From Fortune, we sailed/motored 50 miles around Burin Peninsula and anchored in Little St. Lawrence Harbor. We then spent a couple days in Burin. Burin is a charming town with a boardwalk around the bay and very nice trail up to the highest point, called Cook’s Lookout Point. From Burin, we went to Oderin Island, and then to Merasheen Island. In Merasheen, we found the charts inaccurate – it showed 20′ and we ran aground. Luckily, we were going slowly and we still had an hour of rising tide. We floated off and tried another direction but stopped at 11′. Luckily where we decided to anchor had good holding as we ended up getting 2 nights of 25+ knots of wind. We then went to St. Kyran’s which was a very protected bay. The church was built in the 1920s and is an amazing bit of architecture. The community was relocated to more populous areas through the government’s resettlement program in the1960s and the church abandoned. Some community members celebrated the parish’s 150 year anniversary in the abandoned church in 2006. One can see the amazing view the parishioners must have had in the last photo below.
Month: August 2025
Back to Dogbark

We stopped in Lewisporte on our way back from Gros Morne National Park. Lewisporte has a large port and we had hoped to overwinter here but they couldn’t accommodate our boat. We looked online for live music and found the Citadel House. It is both a live music venue and record label and they had two groups performing that night. The second group, the Dandelion Few, was amazing, with a lead singer from Ireland who had married a singer/songwriter from Newfoundland. Then it was on to Fortune where we caught the ferry to St. Pierre where we met up with Graeme and Janna’s family and spent the day in Miquelon before we all came back to Fortune.
L’Anse aux Meadows

In the northwest corner of Newfoundland is the National Historic Site of L’Anse aux Meadows, the only authenticated Norse site in North America. The Visitor’s Center shows many of the archeological findings and some of the Viking village has been recreated, including actors demonstrating everyday life. We did a little hike along the coast line and found a delightful surprise, fairy homes created from the imagination of children. After leaving the village, we went to dinner at the Norseman Restaurant and had the best dinner in Newfoundland. We saw what looked like the Leif Erikson statue in Ballard and saw that it is a replica given by the Leif Erikson International Foundation of Seattle to Vinland in 2013.
Driving around Newfoundland

After meeting Graeme and Janna and their family in St. Johns and turning Dogbark over to their capable hands, we left in our rented car for Dildo. Dildo is a quiet fishing village that got world wide attention on Jimmy Kimmel shows. Jimmy ended up receiving honorary mayor status and he gave the community Dildo block letters as seen on Hollywood Hills. Nearby Dildo is the Newfoundland Pony Heritage Park where they are trying to protect and preserve the rare and endangered Newfoundland Pony. We spent several days in Terra Nova National Park and Gros Morne National Park. The trails were well kept, the outhouses spotless, and the trails surprisingly uncrowded. We did not see a moose but saw a moose exclosure that demonstrates how an overpopulation of moose harms the forest. We also saw a ruffed grouse and spruce grouse chicks. Terra Nova National Park is on the east coast and Gros Morne National Park is on the west coast, separated by a 5 hour drive. They both contain hundreds of coastline which have numerous lookouts and trails.
Burin, Newfoundland (AKA Most Goated Town Ever)

Hello world, this is Talia, back behind the keyboard of saildogbark.com for the first time in FIVE years. I am delighted to tell you about our remarkable experiences in the small town of Burin, Newfoundland (pronounced like Bjorn, they like to get rid of syllables in their words here).
Oh dear, Oderin!

Our first notable stop was at Oderin Island (pronounced “odeern”) on the west side of Placentia Bay. Oderin is a gem of an island with rocky outcrops, green rolling Sound of Music hills, and a small protected harbor just (barely) big enough for Dogbark. The shoreline is dotted with the colorful homes of the fisherfolk who used to live here. In the heat of the summer, the place looked idyllic, but imagining living here through the cold winter months battered by North Atlantic storms definitely made us shiver.
Our first 48 hours cruising in Newfoundland

Hi! Savai here. Our family is cruising Dogbark for the next two weeks along with my friend Juliette. We have been having a BLAST in our first few days. After flying into St. John’s and touring the local universities, we sailed to Ferryland Harbor. We came with a bucket list of animals to see, but somehow have already checked all of them off the list. Wildlife we have seen so far: