dyed wool. Some artisans even offer art & craft workshops that you could take part in during your travels. Don’t be afraid to engage them in a conversation about their life’s passion. You never know you just might learn a few new tricks or skills.

After all there’s more to a craft than just a simple knick-knack to be taken home and forgotten about. These items are unique and are crafted as a labour of love by a talented local artist just for you. You will bring these lovingly created items of beauty back home to cherish for years to come. Looking at them will remind you of your wonderful vacation on the Discovery Trail.


Bay

nd

Sou

Long Islands

Bonavista

7

Keels Tickle Cove Duntara King’s Cove Red Cliff Open Hall Plate Cove West

Plate Cove Sweet Bay

Winter Brook Charleston

Blackhead Bay

Birchy Cove

235 Stock Cove Knights Plate Cove East Cove

mestown Summerville

Lockston Path Provincial Park

Princeton Southern Bay

8

Port Rexton Lockston

Trinity

Goose Cove

5

Spillar’s Cove

235

Elliston 230

Maberly 238

King’s Cove, Open Hall, Red Cliff, Tickle Cove, Plate Cove East, Plate Cove West, Keels, Duntara, Summerville, Princeton and Southern Bay

Newmans Cove Amherst Cove Little Catalina Upper Amherst 237 Cove Catalina Port Union Melrose

6

230

Champney’s English Harbour

Trinity East Dunfield Trouty

Area 8

New Bonaventure

Route 235 - Five Coves Old Bonaventure

Ireland’s Leaving Bonavista, take Route 235 out of town. This Eye e Waterville less-travelled road hugs the shore of Bonavista Bay. New Burnt Clifton Cove You’ll soon pass through the Five Coves – Birchy Cove, Newman’s Cove, Upper and Lower Amherst Coves, tley Lower Lance Cove Knight’s Cove and Stock Cove. Britannia on’s Random Island Hickman’s Harbour Winter winds often blow freezing salt spray over the wharf at Newman’s Cove, coating it in a thick layer . Jones Random Sound ithin of iceSouthport sculpted by the wind and waves. But you don’t Cove in winter to appreciate the power need Gooseberry to be here Butter Cove of Heart’s relentless waves. The breakers coming ashore Ease Hodge’s Little ch Cove Caplin Coveat Blackhead Bay are spectacular. There is great opportunity for sea kayaking in his area as well.

231

Trinity

King’s Cove, Bay Keels and Duntara

King’s Cove has a long history of being a fishing village, and the tradition continues today. The lighthouse Trail is not to be missed. The short hike is an easy walk, departing from either the government wharf or behind the church. The path has several vistas along the way, including Pat Murphy’s Meadow (made famous by the song of the same name, originally a poem written in the 1930s by a son of King’s Cove).

Tickle Bay

nce Cove

Bellevue Beach

1

The lighthouse itself was assembled in 1893, having been constructed in Birmingham, England, of pre-cast Thornlea iron. Information panels at the site explain the early Long Cove years of lighthouse keepers. You can return by the same track, or take a circuitous Norman’s Cove route through the woods and meadows. In late summer, Chapel Arm you may find blueberries abundant. It is a very pleasant stroll for a summer’s afternoon.

Bellevue

73

201

80

202

Route 235-20 will take you to Duntara and Keels. TCH East to St. John’s Not to be missed, the two remain active fishing communities. The wharves and stages you see at water’s edge are used by local fishermen as staging ground for independent fishing enterprises.

When you drive through Duntara stop by to visit the 2 Rooms Contemporary Art Projects historical saltbox house which was hand built in 1881, it was used originally as a fisherman’s house. The home is now renovated and used as a gallery and museum. This local landmark with its distinctly painted exterior stands out against the beautiful landscape of Bonavista Bay. 2 Rooms Contemporary Art Projects presents curated exhibitions of regional and international contemporary art in the first floor galleries. A continuing series of displays featuring collections of local historical artifacts and natural specimens are presented on the second floor. The 2 Rooms program reflects the historical, natural and cultural conditions that exist interdependently in Newfoundland’s outport communities. Keels has a couple of attractions. Local lore says the town got its name after John Cabot intentionally ran his boat ashore here to repair the keel. The rocks near town also house The Devil’s Footprints, naturallyoccurring cavities in the rock. The landscape is striking here, and the Footprints are an excellent excuse to stretch your legs and enjoy the view. DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide 49


A 8

Open Hall, Red Cliff and Tickle Cove

Route 235-19 is one of the best-kept secrets of the Discovery Trail. The three communities date back to the 1700s. The Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church in Open Hall, built in 1908, is one of the largest wooden churches from that time. Red Cliff comes alive with wildflowers in summer, a striking contrast to the brick-red rock which gives the town its name. At Tickle Cove, take in the Sea Arch trail. A brief trail (with wooden stairs built over the steep sections) brings you to a well-built viewing platform where you have an unobstructed view of a large sea arch. The geology here is spectacular. A second trail hugs Tickle Cove Pond on the east side. Early August, the town (and pond) are inundated with people for the annual Dory Days community festival and dory races on the pond.

Plate Cove East and Plate Cove West, Summerville, Princeton, Southern Bay

Plate Cove West and Plate Cove East were named for the sloping land, shaped like a plate. Summerville awaits just a little further along Route 235. This quiet town has some of the best blueberry picking in the area. Just follow the footpath at the very end of the road. 50 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide

Princeton is home to The View Golf Resort, where you can golf, dine, and stay at the full-service resort. Princeton Pond, The old Railway bed, is accessible at Princeton, and is well travelled by all-terrain vehicles and snowmobiles, depending on the season. At Southern Bay, Route 235 meets Route 235.

ADVERTISER’S LOCATOR LEGEND Places to Stay •

Round Da Bay Inn • 709-544-2008 • www.rounddabayinn.com

Places to Eat • Bella’s Restaurant • 709-544-2008 Places to Shop •

Round Da Bay Inn-Gallery and Gift Shop • 709-544-2008

Attractions •

Two Rooms Contemporary Art Projects • Duntara • www.2roomscontemporaryartprojects.com

Please refer to area map for location reference

Round Da Bay Inn 16 Unique Theme Rooms Bella’s Restaurant - serving delicious homemade meals Visit our Art Gallery and Gift Shop

Come and explore our scenic shores! Route 235, Plate Cove West, Bonavista Bay, NL (709) 544-2008 • www.rounddabayinn.com

7631659

The Film “Maudie” starring Ethan Hawke and Sally Hawkins was also partially filmed in the area. As you tour around see if you can spot some of the areas used.


Newfoundland SLANG Common Newfoundland Slang and the meanings:

Stay where you’re to ‘til I comes to where yer at. Meaning: Stay where you are until I come and get you.

Me’ Ducky. Meaning: Female term of endearment.

Where y’longs to? Meaning: Where are you from or where do you live?

Gwan b’y . Meaning: Something is unreal or said in disbelief

Fill yer boots me ol’ trout. Meaning: Good for it or good to go.

Oh me nerves. Meaning: I am frustrated.

I dies at you. Meaning: You are funny.

Yes b’y. Meaning: Yeah right or said in agreement.

Me Fadder is some crooked and contrary today! Meaning: My father is grumpy and hard to get along with today. Havin a time. Meaning: Having fun or a good time. Whadda y’at? Meaning: What’s going on or what are you doing?

Wanna go for a scoff? Meaning: Do you want to go and get something to eat? Goin’ for a scuff. Meaning: Going dancing B’ys tis some mauzy day. Meaning: Today is a wet and foggy day. Long may yer big gib draw. Meaning: A wish for you to have good fortune

a Cove, or a Bay? Is that an Isthmus, a Bight, ine terms explained. And what’s a Tickle anyway? Shorel

and an of water between the mainland and on road h Sound are Smit and You’ll see them in town names d Soun om Rand d. islan , Norman’s the Discovery signs all over the area. Chapel Arm examples nearby. Just north of , to name Sound are man New Cove, Deep Bight and Tickle Cove and d Trail, Clode Soun s get their a few. But how did these place Nova National Park. Terra in d foun role. a d playe names? Often, their geography nel between A TICKLE is a short, narrow chan of land with strip w narro a is to describe used be An ISTHMUS also d coul It ds. islan a connection our that is harb a to ocean on either side, forming nce entra w the narro . (Area 1) tickle may A ate. navig between two larger areas of land to y particularly trick tline. Like a d rocks shallow enough to coas erge the in subm nt have inde an is T BIGH A as you pass. ing than the ‘tickle’ the keel of your boat bight mark, it is wider at the open a and the short trail to (Are t 8, Bigh Area in is Deep at Cove self e your Tickl for bottom. See the Sea Arch is not to be missed. 3) ered from nce entra the but A BAY is any indent in coastline shelt A COVE is curved like a bight, s of the ocean – A cove or waters within. wave ered and shelt wind the the than wer narro is You’ll see but the Five a bight can also be called a bay. There are plenty of examples, erst most famous during d’s Amh , dlan Cove foun k New Stoc of , Cove three ht’s Coves (Knig Placentia Bay, y Cove.) of your tour of the Discovery Trail: Coves, Newman’s Cove and Birch for. vista h watc Bona to and ones Bay Trinity Route 235 in Area 8 are Bay surround you. ected prot r wate of r finge a is ARM An in by land on both sides, reaching a 2, from the ocean. Bull Arm (Are and where Sunnyside is located) ct Southwest Arm (Area 2) are perfe examples. and A SOUND is similar, but while d soun a sea, the from in hes arm reac ch stret the to n give e nam is usually the DISCOVERY DISCOVERY TRAIL TRAIL || 2018 2018 Visitor Visitor Guide Guide 51 51


Discover WINTER Year-round recreation on the Discovery Trail

You won’t find us hibernating during the winter here on the Discovery Trail! Our communities come alive during the colder season, making the most of the winter wonderland in our backyard. Clarenville is the hub of outdoor winter adventure on the Discovery Trail. It’s where you’ll find White Hills Resort, a downhill ski and snowboard destination, and the home base of the Clarenville Nordic Ski Club. Snowshoers are also welcome on the purpose-built trail, located at the base of the White Hills. If motorsports are your thing, you’re in luck. The East Coast Snowmobile Association is also based here, and members and visitors alike can access the provincially groomed snowmobile trail system. There’s plenty of backcountry to explore as well. Don’t forget the ice fishing! With lakes and ponds a plenty in the region they offer superb opportunities to hook a trout for a pan fry at the cabin or better yet a backwoods grub job right there by the water. What could be fresher? Nothing! However if your plans do include travel on any of the ponds via snowmobile or foot, make sure to ensure the safety of ice conditions before you ever plan on venturing out. Also very important if you are planning on going it alone that you make someone aware of where you plan to travel, and how long you plan to be gone. Community events also abound — from winter carnivals to variety concerts staged by local people to sporting events in the arenas at Clarenville and Bonavista. Whether you want to just sit back and watch, or join in the fun, there’s lot to do to keep you busy after the sun has slipped beneath the 49th parallel. 52 DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide


Y A W R U O Y P M CA N O Ç A F E R T O V À G N LE CAMPI

Experiencing the great outdoors just got easier. Book your oTENTik today! Call 1-877-RESERVE Visit reservation.parkscanada.gc.ca

DISCOVERY TRAIL | 2018 Visitor Guide III 7634710

Malady Head Campground Le terrain de camping Malady Head

Profiter du plein air n’a jamais été aussi facile. Réservez votre oTENTik dès aujourd’hui! Composez le 1-877-RÉSERVE Consultez le reservation.parcscanada.gc.ca


Garrick Theatre

Look for the Saturday Summer Music Series. For a complete schedule see www.garricktheatre.ca 709-468-5777/2880

Ye Matthew Legacy

Experience over 500 years of living history in our interpretation centre. Visitors also view the replica of John Cabot’s 15th-century ship Matthew.

Cape Shore Trail

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This coastal trail featuring rugged coastline, whales, icebergs, puffins, as well as historic Green Island where many battles were waged between the French and the English fighting for fishing rights. This Trail is a must for nature lovers because of its views of Bonavista Bay.

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www.townofbonavista.com


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