Day 5 of Newfoundland Vacation Thursday August 26, 2021
Dildo to Elliston
Our first stop of the day was at Arnold's Cove on our way to the Bonavista Peninsula.
Arnold's Cove is on the westerly tip of the Avalon Peninsula and rests on the shores of Placentia Bay.
After Arnold's Cove we travelled the Trans Canada Highway on the Bonavista Peninsula to Clarenville, where we took Highway 230A and other subsidiary highways to Kings Bay.
After King's Bay we travelled on to Bonavista.
We ordered fish and brewis for lunch at Walkham's Pub, OMG this is tasted so good with Black Strap Molasses! The main ingredients in this dish are hard bread, salt cod, salt pork finely chopped, potatoes and onion.
Bonavista was established in the late 1500's making it one of the oldest communities in North America. The settlement became very important to Newfoundland because of its proximity to the rich fishing and sealing grounds to the north of the peninsula.
Bonavista is a beautiful town with a population of almost 2000 residents. The age of the settlement brings with it a uniqueness we can only bring to memory because I was so impressed with the sights and views that I did not get one picture of anything else other than food!
That Manitoulin Islander's "first time off the rock" caught up with me, I was eyes and mouth open, the pleasure processor
put the brain's thinking processor on pause I guess.
What else can I say?
We found ourselves in a funeral procession as were were leaving Bonavista and heading to Elliston. I didn't think it would be appropriate to take pictures, it could have brought bad luck if we were superstitious.
Another pile of wood for winter's heat. The forests here are made up of coniferous trees and those forests seem to be sparse. The trees do not grow as tall as ours do in Ontario, I guess it is due to the high winds they endure and possibly a shallow soil depth.
The exciting part of visiting Elliston was to see the Atlantic Puffins on Elliston's Bird Island.
Well, we were a bit late in seeing them as they had already started to migrate North. I jokingly say there was only one puffin but we took several pictures of him. There were only a few on the Island though, the late flyers I guess. Who knows why, perhaps a male without a mate, an older bird unable to make the journey North, there are no doubt other reasons.
I am using this photo from the internet to give you
a close up look of what they look like since
my pictures were not close enough to do that.
Regular visitors at the site said when they are in full colony they often fly in close to the bird watchers, strut around and put on quite a show. Sadly we didn't experience that, but we did get to see real puffins. Nice! Yes there were more than one.
Below I have listed a few fun facts about puffins:
- They usually have one partner in a lifetime
- The female lays one egg a year
- They return each year to the same burrow to nest
- They dig their burrow to approximately 3 feet deep, they also have been known to raise their young between rocks on steep cliffs
- They live up to 20 plus years in the wild
- Just before mating season their beaks become brightly coloured, in the fall the beaks outer layer sheds leaving the bill smaller and duller in colour
- They must be able to see the ocean in order to fly, flight is difficult due to their shape and size. The bird must flap its wings 300 - 400 times a minute to stay in flight, their speed will reach 55 miles per hour
- A group of puffins can be called a colony, a puffinary, a circus, a burrow, a gathering or an improbability
- They are social birds and form immense colonies
- They winter in South of Ireland, South of Iceland and at the entrance of the Labrador Sea
- The puffin is an excellent swimmer, and can dive up to 60 meters looking for food (196 feet!)
- Puffins spend most of their lives out at sea resting on the waves when not swimming
Of course there are the puffin shaped lounge chairs for sale.
Artists have an array of paintings.
Elliston boasts itself as being the Root Cellar capital of the world with over 130 of them in the area.
Root Cellars are unique but not unknown to some of us on Manitoulin. It was the only place people had to keep their vegetables from freezing in winter and cool in summer.
Here are bins located inside the cellars and used for storage of vegetables. I still find the cellars to be dark and creepy.
You will find more on root cellars at this site, copy and past to your search bar: https://townofelliston.ca/2visit/geopark.html
The Newfoundland landscape can be best described as a mixture of bogs, barrens, rock outcrops, water bodies and low fertility, highly acidic soil. It must have been very difficult to grow anything, those people had to have been determined with a strong endurance to have lived and survived raised families before the delivery of such foods to their area.
The "Home From The Sea" site is a tribute to the many men who lost their lives in two separate disasters during a 1914 storm.
The Sealers Memorial honours the crew of the SS Newfoundland who froze to death in March 1914 when poor communications led them to be stranded in a blizzard, as well as the crew of the SS Southern Cross, which sank in the same storm. In all, 251 sealers died.
The slab of rock is engraved with the names of all the sealers, and a bronze statue depicts the huddled figures of Reuben and Albert John Crewe, a father and son who froze to death in a grim embrace.
We visited the "Home From The Sea John C Crosbie Sealers Interpretation Centre" and found it to be very informative. It is hard to believe the sealers endured so much, unbelievable.
The scenery is breathtaking.
the upcoming winter with all the wood they have piled.
with hosts Maila and her husband Rashid. They are amazing hosts, we definitely would recommend
this place to anyone passing through. During our
travels we stayed in two B&Bs and one Airbnb, the Meems is top of the list for us.
So ends another delightful day in Newfoundland.
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