Travel Guides to Canada

2012 Travel Guide to Canada

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NORTHWEST TERRITORIES Experience the North By hÉLÈnA KATZ A woman dips her foot into the Arctic Ocean, on the northern coast of Northwest Territories (N.W.T.). Paddlers canoe past mountains and wildlife on a legendary river. In the terri- tory's southeast corner, a bison emerges from the boreal forest and lumbers across the highway in Wood Buffalo National Park. Near Yellowknife, a bush plane flies over the tundra and lands at a fishing lodge on a remote lake. Sandwiched between the Yukon and Nunavut, and bordered by Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia, the N.W.T. offers visitors experiences that are as diverse as its scenery. Landscapes include boreal forest and waterfalls in the south, tundra-covered Barren Lands in the north, and the Mackenzie and Richardson Mountains to the west. The Mackenzie River, North America's second-longest river, runs through it like a spine. Great Slave Lake is the continent's deepest lake. Great Bear Lake sits astride the Arctic Circle and is the largest lake in the N.W.T. Paddlers head north every year to navi- gate legendary rivers such as the Nahanni, Coppermine and Thelon. The N.W.T. has 33 communities in five regions: Inuvik region, Sahtu, North Slave, South Slave and Dehcho. Half the population is Dene, Métis or Inuvialuit. Although there are 11 official languages, most people speak English. royAL FooTSTEPS When the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge visited Yellowknife in 2011, they watched Aboriginal performers at outdoor Somba K'e Civic Plaza beside the town hall and listened to debates during a session of Youth Parliament at the Legislative Assembly. Then they flew to Blachford Lake Lodge (www.blachfordlakelodge. 174 2012 TRAVEL GUIDE TO CANADA Northwest territories

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