East Coast Glow: Iceberg water skincare products making waves in Bonavista - Action News
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East Coast Glow: Iceberg water skincare products making waves in Bonavista

East Coast Glow is a new business in Bonavista making soap and cream using the purest water you can find, iceberg water.

Karen and Roger Dewling make soaps and creams made of glacial water and seaweed

Roger and Karen Dewling make soaps and skin care products out of icebergs and seaweed. (Jane Adey/CBC)

Roger Dewling used to chase down pieces of iceberg that had broken off and drifted close to shore to cool down his drinks.

Now, he has an entirely different reason for collecting bergy bits. Roger and his wife, Karen Dewling, make and sell soap and creams produced with the glacial water.

This Oat Milk and Almond body lotion is just one of the products East Coast Glow makes using iceberg water. (Jane Adey/CBC)

"Soap making is really a chemical reaction that's taking place called saponification and the purer the water source the better the chemical reaction is going to be, which is going to result in a better soap," Karenexplained.

Karen Dewling began making soap years ago for her daughter's sensitive skin.

"She was born with terrible eczema to the point that she needed some intervention and of course when we visited our doctor we were given harsh creams and topical steroids and things like that, that I didn't want to slather my six-month-old baby with, so it kinda happened that way," she explained.

Cashing in on nature

Now, the Clarenville couple is selling their iceberg soap and creamsin Bonavistaas fast as they can make them.

"We've had a lot of good support and people who come out who can't use any other products,they try our things and they're able to use it and they keep coming back."

'They kind of step back and say wow, we can't get this anywhere else." - Karen Dewling

They've called their business East Coast Glow. Karen Dewling says the cool, rare ingredient impresses tourists who often come from far away to see towering sculptures of ice off the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador.

"They go out on these tours and they see them and they're enthralled by them so they come here and they see that we use the iceberg water and they kind of step back and say wow, we can't get this anywhere else and they bring gifts back to their families," she said.

Roger Dewling eyeballs bergy bits on his drive to work and is always prepared to harvest some. (Submitted photo)

Roger Dewling is a chef instructor at the College of the North Atlantic in Bonavista. His scenic coastal commute from Clarenville offers him time to spy icebergs in the spring. When they start to break up, he moves in.

"I roll up my jeans, take off my boots and just go out and get it," he said.

Dewling always carries around restaurant bus pans in his vehicle for the unexpected harvest.

"We have, like, three chest freezers full of icebergs."

Seaweed added touch

Roger's iceberg collecting happens over a short period but there's another special ocean ingredient the Dewlingsgatherall year long.

"We collect seaweed and kelp off the cape lighthouse and we dry that and we put that in our salts and our bath balms as well," explained Dewling.

"It makes our product interesting and we're here in Newfoundland and why not use the products that are all around us and in the ocean."

Roger and Karen Dewling have partnered with Newfoundland Sea Salt company to use that product in their soaps and creams, which also contain seaweed. (Jane Adey/CBC)

East Coast Glow's storefront is in Bonavista for the summer.Karen Dewling says once the tourism season slows down, they'll rely on online sales which they hope will be just as brisk.

"It's a great sell and it's a great thing that we promote as Newfoundlanders that this is part of our culture and what we do," said Roger Dewling.

You can hear The Broadcast with host Jane Adeyweekdays at 6:05 pm.