Newfoundland, Labrador and Baffin Island

Newfoundland, Labrador and Baffin Island

Cost:
From US$4100/ Approx C$4300
( from St John's ) ( Main deck Triple Cabin)


2008 Departure
Thurs. July 10 – Tues. July 22

2009 Departure
Fri. July 10 – Wed. July 22

Tour Leader -Tony Beck
Tony is a professional naturalist, wildlife photographer and teacher who has travelled extensively in North and Central America. He is a caring tour leader who shares his contagious enthusiasm and well-honed skills with his tours participants. Tony has lead previous Quest tours to Hawaii, Costa Rica and Eastern and Western Canada.

Audrey Nowicki - Staff Member
6
Audrey has been working for Quest's for five years, and is currently the Sales Team Leader. Her expertise has been developed as a participant in a number of our voyages of discovery. Her clients appreciate her attention to detail and her friendly, professional approach.

  

     
Join us on a unique voyage to one of Canada’s least visited regions — the rugged coasts of Newfoundland, Labrador and Baffin Island. We’ll be aboard the R/V Akademik Ioffe, a true expedition ship, which will take us to important historical and archaeological sites, unchartered fjords, masses of sea ice and icebergs, and spectacular scenery.

Please Note: As with all of our expedition cruises, weather, ice or other conditions may require that changes be made to our itinerary and certain shore excursions cancelled or altered.

Itinerary
( All Meals included while on board ship.)

Day 1
Departure from St. John’s

We’ll board our vessel, the R.V Akademik Ioffe, at 12 noon, and set sail north along the coastline. The ship will be tied up at the cruise ship terminal in historic downtown St. John’s. We recommend that you fly in a day or two in advance so that you can discover and enjoy the culture that gives Eastern Canada the reputation for being so welcoming and friendly.

As we sail out of St. John’s Harbour, we will have Signal Hill on our port side, where Marconi received the first trans-Atlantic wireless transmission in 1901. On our starboard side, we will see Fort Amherst, built by the British to protect the entrance to the Narrows. As we clear the harbour, we can look to the southeast and see the lighthouse at Cape Spear that marks the easternmost point of the continent of North America. We will leave this behind as we sail northwest around the Avalon Peninsula and on to the Great Northern Peninsula of Newfoundland.



o/n Akademik Ioffe

Day 2
L’Anse aux Meadows
We’ll arrive off shore at L’Anse aux Meadows, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and go ashore in our sturdy Zodiacs, landing on the beach, reminiscent of the ancient Norsemen. This will be our first of many experiences with our Zodiacs, a very safe and versatile craft invented by the famous Jacques Cousteau. L’Anse aux Meadows is a corruption of the original French L’Anse au Meduse meaning Jellyfish Creek. This is where Norseman, Leif Erikson, is thought to have founded “Vinland” in 1000 AD.  As we explore the reconstructed sod huts and Norse ruins, we’ll see evidence that the Vikings discovered North America five hundred years before Columbus arrived.

Day 3
Battle Harbour

We’ll set sail for the coast of Labrador and cross the Strait of Belle Isle to arrive at Battle Harbour, one of the first British-based settlements in the east and home to the Church of St. James the Apostle, built in 1852.  We will explore the restored fishing, whaling, commercial and religious buildings of this remote community, amid the backdrop of breathtaking coastal views.  On the way across the Strait we’ll be on the lookout for Humpback and Minke Whales, along with seals and many species of pelagic birds. Dr. Wilfred Grenfell built one of the first hospitals in Labrador in Battle Harbour in 1893, with one doctor and one nurse on staff.  We’ll also begin our series of shipboard lectures today. Further along the coast we’ll arrive at Hawkes Harbour in the late afternoon for a visit to an abandoned whaling station, operated by the Newfoundland Whaling Co. Ltd., and built in 1933.



Day 4
Labrador Coast

Today we’ll make our way along the wild and ruggedly beautiful coast of Labrador with some cliffs rising as sheer rock walls over 1500 metres. As we sail we’ll be sea watching from the bridge and upper decks of the Ioffe looking for Humpback and Minke Whales, White-beaked Dolphins and perhaps Orcas. We’ll also be spotting and identifying the many sea birds in the area.                                        

Day 5
Hopedale
The ancient rocks of the Canadian Shield cradling the hamlet of Hopedale, population approximately 620, will greet us as we rise this morning. After breakfast, we will go ashore by Zodiac visit the Hopedale Moravian Mission - built in 1782 and said to be the oldest building east of Quebec. Here we will learn about the influence of the Moravian missionaries on the Inuit people of Northern Labrador. We hope to visit the local museum and perhaps buy a carving or two from the local Inuit as we explore the town.

Day 6
Okak / Cape Mygford
We’ll sail north to Okak Bay, and land at Okak, an abandoned community and former Moravian Mission and subsequent Hudson’s Bay Company trading post until 1956 when the Canadian government relocated the inhabitants to other communities in Labrador. This site offers lush sub-Arctic tundra walking on the open-rock barrenlands of coastal Labrador. We’ll explore this area and others farther north for the ancient camps of the early pre-Dorset people who occupied this barren landscape.



Our next stop will be Cape Mugford, one of the two sources along the coast of Labrador, of the stone, Ramah Chert – used for over 7000 years by the Paleo-Eskimo peoples and the Maritime Archaic Indians. Prehistoric cultures utilized both high and low quality stone for tool making. When they could get it, they appear to have preferred chert, a fine-grained stone composed mainly of silica. This composition makes the stone brittle and able to fracture with a sharp edge. It was preferred by many flintknappers (or stone workers) because the pattern with which the chert fractured was predictable, producing a better formed tool. There are only two known sources of high quality, flakeable chert along the entire Labrador coast. One is in the Cape Mugford region; the other is farther north in the area of Ramah Bay. This second source is found in an extremely limited area, as part of a sedimentary formation that runs from Saglek Bay north through Ramah Bay, ending at Nachvak Fiord. We hope to go ashore here to view this interesting rock formation and for further tundra exploration.



Day 7
Hebron / Torngat Mountains National Park

Today we hope to visit Hebron, once the northernmost settlement in Labrador, Hebron was established by the Moravian missionaries in 1831. The Mission was closed and the Inuit families relocated in 1959 but the buildings still stand today. From here we sail north and into Saglek Fjord. This is the southern gateway to the Torngat Mountains National Park Reserve, Canada’s newest and 42nd national park, established on December 1, 2005.

The Torngat Mountains National Park Reserve covers 9,600 square kilometres in Northern Labrador, bordering Quebec on one side and the Labrador coast on the other. It is home to Canada’s highest mountains east of the Rockies, breathtaking fjords and stunning Barrenland viewscapes. The Inuit and their predecessors have occupied this region for over 7500 years.



The Inuktitut word Torngait, means "place of spirits". Polar bears hunt seals along the coast, and both the Torngat Mountains and George River caribou herds cross paths as they migrate to and from their calving grounds. Today, Inuit continue to use this area for hunting, fishing, and travelling throughout the year. We'll go ashore and explore the area. Wildflowers are spectacular when in bloom and bears feast on the aptly named Bearberry and Crowberries, among the sedges and grasses, on the raised beaches along the shores of the fiords
 


Day 8
Nachvak Fjord

Near Natchvak, the Torngats are a particularly beautiful range. It means “the place where the spirits live” and surely no one will disturb them in this eerie place. The local Inuit have resisted all attempts to get them to settle here but such was their respect for the spirits that they would not stay despite enticements. According to one of their legends the area was once home to a form of giant Brown Bear that was even bigger than a Polar Bear and would attack humans on sight.

The Torngat Mountains are particularly beautiful here and Nachvak Fjord is no exception. This deep and narrow Fjord is 22 kilometres long and all sorts of animals congregate in the fjord including whales, seals, Walrus, Arctic Fox and Polar Bear. There are also great concentrations of sea birds including puffins and murres. We’ll enjoy this abundance of wildlife and striking scenery by ship and Zodiac.



Day 9
Button Islands
As we sail up the final stretch of coastal Labrador, we will attempt a visit to Martin Bay to view the site of the German automated weather station established in secrecy in October 1943 by a German U-Boat. This station remained undiscovered until the late 1970’s when a German historian came across a reference to it in the German naval archives. The equipment was collected by the Canadian Coast Guard in the early 1980’s and is on permanent display in the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa.



Later in the day, we will visit the Button Islands before sailing into Ungava Bay. Named after Thomas Button who explored the area in 1612, the islands are in the middle of the upwelling of nutrients of the edge of the continental shelf. These nutrients attract thousands of seabirds and other marine mammals.



Day 10
Akpatok Island
We’ll start our day with a short walk up a narrow river valley to view some archaeological sites on the eastern shore of Akpatok Island. During yet another of our excellent lunches, the ship will sail around to the bird cliffs on the northern shore of the island where we will plan to launch the Zodiacs and cruise among this wildlife extravaganza. Named after the Akpat, the Inuktitut name for Thick-billed Murre, this limestone island is home to over 500,000 breeding pairs. The clamour of chicks demanding a feed, the arguing of parents over ledge space and the squawking of gulls on the hunt for an abandoned chick will provide a noisy background to the warm aroma of a seafood-based diet.



Day 11
Hudson Strait  / Lower Savage Islands
Today we’ll sail across the Hudson Strait to the Lower Savage Islands. This strait is rich in sea life, providing the food for the large seabird colonies that line its shore. We will cruise in our Zodiacs among the maze of channels that comprise the Lower Savage Islands, looking for Polar Bears and, where no bears are found, a place to go ashore. These rarely visited islands will be our first landfall on Baffin Island. We’ll stroll among the wildflowers and dwarf birches and Arctic Willows that abound in this wild place and we’ll look for evidence of the early Paleo- Eskimos who may have called the islands home.



Day 12
Monumental Island
Today we’ll sail across the mouth of Frobisher Bay to visit Monumental Island, a small, steep-sided island off the Southeast coast of Baffin Island. Here we’ll be looking for the Polar Bears and Walrus that live around this island in an uneasy truce. While Polar Bears have been known to attack and kill young Walrus, they are no match for a fully grown male Walrus, especially in the water. This will be our last Zodiac cruise and tonight, on board the ship, we’ll enjoy the sumptuous fare at the captain’s dinner. During the night the ship will negotiate the narrow channels of Frobisher Bay on the way to our disembarkation point, Iqualuit, the capital city of Nunavut.

Day 13
Iqualuit
We will disembark by Zodiac and, after a short tour of Iqualuit (if time and tides permit), we’ll transfer to the airport and board our charter flight back to Ottawa.




Tour Itinerary
Day 1 Departing from St. John’s
Day 2 L’Anse aux Meadows
Day 3 Battle Harbour
Day 4 Labrador Coast
Day 5 Hopedale
Day 6 Okak / Cape Mygford
Day 7 Hebron / Torngat Mountains National Park
Day 8 Nachvak Fjord
Day 9 Button Islands
Day 10 Akpatok Island
Day 11 Hudson Strait  / Lower Savage Islands
Day 12 Monumental Island
Day 13 Iqualuit
Tour Information
Leader : Tony Beck
Length: 13 Days
Limit: 110 Participants
Departing: St. John’s
Flight from: Iqualuit is US$475 / Approx. C$465
Cost: From US$4100/ Approx C$4300

Please note:  The cost of the charter flight from Iqaluit to Ottawa is approximately US$475 / Approx. C$485.
The flight to St John's is not included.
Port Dues and Taxes are included. Gratuities are not included.
The volatility in global oil prices may result in fuel surcharges
Deposit: 10% or US$750/C$785 (which ever is greater)
 
2008 Departure
  • Thurs. July 10 – Tues. July 22
  • 2009 Departure
  • Fri. July 10 – Wed. July 22