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Out of the Northwest Passage 2013

Aug. 20, 2013 - Sept. 5, 2013

     Aboard the Sea Adventurer

 

Experience the spirit of exploration in some of the least travelled regions in the Canadian Arctic. This is an expedition in the truest sense: nature reigns supreme, and we go where conditions permit! Here is a taste of our proposed route.

We’ll board the Sea Adventurer in Kugluktuk (Coppermine) and sail west to the Beaufort Sea. Conditions permitting, we’ll traverse Prince of Wales Strait, making expeditionary stops on both Banks and Victoria Islands, and Ulukhatok (Holman) on the shores of the Amundsen Gulf.

Visiting Winter Harbour and Neil Griffiths Point on Melville Island, we’ll explore Lancaster Sound, famous for its marine mammals, including beluga whales.

On Beechey Island, we’ll see the graves of the ill-fated Franklin expedition. On Ellesmere Island, we’ll visit Canada’s northernmost community: Aujuittuq (Grise Fiord), “the place that never thaws.”

We’ll journey into the remote reaches of Smith Sound as ice and weather allow, before crossing to Greenland.

On the coast of the world’s largest island, we’ll marvel at huge icebergs and vast fjords. The historic communities of Upernavik and Ilulissat—a UNESCO World Heritage Site—are sure to be highlights of an adventure unlike any other.


View Arctic Safari 2012 in a larger map
day 1
Kugluktuk (Coppermine River)
day 2
Ulukhaktok (Holman)
day 3
Banks Island
day 4
Prince of Wales Strait
day 5
Winter Harbour, Melville Island
day 6
Parry Channel
day 7
Bathurst and Beechey Islands
day 8
Dundas Harbour
day 9
Aujuittuq (Grise Fiord)
day 10
Smith Sound
day 11
Cape Alexander
day 12
Kap York
day 13
Upernavik
day 14
Karrat Fjord
day 15
Ilulissat
day 15
Itilleq
day 17
Kangerlussuaq (Søndre Strømfjord), Greenland
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Situated on the famed Coppermine River, the hamlet of Kugluktuk is home to 1,200 residents. The proximity to the treeline make this area particularily rich in wildlife. Wolverines, moose, muskoxen, caribou, foxes, wolves and grizzly bears are all resident species. The people of Kugluktuk rely heavily on their traditional economy of hunting and fishing to feed and clothe their families for cultural and nutritional wellbeing. Originally named Coppermine, it was renamed Kugluktuk according to its Inuinnaqtun name meaning "place of moving waters", on January 1st, 1996. The Coppermine River itself is designated a Canadian Heritage River for the important role it played as an exploration and fur trade route. Copper deposits along the river attracted the first explorers to the area.

1

Quad Lower Forward, 2 upper 2 lower berths, porthole window.

$7595.00

2

Triple Lower Deck, 1 upper 2 lower berths, porthole window.

$9395.00

3

Junior Double, two lower berths, porthole window

$10295.00

4

Double, two lower berths, midship, porthole window.

$11695.00

5

Main Double, two lower berths, porthole window.

$12995.00

6

Deluxe Double, two lower berths, midship, porthole window.

$14395.00

7

Superior Double, two lower berths, picture window.

$15495.00

8

Junior Suite, two lower berths, sitting area, picture window.

$15995.00

9

Suite, two lower beds, sitting area, picture window.

$16695.00

10

Owner’s Suite, two lower berths, shower & bathtub, picture window.

$17595.00

What's Included

  • All entry & park fees
  • Your complete itinerary
  • Team of resource specialists
  • Educational program and pre-departure materials
  • All shipboard meals
  • All Zodiac excursions
  • Service charges and port fees

What's Not Included

  • Commercial flights
  • Mandatory medical / evacuation insurance
  • Personal expenses
  • Additional expenses in the event of delays or Itinerary changes
  • Discretionary gratuities to ship's crew (approximately $10 - 14 per passenger per day)
  • Visas, or inoculations, if required
  • Physician's fees confirming you are fit to travel
  • Possible fuel surcharges
  • $250 Discovery Fund Fee
  • Charter Flights
  • Charter Flights are available from Edmonton to Kugluktuk and return from Kangerlussuaq, Greenland to Toronto for $2,054.05 USD
 
  • Visit the northernmost community in Canada at Grise Fiord and the westernmost community in Nunavut at Kugluktuk
  • Sail the route to the North Pole during our journey into Smith Sound
  • Travel to Greenland, Nunavut and the Northwest Territories within one sailing
  • Play a nine
  • hole tundra golf course overlooking the Beaufort Sea at Ulukhatok
  • Marvel at the Ilulissat icefield, where 90% of the north Atlantic's icebergs are born

Chris Dolder

Expedition Team

A native Brit, Chris is a self-confessed Polar addict, slowly coming to terms with his enthusiasm for both the Arctic and Antarctic (by visiting them as frequently as possible). He has been a visitor to the Polar Regions since 1995 to conduct research as part of National Programmes (with Sweden and New Zealand) and to pursue his passion for wildlife photography. An avid reader of Antarctic history, Chris has journeyed to historic monuments on the Antarctic Peninsula and in the Ross Sea Region, including Scott?s Discovery and Terra Nova Huts. In 2004, he successfully completed a traverse of South Georgia as part of a group of mountaineers following in the footsteps of Ernest Shackleton. Chris has a degree in Biological Sciences (majoring in animal behaviour) and recently completed his post-graduate qualification at the Centre for Antarctic Studies and Research in New Zealand. A people person, Chris is lively company. He is well capable of attending to the needs of his passengers, sharing his experiences and inspiring others to make meaningful connections with the environment as they discover these regions.


Danny Catt

Photographer

Danny is a writer, photographer and educator with over 10 years of experience with Parks Canada in the fields of environmental education and park planning. Danny has travelled the world, and leads a number of Adventure Canada’s natural history and photography trips. When not seeking adventures in exotic places, Danny is a faculty member in the Fish, Wildlife and Recreation program at the British Columbia Institute of Technology, near Vancouver.


David Pelly

Culturalist

As a writer, David’s work has been largely based on Inuit traditional knowledge he collected over the past 30 years. He has published eight books and countless articles about the North, the land, its history and its people. His recent book, Sacred Hunt, is about the profound relationship between Inuit and seals. He has worked with biologists and archaeologists, developed and written documentary films, served as co-curator of Inuit art exhibitions, and assisted with numerous community cultural projects across Nunavut. An adventurer in his own right, he has also led several dozen northern expeditions, travelling by canoe and by dog-team for thousands of miles in the Arctic wilderness.


Jerry Kobalenko

Arctic Explorer

Canada’s premier arctic traveller, Jerry has logged over 7,000 miles in the Arctic over the course of some 35 skiing, hiking and kayaking expeditions. He typically spends three months a year in a tent in the North. Both a photographer and a writer, Jerry’s work appears around the world in such publications as Canadian Geographic, Outside and Condé Nast Traveler. His literary travel book, The Horizontal Everest, “…is refreshingly free of the hubris that marks much adventure writing,” writes The New York Times Book Review. “The reader never feels assaulted by Kobalenko’s daring, only inspired by it.” His most recent book, Arctic Eden, combines Jerry’s photography, writing and travel skills. When he is not on an extreme journey, Jerry lives in Canmore, Alberta with his wife Alexandra.


Johnny Issaluk

Culturalist

Johnny Issaluk is from the small arctic hamlet Igluligaarjuk (also known as Chesterfield Inlet), on the coast of Hudson’s Bay in Nunavut. He grew up traditionally, out on the land, hunting, fishing and camping with his elders, as Inuit have for centuries. Traditional life was juxtaposed with contemporary education through residential secondary school and Nunavut Arctic College in tourism, guiding and environmental technology. Johnny works with various organizations that address mental health, suicide prevention and healing through counseling and traditional activities. Johnny is also developing a small consulting business, Nurraq Outfitting. One of the youth projects closest to Johnny’s heart is the internationally renowned educational program “Students on Ice”; where he has worked with youth from all over the world as an arctic ambassador and spokesman for arctic stewardship. As an athlete Johnny has been practicing, competing, performing, coaching and teaching Inuit Games for more than 20 yearss. He is one of the most successful Inuit Games athletes of his generation. Johnny is a recipient of the Diamond Jubilee Medal. Johnny was recognized for his ongoing contribution to the health and wellbeing of Nunavummiut. Johnny has four children, and lives with his wife and three dogs in Iqaluit, Nunavut.


Jon Dudley

Geologist

Jon has been reading the rocks and sharing their stories both as a career and as his passion for over 40 years. He first worked in the Canadian Arctic while still in high school and became enthralled with the land and its people. Having obtained degrees in geology in Toronto and Calgary, he pursued a career as a professional geologist, which included fieldwork and excursions across Canada. Both independently and as a member of a number of geological organizations, Jon continues to be very active in helping youth, teachers, the general public, and other geologists appreciate some of the marvels of our planet and how all life is connected to, and shaped by, the ever-changing geological landscape.


Latonia Hartery

Archaeologist

Latonia has a PhD in circumpolar archaeology from the University of Calgary. Her exploration of this topic has taken her to the Canadian Arctic, Greenland and Scandinavia. For the past decade she has conducted excavations on Paleoeskimo sites in Bird Cove-Pond Cove, Newfoundland. At this location she integrates research, tourism and public education. She is also the president of AARA, a non-profit organization dedicated to Arctic and sub-Arctic studies. As a filmmaker, she has worked on independent documentaries and other films for a wide range of broadcasters including APTN and the CBC. For her community efforts, and for preserving and promoting Arctic and sub-Arctic culture, she was recently given JCI Canada’s Outstanding Young Person Award.


Laurie Pelly

Land Claim Specialist

Laurie’s attachment to Canada’s North began in 1989 with a canoe trip through the central barrenlands Thelon Wildlife Sanctuary. This northern exposure led to Laurie’s becoming an Arctic canoeing enthusiast and, indirectly, to switching careers from corporate lawyer in New York City to legal counsel for Nunavut Tunngavik Incorporated, the non-profit organization which represents the Inuit of Nunavut. Since 1994, Laurie’s work at NTI has encompassed a wide range of issues as she represents the Inuit at the international, federal, territorial and local levels. Laurie, David and son Eric lived in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, from 1995 to 2002, and are now resident in Ottawa, but continue to travel regularly in the North.


Lois Suluk-Locke

Culturalist

Lois was born and raised in Arviat, the southern-most community in the Kivalliq Region, along the Hudson’s Bay coast. Lois followed the footprints of her grandparents, learning, preserving and performing Inuit traditional songs, and teaching about the mix of traditional and modern day life in the North. Working with youth and elders in Arviat, Lois teaches the different types of Inuit songs, including throatsinging, and the jaw harp. She has travelled to France, Europe, the United States and throughout Canada performing and speaking. She still resides in Arviat with her husband and two children.


Paul Prior

Ornithologist

Paul Prior cannot recall a time when he was not birding, and his passion has always been for migrant songbirds. Paul’s passion for birds has taken him to passerine monitoring/banding stations in Israel, Costa Rica, northern Ontario and northern British Columbia, as well as guiding trips to the Caribbean (Cuba, Hispaniola and Trinidad and Tobago), Central America and the Canadian east coast. In the latter part of the 90s his attention was steered more to work with Ontario’s endangered breeding species, specifically with Bald Eagles, Loggerhead Shrikes and Prothonotary Warblers; and then in 2001 he began working as the fauna biologist with Toronto and Region Conservation. As with many naturalists, Paul has been working on improving his natural history knowledge across all fields, delving into invertebrates and amphibians in particular - he's a great believer in the idea that if you're interested in natural history you can never run out of new and exciting things to see and discover.


Pierre Richard

Marine Biologist

As a long-time Arctic marine mammal researcher, Pierre has focused on the population biology of belugas and narwhals of the Canadian Arctic, developing recommendations for the sustainable use and conservation of their populations. He is known in Nunavut as "Pieri, angutikutaq qilalugalerei" ('the tall man who knows about belugas and narwhals'). He is the author of a Nunavut school book on Marine Mammals of Nunavut and several French language books on whales and mammals of eastern Canada and the Arctic. Pierre likes to spend a lot of time on the ships' decks or out in a boat to spot marine mammals and birds. Join him there.