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R I V E R S & S H O R E S

newfoundland

EASTERN CANADA

Newfoundland’s coast welcomed the first

Europeans—the Vikings—to the New World

more than a thousand years ago. They didn’t

stay, and no wonder, for though this is a beau-

tiful place, it is also an inhospitable one, girded

by clifs, deep fjords, and wind-bufeted

headlands. Icebergs drift ofshore from April

to June, and abandoned fishing settlements

bear witness to the coast’s long human his-

tory. Visitors come for the solitude, to take in

the bracing Atlantic air, and to kayak, hike, or

watch for whales and other wildlife.

DON’T MISS

Hikers and history bufs will relish the East Coast

Trail, which runs for 165 miles (265 km) down the

island’s east coast, and the chance to visit the site

of L’Anse aux Meadows, the only confirmed Viking

settlement in North America.

The clifs of Cape St. Mary (right) and Cape Spear

(above), the most easterly point in North America