Rattling Brook, Newfoundland and Labrador
Encyclopedia
Town of Rattling Brook
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Rattling Brook is a small inlet coastal village located in North Central Newfoundland, close to Baie Verte
, Springdale
and other coastal towns nearby. Formerly a fishing village, it's main residents are retirees and seasonal tourists. The town boasts a park at the base of Rattling Brook Falls; a 140 meter waterfall beneath a natural rock formation.
As of 2010, the current population rests between 90 to 110 persons with a small percentage of tourists making up the seasonal traffic.
The area in and around Rattling Brook is home to a diverse group of wildlife, both mammal and aquatic. During the summer months, species of fox, lynx and bears are not unusual. In the colder months, sealife observed in the bay area range from seals, humpback whales & several varieties of bird.
The unique microclimate of the area provides shelter from harsher winds, guarded by the surrounding groups of cliff and rock formation enveloping the area. Snowmobiling and skiing are very popular in the area with residents as well as tourists. In past decades, and due to climate shift, the bay had previously been noted for freezing nearly every winter, however that is no longer commonplace, although icebergs are not an unusual sight.
Seals and other amphibious and aquatic life have been seen in and about the area providing tourists with photo opportunity. Bears and foxes are quite common as well.
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Rattling Brook is a small inlet coastal village located in North Central Newfoundland, close to Baie Verte
Baie Verte, Newfoundland and Labrador
Baie Verte is a town located on the northeast coast of the island portion of the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador on the Baie Verte Peninsula.-Geography:...
, Springdale
Springdale, Newfoundland and Labrador
Springdale is a town in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, which had a population of 2,764 in the Canada 2006 Census. The community is located on the North-Western shores of Hall's Bay, in Central Newfoundland, near the mouth of Indian River...
and other coastal towns nearby. Formerly a fishing village, it's main residents are retirees and seasonal tourists. The town boasts a park at the base of Rattling Brook Falls; a 140 meter waterfall beneath a natural rock formation.
As of 2010, the current population rests between 90 to 110 persons with a small percentage of tourists making up the seasonal traffic.
The area in and around Rattling Brook is home to a diverse group of wildlife, both mammal and aquatic. During the summer months, species of fox, lynx and bears are not unusual. In the colder months, sealife observed in the bay area range from seals, humpback whales & several varieties of bird.
The unique microclimate of the area provides shelter from harsher winds, guarded by the surrounding groups of cliff and rock formation enveloping the area. Snowmobiling and skiing are very popular in the area with residents as well as tourists. In past decades, and due to climate shift, the bay had previously been noted for freezing nearly every winter, however that is no longer commonplace, although icebergs are not an unusual sight.
Seals and other amphibious and aquatic life have been seen in and about the area providing tourists with photo opportunity. Bears and foxes are quite common as well.