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Portland Creek
A natural rock archway created by tidal action. Parking and picnic area provided. Camping is not permitted.
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Barachois Pond Provincial Park
The largest provincial park in western Newfoundland has 3,500 hectares of balsam fir forest, freshwater swimming beaches, bird watching, mountain streams, and hiking trails with panoramic views. A park interpreter provides guided walks, environmental games and campfire sing-alongs.
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Blow Me Down Provincial Park
Situated on a peninsula between Lark and York Harbours, the park offers magnificent views of the Blow Me Down Mountains and the Bay of Islands.
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Butter Pot Provincial Park
The park covers an area of 2833 hectares of varied terrain and vegetation, forest, bogs, heaths and ponds. Hiking trails take you through forests and over barren to a remarkable scenic view point.
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Cataracts Provincial Park
A deep river gorge with two cascading waterfalls provides a scenic setting for photographs. Stairs and walkways enable the visitor to descend the gorge and cross the river. Thirty-five percent of the known mosses and liverworts in Newfoundland have been identified in the park. Camping is not permitted.
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Chance Cove
This park's 2,068 hectares stretch from the highways edge to the coast. There are no designated campsites, but you are permitted to camp on the parking lot in the picnic area. Pit toilets. A trail leads to the coast where you can see whales, seabirds, and seals.
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Searston
This scenic beach is located at the mouth of the Grand Codroy River. Natural Scenic Attraction Park.
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Lumsden
This beach of fine beige sand provides a fantastic view of icebergs in early summer. Picnic sites and pit toilets. Look for shorebirds.
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Virgin Arm
This park provides visitors with an ideal central and convenient location for viewing all of the New World Island
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Bonavista
Natural scenic attraction park, camping is not permitted. A collapsed sea cave with a natural archway carved by the sea.
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Frenchman's Cove Provincial Park
Located on the west side of the Burin Peninsula, the park comprises 51 hectares of varied habitat. Pebble beach, quiet barachois, marsh and stream, bird watching, 9-hole golf course, 25 minutes to St. Pierre ferry.
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Gooseberry Cove, Placentia Bay
This attractive sandy beach with a grassy back shore is ideal for picnicking. High wave action restricts swimming. Camping is not permitted.
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J. T. Cheeseman Provincial Park
This natural environmental park on the Cape Ray barrens features bogs, rolling forested hills, floral species such as yellow clintonia, violet bog aster, bunchberry, pearly everlasting, sheep laurel, and pitcher plant, evergreens, larch and mountain ash, White Admiral and Atlantis Fritillary butterflies, mink, rabbits, moose, birds such as common loon, murre, pine grosbeak, sparrow, and Canada goose.
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La Manche Provincial Park
This park was established because of the scenic La Manche valley, interesting and varied habitat and vegetation, as well as the diverse bird life. The park includes Rowsells Hill Pond, La Manche Ponds, a selection of the La Manche River, and the abandoned fishing village of La Manche.
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Lockston Path Provincial Park
Comprising 733 hectares, this park with its sheltered campsites and freshwater beach provides a good base camp for visits to the nearby historic communities.
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Sop's Arm
152-km waterway park protects boreal forest and threatened Newfoundland Marten, opportunities for paddling, angling and wilderness camping.
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Notre Dame Junction
Nestled in the lush forests of Central Newfoundland, this 133-hectare park borders on the serene waters of Junction Pond. An ideal choice for the family, the park has something to offer visitor of all ages.
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Pinware River Provincial Park
Pinware River Provincial Park is a 68 hectare park located on route 510, approximately 32-km southwest from Red Bay. A ferry crosses from St. Barbe on the Great Northern Peninsula of Newfoundland to souther Labrador approximately 53-km south of the Park. Opened in 1974, the park covers diverse terrain and vegetation.
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Pistolet Bay Provincial Park
Located 12-km off route 430 on the tip of the Great Northern Peninsula. The park encompasses 897 hectares of delightfully varied vegetation.
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Burgeo
The park is named for its undulating sand dunes and long expanses of flat, sandy beaches which are some of the most magnificent on the island portion of this province. Inland, the park is characterized by spruce-fir forest and barrens typical of the south coast of Newfoundland.