When Zita Cobb was 10, her hometown almost disappeared.Not just her hometown, but all of the communities on Fogo Island, the island off Newfoundland where Ms.
Cobb was born in 1958.The crisis was triggered by the collapse of the near-shore cod fishery, a resource that had sustained her ancestral community since the 17th century.
In response, the Newfoundland government proposed to resettle the population to other parts of the province — or somewhere.“I remember my parents whispering in the night, and my mother saying, ‘What’s going to happen to us? Where are we going to end up?’ And my dad saying, ‘I don’t know.’ It’s terrifying for a child,” Ms.Cobb remembered during a recent interview.“They had no running water, no electricity.
They had little health care and no roads.And suddenly — there was no fish,” Ms.
Cobb said.“There was a real risk of starvation.”But the communities of Fogo Island formed a cooperative and asked the government’s support to build a small shipyard so they could build boats that would allow them to fish farther offshore.
And it worked.The people of Fogo Island were not resettled.
And they did not starve.In 2013, Ms.Cobb drew on that same innovative community spirit in establishing the luxury Fogo Island Inn, which has since earned “three keys” from the Michelin Guide.
The island was included in the Travel section’s annual “Places to Go” feature in 2011 and 2022.Ms.
Cobb says that the inn is an expression of the island’s culture — in everything from the way guests are greeted right off the ferry to the ingredients used in the inn’s dining room to the locally made furnishings in the inn’s 29 rooms.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while...