122 CAPE RACE TO CREW POINT, 



harbor, falling steeply, in many places perpendicularly, from wooded 

 hills near the shore. The hills in the background gray and moss 

 covered. 



Red Point shoal, with 5^ fathoms water, bears 233°, distant 850 

 yards from Parfrey point and 200 yards from the shore. 



Skippers brook, a conspicuous waterfall, enters the sea 1^ miles 

 southward of Parfrey point. Skippers Brook rock, with 10 fathoms 

 water, bears 82°, distant I mile from the point of the cove into which 

 the brook runs. 



Ladder cove, a small bight, lies 1 mile southward of Skippers 

 brook, and f mile farther southward is Coffins cove, 300 yards deep, 

 with a beach of shingle at the head. 



Barren point, 1^- miles southwestward of Coffins cove, is covered 

 Avith moss and surmounted by a small peaked hill 216 feet high. Joss 

 brook falls into the sea from an elevation of about 30 feet close 

 northeastward of this point. 



Clatise harbor, nearly 800 yards wide in its entrance between 

 Gunning point on the north and Clatise Harbor head on the south, 

 expands to a width of 1,600 yards and extends southwestward 1 

 mile, terminating in two arms. Culleton head, north of the entrance, 

 is a bare round hill 452 feet high, falling steeply to the eastward. A 

 few houses are built on the north shore immediately within the en- 

 trance. A large brook runs into a cove on the north shore ^ mile 

 southwest of Gunning point, and a rock that dries is situated close 

 to the eastern entrance point of that cove. 



Clatise Harbor head, the sharp extreme of a narrow promontory, 

 rises to a wooded hill 253 feet high. A sunken rock lies close to it, 

 and a bank, with less than 10 fathoms on it, extends 200 yards from 

 the end of the head. 



Shag" rock, 6 feet high, is the highest of a small cluster lying 

 400 Awards from shore and southwestward nearly 1 mile from Cla- 

 tise Harbor head. A shoal, with 4| fathoms water over it, bears 295°, 

 distant 200 yards from this rock. 



Northwest arm extends southwestward 1 mile with a breadth 

 of 400 yards, and then turns northwestward, forming a cove 400 

 yards across. The hills on the north shore, which are 330 to 360 feet 

 high, fall sharply to the sea, and are generally wooded. A hill, 150 

 feet high, covered only with moss, slopes to the east point of the cove 

 at the head. Between Northwest and Southwest arms the coast is 

 bold, encircling a cove into which a streamlet runs. Rocks lie close to 

 the head of this cove. 



Cross rock, a small pinnacle 5 feet high, lies close to the northern 

 side of the entrance to this arm, and is nearly joined at low water to 

 the shore of a small cove, round which are a few houses. This rock 

 has deeii water close to its southern side. 



