Leave blueberries for animals, Parks Canada tells pickers on St. John’s landmark
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — People in Newfoundland and Labrador’s capital are tossing their plastic buckets in exasperation after a request from Parks Canada to stop picking blueberries on Signal Hill.
“It’s really stupid,” said Eleanor Dawson, who walks the hill almost every day and has been picking berries up there for most of her life.
The berry pickers on Signal Hill are mostly older people who aren’t doing anybody — or anything — any harm, Dawson said. “They’re up there with a cup, getting a cup of berries,” she said. “It’s the same people, and they’re very local. It’s a real community thing.”
Signal Hill is a national historic site overlooking downtown St. John’s and is home to a popular 1.7-kilometre hiking trail that winds around the back of the hill, through wide, rocky areas carpeted in low-lying blueberry bushes. Come mid-August, the bushes are bursting with blueberries, and the bent-over backsides of eager pickers are easy to spot off the trails and among the shrubs.

