Staycation success: How the pandemic helped tourists discover Lumsden Beach - Action News
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Staycation success: How the pandemic helped tourists discover Lumsden Beach

The Newfoundland town of Lumsden was not prepared for the hundreds of visitors who have flocked to the town on summer days under the pandemic, so it has invested in amenities to encourage people to stay longer and spend more money.
Before 2021, there were few places to stay and no restaurants in the Lumsden, on Newfoundland's northeast coast. (Town of Lumsden)

Something unusual started happening in Lumsdenover the summer of 2020, a few months after the COVID-19 pandemic hit.

People started showing up in the small town on Newfoundland's northeast coast. First it was just a handful of vehicles coming from out of town to spend the day. Then a few more and a few more. By the summer of 2021, hundreds of people were descending on the quiet community on warm, sunny days.

"There's days when it can be upwards to 300, 400 vehicles parked at the beach," town manager Jeanie Stokes told CBC News in a recent interview. "I mean, there's only like 500 people in Lumsden."

For people in the know, Lumsden's white sandy beaches were always a summer favourite but the push for staycationsover the past few years may have enticed more people toexplore the province. Aftersomeone posted about the beach on a popular Facebookpage devoted to N.L. staycations, Stokes said, things exploded and there were days when the crowd doubled and even tripled the town's population.

Lumsden's North Beach is pictured. (Lumsden Beach Company)

However the unexpectedtourism boomhas proved to be a doubled edged sword for the small town.

All of a sudden there were issues with a lack of parking, garbage cans and public washrooms. Stokes said it wasoverwhelming.

"Back in 2020, we really didn't know how to handle it because it came on us by surprise," Stokes said.

Rayann Crane, owner of Lumsden Beach Company, says her business is already growing after just one year. (Lumsden Beach Company)

This summer, however,thetown feelsprepared to accommodatethat many people again. It's added more garbagecans along the beach and it'sputting in a new parking lot. It's also constructed a new building on the beach with public washrooms and a kitchen space leased by new local business Lumsden Beach Company.

Owner Rayann Crane, who's originally fromLumsden, said she had been mulling over the business idea for a while but a visit thereherself in 2020 gave her the push to make it happen.She said visitors would ask where they could get something to eat and she'd have to send them out of town.

"It just killed us because we had the idea but there was no infrastructure and I wondered, 'Will this opportunity happen again?'"

A Lumsden boardwalk. (Lumsden Beach Company)

Eager to strike while the iron was hot, Crane launched her company that fall. Now Lumsden Beach Company rents RVson the beach, runs a hotdog cart, sells clothingand rents kayaks, and Stokes plans to open a caf in the town's new building.

Between the business community and theway the town has stepped up, said Crane, tourists will have an even better experience visiting Lumsden. The goal, she said, is that they not only come back and stay longer, but spend some money in the town while they're there.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from CBC Newfoundland Morning

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