Featured Playlists
Video Vignettes, Newfoundland and Labrador
Have you ever imaged sitting beside a whale on the ocean, so close you can feel its saltwater spray on your skin? Have you ever stood at the tip of a rock face with a city of birds diving and dancing through sun-infused mist, just a few feet away? And have you ever spent a day on the open ocean, which unfolds into a night full of music and dancing as you explore the nooks and crannies of bars clustered down one eclectic street? These videos will give you a taste of some of the unique experiences waiting for you here in Newfoundland and Labrador...
Western Region, Newfoundland & Labrador
The Western region is a great sliver of land on Newfoundland's island, stretching 750 kilometres from Channel-Port aux Basques on the southwest corner, to the historic Viking site of L'Anse aux Meadows at the tip of the Great Northern Peninsula. With ancient mountains, fjords, icebergs, whales, thousands of miles of coastline and two UNESCO World Heritage Sites, this wild and rugged region sports abundant breathing room, diverse natural heritage and rich culture. It's home to Gros Morne National Park, the International Appalachian Trail, Marble Mountain (which is some of the best skiing in Eastern Canada), and Corner Brook, the biggest city outside the Avalon Peninsula.
TV Ads, Newfoundland and Labrador
Around here, there's no such thing as an accidental tourist. Newfoundland and Labrador is not Disneyland. It's a harsh and beautifully rugged destination with 29,000 kilometres of pristine coastline, perched at the most easterly edge of North America. Our landscape is full of a strange and terrible beauty. Our towns and cities, soaked in centuries of colourful history and culture, and we have perhaps the most genuine, creative and warmly funny people you're ever likely to meet.
Gros Morne National Park, Newfoundland and Labrador
On Bonne Bay in Western Newfoundland sits a powerful, core-changing landscape. This UNESCO World Heritage Site is to geology what the Galapagos is to evolution - evidence of continental drift is underfoot at every step. It took Mother Nature 485,000,000 years to mould Gros Morne National Park into the geological and visual wonder we know today. The second largest National Park in Eastern Canada, it encompasses tiny seaside communities, forests, bogs, barren lowlands, and striking shoreline, stretching across 1,805 square kilometres of Western Newfoundland as part of the towering Long Range Mountains.
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