Labrador

Sourced from Wikivoyage. Text is available under the CC-by-SA 3.0 license.
Matt MacGillivray
Labrador is the mostly remote and sparsely settled mainland portion of Newfoundland and Labrador. Named for 15th century Portuguese explorer João Fernandes Lavrador, it's “the big land”: vast wilderness areas with abundant wildlife, whales and icebergs, some of the highest peaks east of the Canadian Rockies, and — almost as an afterthought — some widely scattered pockets of human habitation.
This great outdoors is one of Labrador’s prime attractions. Sport fishing and wildlife viewing are popular activities, along with taking in the starkly beautiful scenery. The towns, villages and outports have merit, too. Not just refuelling stops, many have sites or museums that provide glimpses into the culture and history of the region, and the Inuit, First Nation and European influences that shape it. But when moving on, you’ll be quickly reminded it’s a big land. Away from towns and villages, there are hundreds of kilometres of vast, open space where the large caribou herds and other wildlife can roam free — even along the one “beaten path”, the (often-gravel) Trans-Labrador Highway.

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