Meals Included: Breakfast, Lunch
You will enjoy a day trip to Twillingate today. Along the way, you will stop at the Beothuk Interpretive Centre for a nice stroll through the Ancient Gardens. You will then continue to Twillingate, located in the heart of Iceberg Alley, for a scenic tour, as well as lunch and wine tasting at a local winery. Aboard the coach once again, you will have a short stop at the Long Point Lighthouse poised high on the cliffs where you have a fantastic view over the cliffs and down to the sea. There will also be time to visit the Lightkeeper’s Fudgery and gift store to purchase some fudge or enjoy an ice cream. You will then retrace your steps back to Gander for the evening.
Twillingate: A town of 2,269 people located on the Twillingate Islands (“Toulinquet”) in Notre Dame Bay. The islands provide an excellent sheltered harbour and easy access to the rich fishing grounds nearby. In recent years, a causeway named after Walter B. Elliot was built, which connects it to the mainland via New World Island. Labeled as “The Iceberg Capital of the World”, the town is one of the oldest ports on the island. Imagine… a now-extinct people with a unique language and culture, thriving on the rich resources of the land and sea: seals, birds and fish.
Auk Island Winery: The winery (now named after the extinct Great Auk) was originally founded in 1997 with the trademark of the Notre Dame Winery. The winery has made its mark in the industry making unique wines made from Newfoundland berries and fruits and some specialty wines using Iceberg water. The majority of the berries used are wild and free of pesticides or fertilizers, making our wines as pure as they come. The berries are picked by hand by the locals and often hand-delivered directly to the winery.
Beothuk Interpretive Centre: 300 years ago, this site was a Beothuk village. Tour the Interpretation Centre where exhibits and artifacts foster an appreciation for this unique, and now vanished culture.
From the Interpretation Centre, follow a 1.5 km groomed walking trail to the village site – today an outline of house pits is the only evidence of the Beothuk people who once lived here. Along the trail, a sculpture designed by renowned Newfoundland artist Gerald Squires evokes the tragedy of the Beothuks’ demise.
Overnight – Sinbad’s Hotel & Suites