Travel Guides to Canada

Travel Guide to Canada 2024-25

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houses used by Thule people between 1200 and 1700 AD can be seen (www.nunavut- parks.com/nunavut_parks/qaummaarviit -territorial-park). There are also many Hudson's Bay Company trading posts, remnants from the 19 th century whaling era and, on Beechey Island, the graves of three men from Sir John Franklin's search for the Northwest Passage. The Northwest Passage can be explored on expedition cruises staffed with artists, academics and Inuit (www.quarkexpeditions.com/en/arctic; www.adventurecanada.com). Carving is common throughout Nunavut, but Cape Dorset is the epicentre of iconic Inuit sculptures that have been gifted to presidents, popes and royalty (www.dorsetfinearts.com). Their print- making is also acclaimed. The Kenojuak Cultural Centre, an art studio and exhibition space, covers seven decades of printmaking. The print centre in Pangnirtung is also world-renowned (www.uqqurmiut.ca). MUST SEE, MUST DO Dogsled or kayak on a day trip out of Iqaluit (www.inukpakoutfitting.ca). Experience an Arctic safari aboard a snowmobile-drawn Inuit sled from coastal Pond Inlet to the floe edge in springtime, guided by Inuit. Wildlife, from whales to polar bears, take part in an open water feeding frenzy (www.arctickingdom.com/ arctic-safari). Watch polar bears and walrus emerge from stone, antler and whalebone as carvers work outside their homes in most hamlets. See colourful northern lights flicker across the sky in fall and winter. Experience Inuit throat singing and drum dancing (www.alianait.ca). Squeeze yourself into the tiny but busy South Baffin Holdings, an art shop chockablock of carvings, prints and parkas. Schedule a visit to Uasau Soap, where you can get your hands on body butter, soaps and other skin care products sourced from traditional ingredients such as seal oil, whale and seaweed. If you're lucky enough, taste traditional Inuit food like Arctic char, caribou, muskox—not a regular menu item, and fresh, hot bannock bread. SCENIC WALKS Experienced backpackers can traverse the 97-km (60-mi.) Akshayuk Pass through Auyuittuq National Park, a 10 to 14-day hike amid glaciers, sheer cliffs and river crossings. Be sure to travel with one of the licenced, insured and Park-approved outfit- ters in Pangnirtung and Qikiqtarjuaq. The less adventurous can glimpse the pass' spectacular mountain terrain on a day's boat ride up the fjord from Pangnirtung to hike to the Arctic Circle (www.parkscanada.gc.ca/ auyuittuq). Hike the trail up the peak of 200-m (656-ft.) Mount Pelly in Ovayok Territorial Park east of Cambridge Bay for views, wildflowers and archaeological sites (www.nunavutparks.com /parks-special-places/ovayok-territorial-park). Stroll easy paths through a tundra valley to waterfalls and cultural sites at Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park just outside Iqaluit (www.nunavutparks.com/parks-special- places/sylvia-grinnell-territorial-park). FAMILY FUN Head to Iqaluit from Ottawa on a family- friendly long weekend in August. Flights, hotel and a town tour are included (www.arctickingdom.com/arctic- getaways). Take the kids to play with Canadian purebred Inuit dog puppies at Inukpak Outfitting's kennel, head out for a dogsledding excursion, build an igloo with your family then sleep in it, or ride a snowmobile and try ice fishing (www.inukpakoutfitting.ca). NU 95 ROUGHLY 75% OF THE WORLD'S NARWHAL POPULATION MIGRATES INTO NUNAVUT'S ISLAND ESTUARIES AND SHALLOW BAYS. Quick Fact KAYAKING • DESTINATION CANADA/MARLIN OLYNYK POLAR BEAR AND SNOWMOBILING IN THE ARCTIC • ©DESTINATION CANADA

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