Walk the haunting Boney Shore — where centuries of whale bones and Basque artifacts litter the tideline — and visit the excavated whalers' graveyard with a private historian for an intimate encounter with 16th-century life and death on the Labrador coast.
What to expect
Your private Parks Canada interpreter meets you at the Red Bay NHS Visitor Centre and leads you along the Boney Shore, where the bleached remains of bowhead, right, and sperm whales — processed here 500 years ago — are still visible in the shallows and along the beach. The whalers' graveyard contains the excavated and respectfully presented remains of young Basque sailors, many in their teens, who died far from the Basque country of Spain and France in pursuit of whale oil fortunes. Your historian brings individual names and stories to life using archival records, creating an unexpectedly moving experience. The walk concludes with a private viewing of the Visitor Centre's extraordinary chalupa and artifact collections.
Good to know
This walk is entirely at sea level and relatively flat — suitable for most guests. Allow 1.5–2 hours for the full private walk and museum viewing. The shoreline can be slippery — sturdy waterproof footwear is essential. Arrange private programming well in advance through Parks Canada (1-888-773-8888). The Visitor Centre is a 5-minute walk from the cruise pier, making this the most logistically straightforward excursion available in Red Bay.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Red Bay — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.