Canada - Hunting Down Canada's Coolest
Adventures
By
David Ellis
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Polar Bears - there are more in Nunavut Territory than anywhere else in the world
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Adventurous holidaymakers ready for anything in Canada's Arctic around Iqaluit
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There is almost no mercury in the
thermometer at minus-26C in winter, and on Christmas Day there might be
five hours of sunshine – if there’s any of the stuff at all, because
most Christmases it’s snowing. Twenty-four hours.
But mid-year things change: on balmy summer’s days the locals frolic in
20-hours of daily sunshine as temperatures soar to a sizzling
average-eight. That’s right, eight. Celsius.
Yet rather than looking on such conditions as negatives, the 31,000
folk of the Canadian city of Iqaluit see them as positives – and want
the world to beat a path to their door, where they say the greeting’s
far warmer than the weather.
And that they’ll gladly share their table with you too: whale blubber
and muskox, caribou, seal, walrus, chicken, game fish, clams, shrimps
and lobsters.
And bear’s feet, with those lucky enough to be invited to a private
home, or who choose a “country food” caf� where the local Inuits dine,
find themselves chowing-down as their hosts do: with the fingers, and
savouring those tasty morsels raw or frozen.
“Remarkably, after the initial shock, visitors find this hospitality
not only a very unique part of a fascinating cultural and adventurous
holiday, but a very touching one too, as the people are just so
accommodating,” says Ed Smith whose Sydney-based Canada and Alaska
Specialist Holidays is funnelling increasing number of inquisitives
Aussie holidaymakers to Iqualuit.
“These visitors find there’s so much to do in the fascinating outdoors
for the hunter armed with gun or camera,” says Smith, himself an
expatriate Canadian who is quick to point out that you don’t have to
survive on “country food” when visiting Iqualuit.
“There are all the regular restaurants, pizza parlours, Mexican diners
and Chinese takeaways, and you’ll even find tropical fruits in the
supermarkets in the coldest depths of winter,” he says.
Iqaluit is on Baffin Island and is the capital of Nunavut, Canada’s
newest territory covering a vast 1.95 million square kilometres (20% of
the country,) and was created a decade ago through the most
comprehensive settlement ever reached between a state and an aboriginal
group.
Long occupied by nomadic Inuits, Arctic Nunavut was first visited by
white man in the 16th century when English explorer Martin Frobisher
came upon Baffin Island during his search for a Polar route to China.
On a third visit in 1578 he also took 300 Cornish miners to excavate a
thousand tonnes of what he thought was gold-bearing ore. But back in
England it turned out to be nothing but iron pyrite (Fool’s Gold,) and
ended up as filling for pot-holed country roads.
Within 100 years of Frobisher’s visits, the Dutch were whaling the
area, and in 1670 the famous Hudson’s Bay Company was established – one
of its earliest trading posts was re-located in 1949 to what is now
Apex 5km from Iqaluit, and its historic buildings are a fascinating
drawcard for visitors.
The unusual Igloo-shaped Anglican Cathedral in Iqaluit is another
attraction, as are the Legislative Assembly and the local museum.
But it’s the outdoors that attract most visitors – sport-hunters who
team-up with professional outfitters to seek 800kg polar bears (more
than half the world’s polar bear population live here,) muskox, foxes,
lemmings, wolves and Arctic hares to name a few.
They also fish through holes cut in iced-over rivers and lakes,
dangling lures that attract a variety of species that are speared
rather than hooked… and when the ice melts, fly-fish from the shores
for lake trout, fighting Arctic char and Arctic graylings.
Non sport-hunters armed with cameras hike or dog-sled spectacular
trails in search of many of these creatures too, and walruses, seals,
whales and countless species of birdlife from ptarmigans to snowy owls,
ravens, gulls, terns, loons, ducks and geese.
And snap the amazing dancing lights of the aurora borealis, or hunt in
the local stores for carved walrus tusks, sealskin mittens, hand-made
jewellery, custom-made parkas, fur clothes and animal-skin boots.
Iqualuit is 2000km north of Ottawa and so pilots and Santa can’t miss
it in the snow, its airport passenger terminal is painted bright yellow
Canada & Alaska Specialist Holidays can add a short-break to
Iqaluit to a Canada, Alaska or USA vacation, or create hunting or
outdoor adventure packages year-round; phone 1300 79 49 59.
Things to to while in Ontario, Canada
Things to to while in Québec, Canada
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