Labrador
is a territory within the Province of Newfoundland and Labrador
in Canada. Labrador
is roughly 300,000 square kilometres (115,000 square miles),
with 30,000 human inhabitants and 600,000 caribou (a type of
reindeer). It covers 75% of the surface area of its province,
and is home to roughly 5% of its human population.
Areas of Labrador
Labrador
may be divided into three parts:
-
Small coastal fishing towns, which each contain 1,000
people or less. People go between these towns by boat when
the harbours aren't frozen1. Even then, they still have
to dodge icebergs. The coast of Labrador
is loosely inhabited, from the Strait of Belle Isle in the
south to Nain in the north. Maps of Labrador
often show a town named Hebron, further north, but this town
has been uninhabited ever since the Canadians started
resettling its Inuit/Indian population.
-
The inland towns of Happy
Valley-Goose Bay, Labrador
City and Wabush, and Churchill Falls were entirely built
and constructed from 1941. People go between these towns via
the trans-Labrador
highway when it's not snowed under, which is to say, about
six months a year. Labrador
City and Happy Valley-Goose Bay each have about 9,000
people, and are modern towns with hotels, gas stations,
grocery stores (though the produce is not always the
freshest), and strip malls. Each of these two metropolitan
areas contains roughly one-third of the human population of
Labrador.
-
The inhabitants of the forests are entirely migratory,
and entirely four-legged. Labrador
is said to contain the world's largest caribou herd. There
used to be migratory human inhabitants, but they got
resettled.
Industry and Tourism in Labrador
Agriculture does not exist in most of Labrador
as the permafrost gets in the way. The provincial government
is encouraging people to take up gardening, however.
Each town in Labrador
was founded with one single dominating purpose; be it fishing,
military, mining, or hydroelectricity. The fishermen came
around 1600, the military in 1941, the miners around 1960, and
the hydroelectricians around 1970. Today, mining is the
closest thing Labrador
has to a growth industry; a major mining project is planned
for Voisey
Bay in the north, albeit with significant native
opposition. Labrador
also has a fledgling software industry.
However, each town is discovering the advantage of tourism
as a supplemental industry, with many boasting their resources
on the World Wide Web:
-
Southern
Labrador
has historical settlements, one of which reputedly dates
back to the time of the Vikings.
-
Happy Valley-Goose Bay is the home of the 5th Wing of the
Canadian Air Force, and plays host to NATO training flights.
It has the Labrador
Military Museum, which describes how useful the airbase at
Goose Bay was during World War Two.
-
Towns where there is significant industry other than
fishing, which is to say, Churchill Falls, Labrador
City and Wabush, are all offering tours of their facilities.
-
Queen Elizabeth II once spent a night in North West
River, just outside Goose Bay.
- Even uninhabited Hebron is something of a tourist
destination, due to the Moravian
Mission that was established there in the 1800s.
The rest of Labrador
tries to get by on being one of the last frontiers. For the tourists, this
translates as lots of hunting, fishing, snowmobiling,
and cross-country skiing2. The most interesting activity
for a tourist in Labrador
is likely to be talking to the natives, who are entirely
friendly and talkative, and a great source of information
about their homeland.
Life in Labrador
Like Newfoundland, the fishing villages of Labrador
have benefited from centuries of isolation to produce a
population used to living in isolation. The residents of
Labrador's industrial cities are new to isolation, but are
largely paid well enough to put up with it. They have to be,
as the cost of living in Labrador
is greater than the rest of Canada.
Labrador
(like Newfoundland) is losing its population over time, as
people leave to find good jobs in cheaper places where the sun shines
more than four hours a day in the winter. Those who stay in Labrador
may find that the best job available for a college graduate3 is as a clerk-typist at the
mine.
There used to be migratory native peoples who hunted and
fished to survive. However, this became quite difficult with
new mines, hydroelectric dams, and NATO training flights
getting in the way. Many natives just shrugged and moved into
town4, where they can live on
Canadian government subsidies. But some still fight for the
right to hunt and fish as their ancestors used to.
Given the lack of highways, other forms of transportation
are incredibly important to Labradorians.
In the interior, supplies arrive by plane or, in Labrador
City, they can arrive by train from the Quebec coast. During
the winter, travel tends to be by aeroplane only. The
provincial government also subsidizes two ferries between Labrador
and Newfoundland. One ferry takes cars and freight into Goose
Bay; the other takes passengers up and down the coast. Each of
these ferries offers food, drink, and beds for their
travellers. Other ferries go the short distance across the
Strait of Belle Isle between Newfoundland and Labrador.
Labrador
is largely a political colony of Newfoundland, and an economic
colony of Quebec which established the mining and
hydroelectric industries. Labrador
residents, like people everywhere, grumble about their bosses
and politicians, but they are very independent-minded, and
hate being called 'Newfoundlanders' or 'Newfies'.
Practically all Labradorians speak English, but the closer
you get to Quebec, the more you can find French speakers too.
In parts of Quebec which adjoin Labrador
and parts of Labrador
which adjoin Quebec, the next province over is more accessible
than the rest of the province you're in, so people cross the
border for fun all the time. These parts of Quebec and Labrador
are probably the only place in the world where you can find
both frogs' legs and codfish tongues served in
restaurants.