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travel / travel magazine / march 2008

Live & Learn



Waiting for the whales
By Lynn Coady with photography by Ned Pratt

Your heart will leap with each 30-tonne splash off the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador, a humpback hideaway where sea mammals dance and dive before your eyes

IMAGINE A COASTLINE so pummelled by the elements that even the trees have given up, growing low against the ground and shaped into permanent windblown sculptures. Imagine the kind of damp that fingers its way beneath your skin and settles there almost smugly, defying your attempts to get warm. Now imagine encountering these things without the appropriate clothing. I arrive on the Newfoundland and Labrador coast at the tail end of summer, but my suitcase does not, leaving me with nothing with which to battle this singular rawness of land and sea but a cashmere cardigan and ballerina flats.



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The farther Dave Snow of Wildland Tours ferries our group along the rollicking unpaved Trans-Labrador Highway, the more certain I become that the cardigan, which doesn't even stay buttoned half the time, will not prove equal to the increasingly northerly elements. Snow keeps reminding me that we are essentially winding our way toward the doorstep of Arctic Canada. "It's the most southern part of the North," he says, seeming to relish this geographical oxymoron. "We have polar bears in winter and tropical sea turtles in the summer."

But it's whales we're on our way to see, and I am going to need a coat. After pickup at the Deer Lake airport, we've taken the ferry from Sainte Barbe, N.L., across the Strait of Belle Isle to Blanc- Sablon, Que. From there, we head straight to the seaside village of L'Anse-au-Clair, in Labrador (where I am assured my bag will be waiting for me in the morning). We continue the next day (bagless) up the Trans-Labrador toward Mary's Harbour, where we'll take another ferry an hour across St. Lewis Sound to finally arrive in the historic village of Battle Harbour. Meanwhile, the farther we bounce along the rocky highway - which, with its composition of pink granite, reminds me of an endless, bumpy tongue - the colder the weather seems to get and the smaller my bag becomes in my mind.

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