Bleached tree at Sandbanks Provincial Park, Burgeo |
The clock is ticking on Newfoundland’s south coast.
On June 1 of this year 59 out of the 77 residents of McCallum voted on
whether to accept a government relocation package. Since 90 per cent of the
population has to agree to resettle, this number was not enough for the
government to allocate up to $270,000 per resident so they could move
elsewhere. But like other isolated communities, it’s only a matter of time
before the pro-resettlement people get their 90% and Newfoundland Power shuts
the place down.
I remember in 2010 when the lights went out in Grand Bruit, west of
McCallum. Grand Bruit never had cars and was only accessible by boat. But
residents did have a school, post office and store. That is until the former fishing
community’s 31 residents accepted a provincial government relocation program.
Water was cut off, the church decommissioned, the ferry service discontinued,
leaving a gaping hole in public transportation between Port aux Basques and
Hermitage. Since 2010 residents and tourists alike have not been able to travel
the entire south coast by government ferry. And if McCallum residents vote yes
to resettlement, there’ll be a second hole in the ferry run.
Will that spell the end of tourism on Newfoundland’s south coast?
You already practically need a degree in provincial ferry schedules to
work out a comprehensible itinerary. And what about that chunk between
Hermitage and Pools Cove? No ferry there. No matter. This July I explored, with
my husband and seven-year-old, the isolated communities between Burgeo and Francois.
We had to… before more lights go out.
Burgeo Haven B and B |
The cemetery at sandbanks Provincial Park is risking being swallowed by the sand. |
Seven kilometres of fine sandy beaches at Sandbanks Provincial Park in Burgeo |
We checked in to the Burgeo
Haven B and B (886-2544) ($110 tax in includes hot breakfast) before walking
across the street to a boardwalk lookout for a view of the bay. We then drove
three kilometres to explore the seven kilometres of sandy beach at Sandbanks
Provincial Park. $5 per carload for day use. Clean bathrooms, amazing boardwalk
system with lookouts. The cemetery at the north end of third beach is risking
being swallowed by the sand and the waves.
Piping plovers nest in the grass alongside the beach.
Three restaurants: Gillett’s Motel, Angela’s Seashore Diner and
Sharon’s Diner.
Only a handful of people on the beach at Sandbanks Provincial Park in Burgeo |
Hundreds of small islands shelter the ocean waters making them calm in Burgeo |