Gaultois: Unveiling Newfoundland's Hidden Coastal Gem
Gaultois: Unveiling Newfoundland's Hidden Coastal Gem. Join me on an adventure to Gaultois, Newfoundland. I travel by boat to this isolated community and enjoy walking around the beautiful town. Other channels that did great videos about Gaultois: @ / @mark_royle_newfoundland • Visit Gaultois Newfoundland While You Stil... @ / @tuckerandi • A Walkabout in Gaultois Music: 'Mon we goes Original music © Matt Keels. Written and performed by Matt Keels Camera A: Canon SL2 Lens : Canon EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS STM Microphone: Rode VideoMicro Compact More about Gaultois: Gaultois is a small settlement in the Coast of Bays area in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. Gaultois had a population of 100 people in the 2021 census. The town has a K-12 school called Victoria Academy (as of 2022-23, there are 4 students enrolled), as well as a fire department, public library, Lion's Club, and town hall. The town is only accessible by ferry or helicopter. The provincial government ferry runs from the nearby town of Hermitage several times daily and the crossing takes approximately 20 minutes. This ferry also services the more remote community of McCallum once to twice daily with a crossing time of around one hour and fifteen minutes. In 2015, Gaultois voted against resettlement. Gaultois considered resettlement again in 2023 but it failed. Before confederation with Canada in 1949, Gaultois was the customs town for those wishing to travel to the islands of Saint Pierre and Miquelon. Prior to resettlement, the population had declined to 107 in 1956 from a peak of 252 five years earlier. After resettlement in 1966 Gaultois population rose to 594 with the fish plant and its draggers as the main employer of the town. The first Waymaster in 1877, was Richard Bradshaw. A fishing community, Gaultois went into a decline when the Lake Group first announced the closure of its fish plant in 1981 and again in 1990 when Fishery Products International closed the plant. The Gaultois fish plant permanently closed in 2010. As of 2017, the population has plunged by 80 percent since the 1990s. Though small, Gaultois has four distinct areas: The Room near the wharf where, traditionally salt fish was dried for market, on flakes. The Valley up the hill a little then surrounded by high rock faces, home to about 10 homes. The Point across the harbour from the rooms. The most populated part of town. The point and the rooms are joined by a wooden boardwalk at the base of the rock face. The Bottom up the hill and down the other side from the point. The most isolated part of town.

Land & Sea: Gaultois in 1981

10 Weirdest and Isolated Towns in Newfoundland

The Best Walk In St.John's is a Scenic Coastal Gem (And it Even Finishes at a Brewery!)

Visit Gaultois Newfoundland While You Still Can

Newfoundland Iceberg & Whale Watching with Trinity Eco Tours — What a Day! 🇨🇦

What's NEW at✨SAM'S CLUB✨ + June 2026 INSTANT SAVING!!

ABANDONED CANADA!! You Won't Believe These Newfoundland and Labrador Towns Still Exist Like This

Why So Few Canadians Live On Prince Edward Island

Biggest Ship Collisions and Mistakes Caught on Camera

The 10 most BEAUTIFUL towns in Newfoundland

Sail Newfoundland and Labrador: A Resettlement Story

Watch this if everything feels too much (gentle comfort for tired women)

Newfoundland Brook Trout At A Remote Backcountry Lake Episode # 89

7 Hrs on Newfoundland's Ferry from Nova Scotia (MARINE ATLANTIC FERRY)

10 Weirdest and Isolated Towns in Newfoundland and Labrador

Resettlement

Unbelievable Workers | Working with Talented Engineers #46 #fail #adamrose #smartworkers

Land & Sea: Resettlers remember the community they left behind

Canada: Newfoundland, the Country’s Wildest and Most Spectacular Island - First Part

