Free Day St. John ,
Bonavista
August 1
We spent our free day back on Signal Hill after a stop to
get an RV part. This day was beautiful
and sunny. We finished the museum on
signal hill. Then we spent 1-2 hours
hiking around the area. We saw gun
placements and various views of St.
John and the surrounding area. Gordon might tell you we walked uphill the
entire time. We were on top of the hill
for the firing of then noon cannon. This
was a tradition for many years, but stopped in the 20th
century. It was started again last
year. Volunteers can sign up to fire the
cannon. If only we had known, we could
have dress up in period military costume and learned the ritual. We were fortunate to see the solar powered hydro
foil boat. The boat is sailing around
the world. It looks like a space ship on
water. It stopped just before entering
Port St. John. We went to the top of Cabot Tower ,
then down the hill to the museum for lunch.
Our next stop was the Geo Museum . We could have spent all day there. It is built into the rocks. A small café and gift shop are on the
top. Then you go below ground to the
museum. The hill sides are part of the
walls. The staff showed different movies
continuously throughout the day and professional geologists and other staff
gave guided tours every few minutes. We
had a guided tour of the oil exhibit. It
covered aspects of drilling in the great banks, including the survival suit
everyone was trained to use before they could be transported to the rig. Then we saw a movie about small animals, like
frogs and fire ants. As that finished we
had a guided tour that gave us a lesson on the three kinds of
rocks—sedimentary, igneous, and ??? We had a guide talk about the “Whispers of the
Rock.” It talked about the rock walls
that were part of the museum. We saw a
3-D movie on icebergs and ice shelves.
Finally, we toured the exhibit on the Titanic.
Although we were on our way home, it took a while to get
there. We stopped to get iceberg beer at
Quidi Vidi, gas, groceries, and hardware.
We covered most of the city. What
a beautiful, modern city it is and the old buildings are well preserved. St.
John’s is the capital of the Newfoundland/Labrador
Province. Did you know Newfoundland
did not come part of Canada
until 1949? It had been a territory of Britain and an independent nation before
then. Labrador joined Canada at the same time and became
part of the same province. Today Labrador has only 30,000 people.
I forgot to mention that St. John gets 20’ of snow per year on
average. It has gotten more.
N. Sydney (night before ferry ride)Eddie Coffee and his group, Entertainment at Lobster and Prime Rib Supper.

Ferry Pictures

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view from ferry on departure |
Firing Noon Cannon at Cabot Tower, St. John |
View of St. John from battery placement |
view of entrance to St. John's Harbor |
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Quidi Vidi |
Friday, August 2, was a travel day. We had another beautiful, sunny day. We took time to see part of Terra Nova National Park , so were the last to
arrive at the campground. We ended up on
a site with 20 amp service (a long electrical cord to the barn/bath house. We are the only ones in our group with
electricity. Everyone else has
generators, although one couple, that had never dry camped, found out their
generator was broken. They are now hooked
up to the tail gunners generator.
After our travel briefing, we got screeched. We are now honorary Newfoundler. It was quite the ceremony. A British soldier (the RV park owner) and 4
of our group paraded to our group. Two
of them were wearing life jackets and the large yellow rain hat (typical
Newfounder hat which is kind of the shape of a fireman’s hat, but is soft
plastic).
The other two wore rain suits with hats. We had to make an oath to the king. After the oath, we made a toast to the king with a small bit of Screeher's rum. Finally, we kissed the King (a frozen cod). It was
funny.
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Wagon Master prepares to kiss King Cod |
Saturday, August 3
What a busy day we had!
We ride shared into Bonavista (We are actually outside of town in the
county, but in the area that is Ft.
Union ). Of course, it was rainy and cold most of the
day. We skipped the 3 murals on the water
tower at Lookout point and went to the Ryan Premises National Historic
Site. We went to the water tower and
lookout at the end of our day. The
museum commemorates five centuries of commercial fishing on Canada ’s east
coast. Five buildings are part of the
saltfish mercantile complex. This would
be the group that supplied the fishing supplies and personal supplies of the
fisherman in exchange for salt cod. An
individual culled the dried fish into various grades, which determined the
credit the fisherman would received. The
culler was paid by the business. As you
can imagine, the fisherman were not always given a fair deal. A guide gave us a demonstration of the salted
fish process. Making salted cod was a
family project and making salted or pickled code was done on plantations. Fisherman
would bring in the fish. They would be hauled to the fish shed, which was right
above the water. One person would cut the throat and open the gut. Another would remove the gut, saving the
liver, which was turned into cod liver oil, and the head. Sometimes heads were saved for the tongue and
the cheeks, some of which were eaten by the fishermen (I tried fried cod tongue
and they are very good). Guts and
unused parts were thrown into the ocean. The next person would remove the
spine. Cod have no other bone or
scales. Fish are salted. Then they are taken somewhere else where they
are stacked up with layers of salt on and around each fish. The staking helps remove moisture. They the fish are washed in salt water. Hopefully, it is dry day and they can be put
outside on flakes. Fish left too long in
salt water receive a much lower grade when culled. Flakes are wooden structures with brush on
top. Fish are put on this to finish
drying out. The fish need to be turned
every few hours. Women and children
usually take care of the drying.
It was hard for fishermen to make a living on this credit
system. Some turned to lumbering in the
winter or hunting for seals. Eventually
fisherman in this area formed a cooperative, which gave them money for their
fish.
The first fishermen were recruited on the British. They came for a few seasons to fish and
returned to England . The British would then put the experience
sailors in the royal navy. Some of the
fishermen stayed to avoid inscription in the navy.
Pictures of Displays at Ryan Mercentile Complex
After we finished the exhibits in the five buildings we went
to lunch. I had a Newfounder’s lunch of
brewis. It was pretty blah. It consisted of salted cod, salted pork deep
fat fried, and hardtack. It came with a
piece of raisin molasses bread. Gordon
and the other couple with us had other things.
After lunch, the entire group met at Matthew Legacy. John Cabot (actually Caboto) was an Italian
sponsored by the British. His job was to
find a passage to the West Indies . Instead, he found N.
America . He later tried a
different route around S. America , but never
returned. John sailed in the
Matthew. Newfoundlanders celebrated the
500 yr. anniversary of their finding in 1997.
People on the island built a duplicate Matthew. It sailed to England and returned to
Bonavista. Queen Elizabeth came for the
dedication of the ship. The ship is
usually outside in the summer and dry docked in a shed in the winter. Because of some wood rot, it was in the shed.
Matthew's Legacy (in dry dock)
Winter Quarter's for Matthew's Legacy |
Next stop was the Mockbeggar Plantation. It may be the oldest identifiable fishery
plantation in existence in Newfoundland . Five buildings were part of the plantation,
but only the house was open. The house
had many owners, including F. Gordon Bradley, a lawyer and politician, who
played a significant role in the move to bring Newfoundland into Confederation of
Canada. He became the first
representative in the Canadian Cabinet, and later served as a member of
Senate. His family donated the property
to the Province. The house was large and
well furnished (furniture dated from 1930’s).
It was not the typical fisherman’s house.
After the plantation, we went to the Bonavista Light House
for a guided tour. It was next to a huge
rock with thousands of puffins. The
house of the light keepers was built around the round light house. It made for some interesting rooms. Some of our group saw whale from here. We did not see them until our next stop,
Dungeon Rock.
kerosene lights in top of light house |
puffins & gulls near Bonavista Lighthouse |
Dungeon rock was probably a sea cave with two entrances. At some point in time the ceiling of the cave
collapsed. Now you can look down to
where the cave used to me and see the two entrances from the land side. There were a couple of viewing platforms from
here. When we looked out we saw whales
feeding. There were several that stayed
in this area and they were probably humpback whales and fin whales. We came back after supper and they were still
in the area, but a little farther away.
Dungeon (collapsed sea cave with two entrances |
Bonavista Water Tower, one of three murals showing
View of Bonavista from water tower |
August 4
We left earlier today, but we ended earlier as well. We went to Elliston, a short distance from
our campground, but on a very, very bumpy road.
It was so bad, that it seemed like 20 miles instead of 3 1/2miles. First we had an orientation to the town that
went on and on. The town was on the
verge of dying. The economy plunged in
2000 and the village could not afford to pay its light bills. A committee met to see what could be
done. They decided to build on the
number root cellars the town has and the puffin viewing area. They now bill themselves as the root cellar
capital of the world. There are about
135 in a 2 km. area. There are a lot of
root cellars in the area. For us, the
real attraction was the puffin viewing.
On some days the puffins cross from their nesting rocks and walk all
around you. That did not happen, but
they did land on the cliff edge where we were sitting or standing (in the rain
of course). It was quite
incredible. After viewing puffins, we
had lunch in the towns orange lodge (a protestant association like the Knights
of Columbus).
After lunch, we went to Ft. Union . Ft.
Union was eventually the
home of William Ford Coaker, who formed the first fisherman’s union. Fishermen got paid in cash instead of
credit. This was definitely better for
them and they got better prices for their fish.
Croaker built the merchandise building (like the Ryan buildings we saw
yesterday). Croaker went on to do so
many, many things. He built houses for
his various managers, houses for the fisherman.
They all had electricity. Managers had indoor plumbing and running
water. Croaker built the power
plant. People in Ft. Union
had electricity before people in N. York City.
He published the Fisherman’s Advocate, built a bakery, owned a fleet of
ships, operated the carpentry shop, plumbing, electrical shop and numerous
national and international businesses. He built a beautiful home here in 1917, which
we also got to see. His wife and
daughter never lived with him, but a niece and her husband moved in with
him. She made many changes to the house. It was called a cottage because it only had 1
½ stories.
We decided to go back to the RV park. Gordon stayed there and rested and I went
back to the puffins.
Puffins on nearby ledge, near Elliston |
root cellars, two of 160+ cellars in the area, Elliston |
puffins near borrows (babies inside), gulls try and take fish from beaks of parents, Elliston |
August 5, 2013
Today is a travel day.
We go to Twilingate.