Celebrate Canada 2010 – defining Canada's cultural tapestry in 2010

June 9, 2009

A Newfoundland Renaissance Man at the Bay Of Bulls

Blogging with a view

on assignment cape spear view in the morning

The photo on the left was taken at 8:36pm and the one on the right was taken 10 am the following morning. Study the iceberg in the background, you will notice it’s toppled over and has nearly disappeared. The story goes that the iceberg was so big that the locals figured it would be there all summer.

mermaid ice berg

Meet Victor Williams, a Newfoundland renaissance man. I met Victor when I showed up at his door to borrow a fishing net so that I could scoop bits of the iceberg from the water’s edge for my drinks. Well, Victor didn’t have a fishing net, but he invited me in to have a look around his home, in his neighbourhood which is called…”Cheese and beard”, (I later looked it up on the map to confirm it) which is just down the road from the Bay of Bulls.

Anyway, the story goes something like this…to me, Victor is a classic example of a Newfoundland Renaissance man. He plays the accordion, he’s built model ships for years, he rebuilt a fiddle, he works in the woods, his home is decorated with photos of coast guard vessels and his front lawn is decorated with moose cutouts. Have a look at how this man’s culture is defined by his traditional surroundings. I was honored to have spent the afternoon poking around Victor’s home which I saw as his personal museum that reflects the strong Newfoundland culture.

Victor Williams has lived all of his eighty years in the Bay Of Bulls area.

victor williams_5

Victor built his entire house, “not one nail was pounded in by anyone else other than me!”

victor williams_6

Victor carved this double-barrel shot gun from one piece of wood. It has such a likeness to a real gun, that someone in the St. John’s Walmart called the police on Victor. “Even the police thought it was a real gun”, Victor explains.

victor with gun

Victor plays the accordion in his living room.

victor play upstairs in the living room

Victor rebuilt this fiddle, which was in pretty rough shape before he saved it.

vicotr williams

Victor builds all of his own boats, no matter what size.

victor with victori

Victor tells me the story of a tanker that once came to the Bay Of Bulls.

vicotr williams_2

Victor has built many model ships, all to size and spec.

victor with boat 1

Victor plays another song in the basement by another one of his ambitious creations.

vicotr williams_4

Victor makes his own Christmas decorations, “you should see this place around Christmas!”

victors folk art

Victor bids me farewell from his front yard. Bye Victor, that was fun….

vicotr williams_7

Later in the day, I ran into Victor in town and he told me that I needed to go back down to the beach by his house because bits of the iceberg had washed ashore. So I went back, got a small piece of ice and walked back up to Victor’s to see if he wanted half of my catch, but he declined. “We see that sort of stuff all the time!” Oh well! For me it was just a great adventure into one man’s world.

on assignment in bay of bulls with ice berg

Church Statues sit atop cannon barrels.

bay of bulls church

Crab Fishermen Finish For The Day In Petty’s Cove.

fishing team in pettys cove

pettys cove

pettys cove fishermen

Petty’s Cove

perry's cove

perry's cove

June 8, 2009

A Portrait Of The Cape Spear Lighthouse

Cape Spear is the most eastern point in Canada.

cape spear parks sign

A road cuts through the tundra-like landscape up to the Cape Spear Lighthouse. The lower lighthouse on the right is the coast guard light station which is still in use to guide traffic into St. John’s harbour.

-06-08-12-12_01

The Cape Spear Lighthouse is a National Historic Site and Monument.

cape spear lighthouse plaque

Welcome to the Cape Spear Lighthouse

welcome to cape spear lighthouse!

This is the bedroom on the main floor, near the front door.

-06-08-16-50_09

The parlor (or living room) was simply furnished but still classic.

-06-08-16-51_03

The entire house has a circular inside wall, which is structural with the concrete tower which supported a metal dome, glass windows, hand railings and a massive lens.

-06-08-16-50_03

The Fireplace in the Kitchen

cape spear_21

Kitchen Cupboards

cape spear_22

Lighthouse Office

cape spear_23

An interpreter tells the story of how the lighthouse moved slightly off of its foundation during a major winter storm.

-06-08-16-58_01

This is the second storey view of the coast guard lighthouse looking north shot from top of the staircase.

-06-08-16-54_05

A Second Storey Bedroom

-06-08-16-55_05

A room on the second floor was used to store barrels of sperm oil, which was burned in the lighthouse lamp.

-06-08-16-56_01

The tool room was next to the room in which the oil was stored.

cape spear_24

These are the stairs leading up to the dome where the lamp once was, but the lamp has been removed. This part of the lighthouse, sadly, was out of bounds.

-06-08-17-01_01

The Cape Spear Lighthouse Dome

cape spear lighthouse dome detail

The top of the world! Imagine the excitement a lost fishermen would feel at finally seeing that lighthouse light pointing him home to safety.

cape spear_6
Looking North

-06-08-14-53_03

Lighthouse, outhouse.

-06-08-14-39_01

There are great trails everywhere around Cape Spear, but do walk with caution. There is a cliff with two hundred foot drops!

cape spear trail sign

Looking South from the Lighthouse

cape spear looking west

June 7, 2009

Day 251 of a 365-Day Portrait of Canada: Cape Spear, Newfoundland

Cape Spear

Cape Spear is located in Newfoundland
Cape Spear
Cape Spear
Location of Cape Spear in Newfoundland

Cape Spear, located on the Avalon Peninsula near St. John’s, Newfoundland, is the easternmost point in Canada (52°37′W).

Cape Spear is also the easternmost point in North America.

The Portuguese named this location “Cabo da Esperança” which means “cape of hope”, which became “Cap d’Espoir” in French and finally “Cape Spear”.

Cape Spear is the trailhead/trail end for two components of the East Coast Trail.

There has been a lighthouse operating at Cape Spear since September 1836. The original Cape Spear lighthouse was the second lighthouse built in Newfoundland; the first was built in 1810 at Fort Amherst, at the entrance to St. John’s Harbour. In 1832, the first legislative assembly for the colony created a lighthouse board. Cape Spear was chosen as the site for a new lighthouse because it was on the rocky eastern coast near the entrance to St John’s harbour.

Construction began in 1834. The first lighthouse was a square wooden building with a tower in the middle containing the light. A foghorn was added in 1878. The first light used at Cape Spear had already been used since 1815 at a lighthouse at Inchkeith on the east coast of Scotland. This light used seven Argand burners and curved reflectors. This was later replaced by a dioptric lens system; the light was first lit by oil, then acetylene and finally electricity in 1930.

Because of its proximity to convoy routes during the Second World War, a gun battery was installed at Cape Spear to defend the entrance to St. John’s harbour. Barracks and underground passages leading to the bunkers were built for the use of troops stationed there.

A new concrete building was built to house the light in 1955. The original lighthouse building and the light keeper’s residence have since been restored. It is the oldest surviving lighthouse in Newfoundland and the location has been designated a Canadian National Historic Site. Some visitors attracted by the scenery and history have been swept away by the large and unpredictable waves at Cape Spear, prompting Parks Canada to post numerous warning signs in the area, Cape Spear was also used recently for filming of a hockey game in the Canadian television series, Road Hockey Rumble.

Cape Spear77

Busted….Excuse me sir you need to have those dogs on a leash….

Cape Spear78

Cape Spear71

Cape Spear72

The 1836 Cape Spear Lighthouse

-06-07-18-36

This is the easternmost point in North America. I spotted giant whales jumping right out of the water, and one minute later from this point, even though they were three miles, I mean kms away, it was very exciting to witness.

Cape Spear61

A Viewing Platform Overlooks The Most Easterly Point in North America

Cape Spear85

A boy runs his Newfoundland “Jack”  along the boardwalk at Cape Spear.

Cape Spear84

Cape Spear was busy today with tourists from across Canada.

Cape Spear60

Some visitors attracted by the scenery and history have been swept away by the large and unpredictable waves at Cape Spear. Two people died last year alone.

Cape Spear79

Really? You have to be kidding.. you’re going to drive out to a National Historic Site to see the beauty and history, only to throw out your fast food trash?

Cape Spear80

The World War Two Battery at Cape Spear

Cape Spear66

Cape Spear67

An old gun rusts away, after never being fired.

-06-07-19-15

Security guard Joe shows me around the bunker.

Cape Spear76

Cape Spear74

If you see a lot of garbage photos posted on this blog, it’s because I’m very anti-litter -bug.

Cape Spear70

Signal Hill from Cape Spear

signal hill from cape spear

Joe takes his job very seriously! I first met Joe when he got on the loud speaker to tell me to put my dogs on a leash, and he then had to drive out and tell me a second time to put the dogs on a leash. At least he didn’t ticket me.

Cape Spear75

Young Ryan

june 5th_4

Faces Of The Day, Cape Spear

-06-07-19-51_06

Village of Blackhead, near Cape Spear.

st john's june 5

Mountain Bike race near Quidi Vidi.

mb racer one

Wow! This 12 year old was sporting the same camera I had! If only I’d had that camera when I was 12, I could have done some serious damage.

june 5th

Older Posts »

Blog at WordPress.com.