Brigus Eye Candy

The forecast called for a reasonably good Saturday (cloudy with sunny periods) and a crummy Sunday (rain), so we high-tailed it out of town first-thing Saturday morning. We went to Brigus, a small, historic community in Conception Bay (population of around 784. Give or take.)

Our plan was simple: pick a place with good colours and architecture that had a beach, some good views and relatively little traffic. An added bonus would be a location best suited to exploring on foot, but without gobs of residual snow.

Brigus was perfect. To boot, the weather was actually better than it was supposed to be and we had stellar light, incredible blue skies and warming sun. Here are some of the fruits of our trip. Enjoy!!

We started out by appeasing the small demon with a beach. The water was brilliant and the surf lively enough to be interesting. You can see Landfall Cottage, once the home of artist Rockwell Kent, in the background. It blends in pretty thoroughly!Landfall

The lighthouse:
Brigus Lighthouse

Exhilaration

Near the beach is a man-made tunnel, the story of which you can see below:Tunnel with a view

The Brigus Tunnel

It's nearly as interesting coming back up the tunnel as going down.Emerging

The historic Anglican Church, St. George's, with brilliantly green moss in the foreground.
Spring

We then grabbed a quick lunch (wonder of wonders there was a Greco sub place between Brigus and Cupids) and went back for more wandering and shoot. Found St. Patrick's Church and had great fun with the statues there. The white on blue was stunning, both in nature and in statuary!

Reaching

st patrick's 2

Alignment
A statuary in front of St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church in Brigus, Newfoundland, Canada. Adjacent is a convent formed of a group of nuns from Ireland. The Mission is aptly named "our Lady of Snow", in Mercy Convent .

Behold

We then had popsicles (at the insistence of the commander-in-chief. She prefers orange, by the way) and decided to see if the road to Rockwell Kent's cottage, Landfall, was passable. It was and was well worth the walk!

This is Big Head:

Great Head
This is Kent Cottage or "Landfall". For more information about it, try this source.

Kent Cottage - closer

This was as close as we thought appropriate, given that the property is private and it is, after all, someone's house. A summer house, to be sure, but were it mine, I would appreciate people keeping their distance. A bit of historical info: The Landfall Cottage was construction around 1786 for the Pomeroy family. It is built on the Battery, named after a gun placement site during King George's War from 1740-1748. They also call it Freshwater as it was a main source of water for sealing fleets on their way to the ice floes. The original building was a small Georgian-style structure with a chimney made out of brick-ballast from ships sailing from England.

Landfall
Wandering back though the town, we saw dozens of fascinating houses. This one in particular caught my eye, both for the contrast of yellow on blue and for it's fabulous door!

Merchant's Door
These upper doors were often equipped with rollers to facilitate hauling supplies in. Very few remain in Newfoundland, as many of the houses have fallen down or been substantially modified (most people don't want second-floor doors with no stairs, for some reason).

Then we headed home, as the day clouded over and Katherine, who had been the soul of patience (popsicle bribes work wonders) and industry (we now have a trunk full of beach rocks) had just about had enough.

There's a trail that runs over the barren hills, out to the lighthouse and round to the next tiny community. We're saving that for when the snow is finally gone. With any luck, that'll be in a few weeks!

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9 Comments Add yours

  1. arlee says:

    Oh that blue blue sky!! There is something special about Coastal skies on a sunny clear day—wondrous!

  2. How incredibly beautiful, thank you for sharing. I particularly love the first photograph…could see it as an etching…

  3. Carol Dean says:

    Thank you so much for sharing this! I needed a vacation and truly felt as if I were there.

  4. Bob says:

    I’d like permission to forward this to some family in Danvers, Mass, who visited Brigus with us recently.

  5. vickyth says:

    Absolutely, Bob! Sorry about the delay in getting back to you – I’ve been ill over the past few days and have fallen terribly behind in just about everything (except coughing, I’m more than up to snuff on coughing).

  6. mcihelle redmond says:

    Hi MY Name is mcihelle and i was raised in brigus and still live here ..im a 40 year old single mom and i just visited your site …The pictures you have on here are so peaceful and very beautiful ….As a child growing up i really never appreciated the beauty of my home town but as the years have entered i think that Brigus is such a beautiful quaint town …My house that i grew up in is such a big attraction for the sight seaers in brigus …it is located next to the old stone barn which used to be ours but a few years back my father Harriosn Fry passed it over to the historical society ..If you are ever in the area you can always pop in and ask for me …My name is Michelle Redmond .

  7. vickyth says:

    Nice to meet you, Michelle! I will certainly swing by your house. I know exactly which one you mean! we frequently find ourselves in Brigus over the course of the summer and would love to meet you!

  8. John Archibald says:

    Yes b’y, quite the place. Capt. Bob, seals, whales, cod, puffins, the herts. A grander place can not be found. Unless of course you travel to Grates Cove, or Hibbs Hole, or Bryant’s Cove or Freshwater or Old Perlican, Heart’s Content, the New Harbour Barrens. Why would one stop?

    Archibald

  9. Gareth says:

    Very nice. Perhaps my favourite place on earth. BTW, the last pic, of the twine loft door and roller is my house. Always like to see photos of it.

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