On the second 2 days of our summer staycation Gladys and i drove from Trinity to Harbour Breton which is indicated by the red dot on the map below. You can see it's closeness to Marystown in direction across the water but we drove the distance which is 592km by road. Quite the trek but since we had never been there before we wanted to see it. We had to drive to Bishop Falls in order to take the route down there from the Trans Canada highway. It's just over 200km from the TCH and there is no places in between on the highway. There are a few towns that you can reach by leaving the main road.
This area was cut off by road for a while this summer due to some wild fires in the area. The fires weren't close to Harbour Breton but there was some issues with smoke from the fires. However, the road down to the area was closed for over a week during the high point of the fires.
The following are a few photos we took during our stay there.
Harbour Breton on overcast evening.
Harbour Breton on a partly cloudy evening.
Fish Plant over looking the harbour. The plant processes farmed salmon.
This is the site of the Hickey Landslide Memorial to a terrible landslide which occurred in August of 1973 which resulted in 4 houses being swept off the hill and the loss of lives of 4 children of the Hickey family. The oldest and youngest of their 6 children survived. The youngest, Cavelle, was 21 months old at the time was protected by the sides of her crib and was rescued. Later in her life she lived here in Marystown and worked with Gladys for a while.
Hickey Memorial Plaque
This is the hill from where the houses were swept away. The town passed a law that forbid the building of any homes in the area in the future.
Gladys sitting on the beach at Deadman's Cove.
Some colourful rock on the beach at Deadman's Cove.
The next few photos were taken in a little restaurant in Harbour Breton which has some local artifacts. The following is a photo of the schooner Norma & Gladys on which Gladys's Grandfather Jim Mallay was once a crew member.
Another photo from the same restaurant with the remnants of whiskey or mollases barrells.
An outfitted schooner dory which was used by Newfoundland fishermen many years ago.
A lighthouse standing guard over the entrance to the harbour in Hermitage.
One of many rock displays on a trail around a pond near Harbour Breton. This one was dedicated to Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs.
Gladys picking a bakeapple just of the trail.
This is a photo of the Chantel John Memorial Park in Conne River, a town not too far from Harbour Breton. Chantel was a young indigenous woman from Conne River who was murdered in 2019.