IcebergsFew things in nature can slow the eye like the sight of these bergs. Take a boat tour down Iceberg Alley and get as close as you can to these natural marvels, spectacles that dot our shores more than anywhere else in the world. Come to think of it, that old saying about icebergs- that 90% of it is under the surface to discover- could easily apply to our whole province. Have a peek at what we mean in this video clip. We are not a people naturally given to bragging, but there is no question that we have the world beaten when it comes to icebergs. Because the cold, hard fact is that this is the best place in the world to see them. On a sunny day, they can be seen from many points along our northern and eastern coasts, glacial messengers carrying a signal from the high north. Great, silent flotillas of them, in every shape and size. In colours ranging from snow-white, to the deepest aquamarine. Cathedrals of ice, not made of human hands. People who like this also like... And despite their arrival from the Arctic every spring, our awe of them remains new, year after year. Their sheer size sends the mind racing, and that’s not even counting the ninety-percent still unseen below the surface. And the very fact that these majestic leviathans are mere fragments of the glaciers that have nurtured them for ten thousand years ago – well, let’s just say it can be a little much to wrap one’s head around. And so we don’t even bother. We simply lie back on the warm grass of a cliff top, and watch the show go by. So, is it bragging, even if it’s true? Perhaps, but the facts are in evidence. We have them. They are ours. But we are willing to share. 
-
Added by
-
Cape Spear (Iceberg in distance)
Added by
-
But I need a photo of that iceberg!
Added by Buzzer on Jul 01, 2009
Added by
-
Outside of St. Anthony
Added by Texan on Jun 29, 2009
Added by
-
Iceberg off Cape Bonvista, Tuesday, Feb. 17th, 2009. Take cold comfort in this first harbinger of spring.
Added by
-
Pack Ice floating in Durrell, Twillingate
Added by
-
Added by
-
Off St. Anthony coast
Added by Texan on Jul 01, 2009
Added by
-
Icebergs Are Alive!!
Added by Texan on May 06, 2009
Added by
-
Added by
-
Added by
-
Chucks of iceberg frothing in Quidi Vidi gut.
Added by
|
 |
Cliquer ici pour voir une version abrégée de ce site en français.
|
 |
|
Log in to view or build your Travel Bag.
|
 |
Subscribe to the Newfoundland and Labrador eNewsletter.
|
 |
Order a Traveller’s Guide, Hunting and Fishing Outfitters Guide, or Map.
|
|