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A record warm Arctic winter has spawned a tourism boom in a tiny Canadian town. Sightseers and selfie-snappers are flocking to Ferryland, Newfoundland, to watch enormous icebergs drift off the ...
Ferryland, a town in Newfoundland, Canada, got a holiday surprise over Easter weekend when a massive iceberg appeared off-shore. The massive chunk of ice overshadows people, boats and even homes.
Tourists are flocking to Ferryland, Newfoundland to see an iceberg tower off its shore. The ice has a height of 151-240 feet and is between 400-670 feet long. A picture shot by mountain biker ...
Ferryland is about an hour from St John’s; my friends and I decide, in the last few hours of daylight, to make a mini road trip. Trish has never seen an iceberg before.
Residents view the iceberg near Ferryland, Newfoundland, in Canada on April 16. (Jody Martin/Reuters) By Jason Samenow.
Residents view the first iceberg of the season as it passes the South Shore, also known as "Iceberg Alley", near Ferryland, Newfoundland, Canada April 16, 2017. Residents view the first iceberg of ...
Canada’s “Iceberg Alley” is living up to its name. Tourists are flocking to the town of Ferryland to see the behemoth that has grounded just off shore.
Meanwhile, Ferryland is bracing for more visitors – and also more icebergs. According to Kavanagh, there are up to six “big” ones in the distance that could make their way down if winds pick up.
And speaking of the Titantic, which sank on April 15, 1912, the wreckage of that doomed liner is only about 400 miles southeast of Ferryland.The southeast coast of Newfoundland is also the closest ...