Deer Lake (Newfoundland and Labrador)

Deer Lake is a town of 5,200 people (2016) in Western Newfoundland. It is the gateway to the Great Northern Peninsula and the closest major town to Gros Morne National Park.

Understand

The town is the gateway to the Great Northern Peninsula, owing to an important highway interchange on the Trans-Canada Highway. It is the closest major community to Gros Morne National Park and is home to the Deer Lake Regional Airport.

History

The first European settlers in the area arrived from Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia in 1864. They came as loggers and trappers, and later took up farming.

In 1922, a work camp was set up to support the International Pulp and Paper company. The camp became the town of Deer Lake. A townsite was constructed in 1925 and included a railway terminal, churches and a small hospital.

The airport was built in 1955 as the principal airport for western Newfoundland. It and is one of the town's major employers.

A hydroelectric plant was established on the Humber River in 1925 to provide electricity to a pulp and paper paper mill in Corner Brook.

Get in

By car

Deer Lake is on Highway 1 (Trans-Canada Highway), about 50 km north of Corner Brook.

By bus

Airport

Airlines

See

  • St. Paul's United Church. A wooden church dating from 1955.
  • The Main Street offers a scenic view of the lake.
  • Roy Whalen Museum and Valley Crafts, 44 Trans-Canada Highway, +1 709 635-4440. A local museum filled with antiques, artifacts and information. The gift shop offers a large variety of souvenirs.

Do

  • Sir Richards Squires Memorial Provincial Park, Highway 422 (at the end of a 30-km gravel access road). On the scenic Humber River, it's a popular place for salmon angling. 157 campsites with a picnic table, fireplace, garbage can and space for your vehicle. There are no electrical outlets. There are pit toilets and drinking water taps throughout the park. The park has a wheelchair accessible comfort station complete with flush toilets, showers, and laundry facilities. Trailer dumping station is also available. Two short trails, which begin at the day-use parking lot, lead to Big Falls.
  • Deer Lake Beach, Nicholsville Road. A small beach with a scenic walk along the shore.

Buy

  • Alexander's Gift Shop, 1 Upper Nicholsville Rd, +1 709 635-4044. Home decor, some women's clothing.

Eat

  • Canton Restaurant, 6 Commerce St, +1 709 635-8118. Tu-Su 11AM-10PM. Canadian Chinese food, but you're in Deer Lake, Newfoundland, so you wouldn't expect authentic Cantonese food, would you?
  • Jungle Jims, 3 Upper Nicholsville Road, +1 709 635-5054. Su-Tu 11AM-9PM, W,-Sa 11AM-10PM. Wings, burgers, wraps, steaks, pastas, etc.
  • Moo Lu Choo's Beachhouse, 137 Nicholsville Rd, Joe Butt's Lookout - Deer Lake Beach. Daily 10AM-10PM. It's not a Chinese restaurant. It's burgers and fries by the beach near Joe Butt's Lookout.

Drink

  • Hideaway Pub, 2 Church St, +1 709 635-5658. Friendly local pub with snack menu and a local beer.

Sleep

Go next

Heading north on Highway 430 will bring you two UNESCO World Heritage Sites:

  • The entrance to Gros Morne National Park, with great hiking and some breathtaking landscapes, is about 25 km away.
  • L'Anse aux Meadows, the site of the first Viking landing in the New World, is several hours drive to the north near St. Anthony (a little over 400 km away).
Routes through Deer Lake
Port aux Basques Corner Brook  W  E  Grand Falls-Windsor Gander
Great Northern Peninsula Gros Morne National Park  N  S  END


This article is issued from Wikivoyage. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.