Newfoundland - Canada

Newfoundland

Stretching some 7000 km from Newfoundland´s Cape Spear to British Columbia´s Long Beach, Canada encompasses almost 10 million sq/km.  Although it is the second largest country in the world, the population has not even reached 33 million.  Hence the reason that there are plenty of vast open spaces, fantastic scenery and an enormous amount of wildlife. 

The province of Newfoundland includes the island itself and the rugged Labrador on the mainland.  Many of its seaside villages began as isolated fishing ports, accessible only by boat and have now grown into larger villages.  From the often foggy shores, generations of fisherman have headed out to sea to the Grand Banks that surround Newfoundland, waters that are legendary for cod and dozens of other kinds of fish.  This more then anything have has determinded the life and culture of the province.

Here are just a few of Newfoundland´s highlights:

• 1000 year old Viking Settlements
• The oldest city in North America, St John´s, (first founded in 1497) and has a street with over 80 pubs and bars on it
• The final destination of Greenland´s icebergs
• Cape Spear is the most easterly point in North America
• Signal Hill is where the first transatlantic wireless cable was received
• Newfoundland was the only part of Canada that was attacked by the German´s during WWII which left behind some excellent wrecks for divers

If you would like to read more about diving in Newfoundland, please download the articles below. Enjoy the reading!

Advanced Diver magazine

SportDiver

Wreck Diving magazine

 

The Lodge

The Lodge

Built totally with Newfoundland Spruce, The Lodge, offers comfortable accommodation, a meeting and social facility with state-of-the-art presentation and entertainment equipment, sauna, indoor pool and recreation areas. It is truely a home away from home you´ll love to relax in.

Located in picturesque Conception Bay South, right on the ocean, The Lodge is next door to the Oxygene Newfoundland dive facility. The Lodge has an ideal location just a few minutes walk from the ocean and the main street.  In this same facility there is a large common room with a 10ft LCD preojection screen, as well as a full kitchen and bar area.

The Lodge is a 3 star bed and breakfast consisting of 6 full rooms with full bathrooms, one of which is a honeymoon suite with an air tub. Two of these rooms are located downstairs in a suite with a private living area perfect for a family of four to stay.

Guestroom Facilities

• Television
• High speed internet hook up
• Phone
• Either two twin sized beds or one king sized bed
 

The Lodge Facilities

• Surround sound HD multi media system
• LCD projector and 10ft screen
• Free internet service
• Fireplace
• Full kitchen
• Large deck overlooking beautiful Conception Bay & Bell Island
• Propane BBQ
• Library of diving and local interest publications
• Sauna 
• Indoor pool

 

About the diving >

About the diving

The mixture of the Labrador Current and Gulf Stream just off the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador attracts thousands of whales, provides rich nestling grounds for millions of seabirds, and brings to life a spectacular underwater garden of flora and fauna.  Add to this pristine water, massive icebergs, and a shipwreck history dating back over 500 years and you have a world class diving destination!

The diving experience in Newfoundland and Labrador extends from May until November and with each week, new and exciting opportunities unfold. Shipwrecks are numerous and very accessible throughout the season. Read more about the shipwrecks by clicking on the link on the left sidebar.

In May and June, massive Greenland icebergs arrive from the north and settle in to various coves and inlets. During the summer months June - August, over 35 million seabirds gather on our rocky shores and several species of whales feed in our nutrient rich waters.

The diving in itself is world class and combined with the natural and cultural history, the experience is exceptional!

About the Icebergs

The best time for Icebergs in Conception Bay is from May to the end of July. From the beauty and majesty of their sheer size to the heart-wrenching memories of ill-fated ships, nothing evokes such a combination of awe, curiosity and caution quite like an iceberg. So if you´re looking for icebergs, you´ve come to the right place. Newfoundland and Labrador is the greatest iceberg theatre in the world. From the east coast of Labrador to Newfoundland´s southern shore, you are in Iceberg Alley, the only place in the world where you can see two or three story icebergs making their way down the Atlantic Ocean from Greenland.
According to the shape and size of the iceberg, we can offer scuba diving on these icebergs. Its amazing to see the actual size of these beauties.

About the Whales

The best month for the whales is July or August when the caplin are rolling in. The most common of the whales in Conception Bay are the Humpback and Minke Whales. These  majestic mammels have quite the stature but are actually just gentle giants who love to frolic. With our 23 ft rigid inflatable boat we can go where ever they go and get magnificent pictures and video. We offer snorkeling and scuba diving with the whales according to your level of diving and the activity of the whales at the time which is a breathtaking experience.

 

Dive sites

Dive Sites

Bell Island WWII shipwrecks   
The Bell Island Shipwrecks are a 45 minute boat ride on the cruiser from the Foxtrap marina. There are four ships depths ranging from 60’ to 160’ within two square miles of each other. Each of these wrecks are fully intact and up right making them quite the site to see.

Chimney Cove
Chimney Cove is a small cove just 15 minute boat ride from the Foxtrap marina. This is just beside the infamous Kelly’s Island which holds many pirate and ghost stories. This dive site is full of marine life such as lobsters, eel pouts and wolf fish. The depth here ranges from 25’ to 45’.

The Bell
The Bell is another attractive site. It is about a 50 minute boat ride from the Foxtrap marina. This site is full of walls and swim throughs along with an abundance of marine life. The depth ranges from 30’ to 60’. Very good site for every level of diver.

The Conception Bay Whaling Wrecks
The Conception Bay Whalers have been an excellent shore dive since 1964. It is believed that these Whale Catchers were abandoned at the close of the whaling industry in Newfoundland. Just one mile off shore in Conception Harbour there rests the remains of two more Whale Catchers, the SS SPOSA and the SS SOIKA. They range in length from 110’ to 130 feet with a beam of approximately 30 feet.  Visibility in the winter and early spring ranges from 100’ down to 30’.  There is a harpoon gun mounted on one of the ships.  A propeller is still on the SS Southern Foam.  Fantastic photo/video opportunities await you.

Whale Bones, South Dildo
Around 1 hr from St. John’s in the south of Trinity Bay, South Dildo is a former whaling station and the skeletons of many of these large animals lie scattered on the seabed close to the shore.  Accessed from the wharf or the adjacent beach, the site depth reaches approximately 20m and is easily navigated.  Alternatively, a boat can be used to reach some of the areas farther away.  Whale skulls, ribs, jawbones and vertebrae, some of them huge, can be found all over the site and although deteriorating and often covered in weed, they are easily recognizable.  

 

Bell Island wrecks

Bell Island wrecks

SS Lord Strathcona
On the morning of September 5, 1942 while anchored off Bell Island, Conception Bay, Newfoundland the ore carrier SS Lord Strathcona was torpedoed and sunk.  She was the second ship to meet her fate on this day at the hands of U-513, which had sunk the SS Saganaga only minutes before.  Fortunately for the crew of the Lord Strathcona, they knew what was coming and took advantage of a few precious minutes to abandon ship, resulting in no loss of life.

The German submarine U-513, commanded by Fritz Rolf Ruggeberg, was also spared this day as, in it’s haste to sink the SS Saganaga and to maneuver for another kill, struck the stern of the Lord Strathcona, damaging it’s own conning tower.  Quickly recovering from this almost fatal blow, U-513 fired two torpedoes from its stern tubes and brought the Lord Strathcona down.  U-513 was to meet its fate on July 19, 1943 off Santos, where she was depth charged and sunk by U.S. Naval Aircraft.

Interestingly, it’s well worth noting that prior to the outbreak of the Second World War, Germany was the principal consumer for the iron ore produced at the Bell Island mines.  It may well have been the same ore which was used to produce the U-boats and torpedoes that were to bring down these ships and cause such havoc on this day.  The German High Command was very familiar with the Bell Island Anchorage and its strategic value in the war effort.

Diving on the S.S. Lord Strathcona, one is amazed by the abundance of flowering sea anemones that now decorate her decks and rails.  This once proud ship is now the home to numerous sea dwellers that have taken over as crew!  Similar in structure and size to the SS Rose Castle, which lies nearby, the Lord Strathcona presents the diver with the opportunity of diving on one of the most spectacular wrecks in Atlantic waters.  Photographers and videographers always appreciate what she has to offer. 

SS Saganaga
The British steamship SS Saganaga was torpedoed and sunk by the German U-boat U513 on September 5, 1942 at Bell Island, Conception Bay, Newfoundland.  She was lying at anchor awaiting orders to set sail for North Sydney with a load of iron ore.  U-513 had slid into the bay undercover of nightfall and lay in wait for the right opportunity to strike.  It came the next morning at 11:07 when she fired her first salvo of two torpedoes. 

In the excitement of their first action, however, the torpedo men had neglected to set the battery switch and the torpedoes sank to the sea bottom.  They may well still be there with their deadly cargo of 500 pounds of explosives.  Quickly, the U513 fired two more torpedoes which easily hit their target.  The first hit about amidships on the portside at 11:07 and the second ‘fish’ quickly followed, sending the Saganaga beneath the waves in less than thirty seconds.  She had a crew of forty-eight men, including three naval gunners. Twenty Nine of the crew was later reported missing. 

As a sideline to this tragic sea tale, one of the crewmembers who perished aboard the ill fated vessel was Able Seaman Walter Skelton, from Grimsby, Lincolnshire, UK.  His granddaughter, through a search on the internet, was astounded to find out that he had perished in Conception Bay when his family had assumed he was out in the North Atlantic at the time of the sinking. 

Much to their amazement, they found out their loved one was actually in Newfoundland.  An expedition was immediately set up to journey overseas to pay final homage to Able Seaman Walter Skelton.  A touching moment was felt by all as Walter’s grandson, Alan Chapman, dived on the deck of the Saganaga on September 6, 2004, to place a memorial wreath on its deck.

Today the SS Saganaga is a divers’ paradise, teeming with new life.  Beautiful anemones decorate her decks and an abundance of sea critters have found refuge in her iron hull.  She has some of the most spectacular swim throughs imaginable - a true photographer’s dream.  She rests at approximately 110 feet and can be easily viewed between 60 to 85 feet.

PLM 27
The steam ship PLM 27 - PLM was an acronym for Paris-Lyon-Marseilles - operated under the Free French Forces of General Charles De Gaulle during the Second World War.  She was the second ship to be sent to her watery grave on the morning of November 2, 1942.  U-518 had just sunk the SS Rose Castle and now had her sights on the PLM 27.  Sending a single torpedo towards her, she was hit amidships on her port side and sank in less than a minute, sending twelve crew members to their graves. 

Survivors were picked up ashore at Lance Cove, Bell Island, located only a few hundred yards away.  Residents of the island were shaken from their beds early this Sunday morning and were reminded of the earlier attack on two ore carriers in September.  Parents dressed themselves and their children in their ‘Sunday Best’, anxiously awaiting the land invasion of German forces they thought was about to happen but fortunately was never to occur.

The Wolf, U-518, swiftly set out to open sea after leaving its deadly cargo of torpedoes in the hulls of the ill fated Rose Castle and PLM 27 but, as was to befall over 85% of the U-Boats in operation, she was to meet her deadly fate at the hands of allied forces on April 22, 1945, Northwest of the Azores.  She was lost with all hands.

Rose Castle
Less than two months after the tragic loss of the SS Saganaga and the SS Lord Strathcona, the SS Rose Castle met her fate at the hands of the German U-boat, U-518.

U-518, commanded by Friedrich Wissman, was under orders to drop off a German agent at New Carlisle, Quebec and attack allied shipping.  On her maiden voyage, it was decided to slip into Conception Bay and attack at first opportunity.  Early on the morning of November 2, 1942 as U-518 was approaching the Bell Island anchorages she spotted the ‘Anna T’, a coal boat of 3,000 tons anchored off the Scotia Pier.   The first torpedo was let loose towards the Anna T, but as luck would have it, it passed underneath the stern of the Flying Dale, also lying at anchor, and struck the Scotia Pier.  This change of events became the first and most likely only enemy strike on a North American shore during the Second World War.  Two more torpedoes were quickly fired towards the Rose Castle, anchored nearby.  She went down in less than ninety seconds, taking twenty-eight men to their watery graves.

Of special note in regard to the ill fated SS Rose Castle is the fact that on a previous occasion she had escaped a similar fate.  U-69, the German submarine that sank the ferry ‘Caribou’ (this vessel ran on the Port Aux Basques to North Sydney service), had fired a torpedo at the Rose Castle on October 20, 1942.  Fortunately it had a defective detonator and the Rose Castle was spared - but only briefly.

Being the deepest of the other three ore carriers sunk during this tragic event, the Rose Castle is the most spectacular.  She sits upright at approximately one hundred and fifty feet, looking almost ready to set sail just as she was over sixty years ago.  Lines running to her mast are still taut, the Marconi Room’s radio is still awaiting messages, and deep in her hull one can still see personal effects of the ill fated crew.  Without a doubt, she is well preserved from the elements.  One can visit the 4.7 inch gun located on her stern and decorated with flowering sea anemones, for evermore ready for action.  Cavernous cargo holds beckon the adventurous diver, but beware – this shipwreck is deep and unforgiving!    

 

Dive package

Dive packages

As Newfoundland is such a unique destination with so many options, we chose to list a suggestion for planning your trip.  Please let us know what you are interested in and how many days you wish to travel and we will taylor make a package just for you!  Info@scubatravel.se

11 day package suggestion

Day 1: Flight to Newfoundland
Day 2 - 8: 7 day basic wreck dive package including the Bell Island wrecks and nature dives around Bell Island OR 7 day combined whale and iceberg (season dependent) package.
Day 9: Guided tour of surrounding countryside and St John´s
Day 10: Shopping and relaxation.  Evening flight to Scandinavia
Day 11: Home in Scandinavia around lunch

Approximate price including flight: 19,700 SEK

Our packages include:

• Flights from Scandinavia - St John´s, Newfoundland r/t *
• Airport Transfers from/to St. John´s airport - hotel r/t
• Accommodation including breakfast
• Transport to and from dive sites
• Evening BBQ Cruise and traditional ´Screech In´ ceremony on Conception Bay**
• Guided tour of surrounding area and St John´s
• Use of 12L aluminum air cylinders and weights

* The flight price is NOT guaranteed in the package price above.  This is due to the ever fluctuating price and availability of flights. 
**During cooler months, the BBQ and ´Screech In´ ceremony will be held in the Lodge.

Please note: Prices do not include the 13% local tax (partially refundable after departure).
 

 

Newfoundland Travel info

Travel info - Newfoundland

Time: GMT - 3.5 hours (Newfoundland has its own time zone)

Currency: Canadian dollar

Language: English (main language), French

Visa: Not required for EU citizens

Health: Canada has a very high standard of health care and many medical products can even be purchased from a local drug store.  Updated tetanus shots are always recommended, but no other vaccinations are manditory. 

Recompression Chamber: In St John´s

Weather: Newfoundland has a costal climate where the weather is cool and often damp throughout the year.  Summer is short but July and August are generally quite warm.  The water temperatures are similar to those in Scandinavia.

Electricity: 110 volt, two prong socket

 

 

Tailor-made

Tailor-made

Sometimes, no matter how comprehensive the package on offer, you may find you are looking for something out of the ordinary - a dive trip with a difference designed only for you. Be it a special occasion, a well deserved break or just an escape to far off shores, Scuba Travel is the right place to start for any holiday.

Newfoundland offers something for all ages of traveller.  From scuba diving on world class wrecks to hiking in breathtaking Gros Morne park to snorkelling with whales or icebergs, this most easterly province of Canada wraps history, beauty and adventure all in one.  

Here are just a few samples of what you can do on an exciting trip to Newfoundland: 

• Snorkel with icebergs in May and June

• Snorkel with several sorts of whales that come in to eat and breed in July and August

• Discover Labrador takes you on a guided tour across the province including stops to Gros Morne park, the viking village, and the whale graveyard among others.

• Why not rent a car and go on a discovery cruise of your own. 

• Combine your trip with a stop in Nova Scotia, a province on Canada's mainland.  Nova Scotia highlights include the Bay of Fundy (highest tides in the world) and the Cape Breton trail.

Contact us for more information or ideas: info@scubatravel.se