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2010 Arctic Tours
& Yukon Tours of Northern Canada:
"Arctic Circle Wildlife Tour"
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In the vast wilderness that is
northern Canada, only one year-round highway crosses the Arctic Circle.
And this road, the Dempster Highway, is less a highway than a back country
road. From its beginning on the North Klondike River, it traverses a single,
expansive wilderness, almost untouched by civilization, and crosses the
Continental Divide three times. On our Arctic tour of this
region, we visit the few, far flung First Nation communities on the Dempster,
and will spend most time alone, seeing only scattered traffic.
In this land of the midnight
sun , the sun holds its place in the sky for an entire summer, enabling
wildlife to be seen almost 24 hours a day. Black bear, wolverine and fox
live in the forest and grizzly bears, wolves and caribou roam the mountain
valleys and plains. Dall's sheep can often be seen on the mountain ridges
while moose live near valley streams and rivers. Bird life includes
eagles, falcons and hawks and a variety of migratory birds.
Surprisingly, at the northern end
of the highway there is civilization - in Inuvik, the modern Arctic circle
service centre founded in the mid-1950s. However, we don' t linger in
civilization too long! After a tour of Inuvik we head out by boat into
the Mackenzie Delta, a haven for wildlife. The next day we take a low
level flight across the tundra and taiga of the Mackenzie Delta for a
day visit to the Inuvialuit hamlet of Tuktoyaktuk on the shores of the
Arctic Ocean.
For those who wish to extend
their time in Canada's north, we highly recommend our 4 day excursion
to a wonderful lodge several hours from Whitehorse.
| Duration: |
8 days / 7 nights |
| Activity
Level : |
Easy |
| Maximum
Group Size: |
8 guests |
| Accommodation: |
Six nights 3* hotel, one night rustic
hotel |
| Meals: |
7 hot breakfasts
and two lunches |
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Tour Dates: |
By
charter only. A minimum of 4 people is required to confirm a departure.
The maximum number of travellers is 11.
The season for this tour
is June 15 to September 15
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| Departs: |
Whitehorse, YT |
| Arrives: |
Whitehorse, YT |
| Price: |
$4,295.
Price based on double occupancy for Days 1 to 8.
Single supplement: $500
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| Included: |
This Arctic Tour includes:
- Experienced guide
- Seven nights accommodation
- Entrance fee to Diamond Tooth Gerties
- Tour of Inuvik
- Half-day Mackenzie Delta marine wildlife tour
- Flight excursion to Tuktoyaktuk including day cultural tour
- Scheduled flight from Inuvik to Whitehorse
- Airport transfer in Inuvik
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| Not
Included: |
Meals where not indicated; gratuities,
HST. |
| Optional
Activities: |
Kluane
Backcountry Pre-trip Excursion. Three nights luxury lodge accommodation
in the wilderness, wildlife excursions, gourmet meals and return
transfer from Whitehorse: $1,755. Including this excursion brings
the price to $6550 for a total of ten nights and eleven days.
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Arctic
Circle Wildlife Tour Itinerary
Whitehorse tours, YT, return.
Day 1. Whitehorse,
YT.
We've set this day aside for everyone
to travel to Whitehorse. In the evening, your guide will meet everyone
at the High Country Inn for a no-host dinner.
Accommodation: Hotel
Included Meals: None
Day 2. Dawson City,
YT .
After departing Whitehorse, we take the Klondike Highway to the historic
gold-mining town of Dawson City (pop. 2000). En route, this yukon tour stops at Five
Finger Rapids and cross some of the great northern rivers including Yukon
River, Pelly River and Stewart River. We arrive in Dawson City in late
afternoon after driving 540 kilometers. In the evening we'll have time
to stroll along the boardwalks and admire the town's original buildings.
Accommodation: Hotel
Included Meals: Hot breakfast
Day 3. Dawson City,
YT .
Our stay in this restored gold mining town will include a focus on historical
and cultural attractions including: The Grand Palace Theatre, the SS Keno
National Historic Site, the Dawson City Museum and the Danoja Zho Cultural
Centre. We'll also have the option to pan for gold and, in the evening,
visit Diamond Tooth Gertie's Casino and Gambling Saloon with live stage
performances. Entrance fees to the above attractions are optional
and range in price from $10 to $15.
For those with a hankerin' to see the countryside, we set aside a half
day for an optional visit to Dredge No. 4, located 12 kilometers from
Dawson City. Built in 1912, this historic dredge is the largest wooden
hull bucket-line dredge in North America. After our one-hour tour, we'll
continue up Bonanza Creek to see miles of tailings worked two or three
times in the continuing search for gold.
Accommodation: Hotel
Included Meals: Hot breakfast
Day 4. Eagle Plains,
YT.
Leaving the Klondike Highway, we begin our 750 kilometer journey up the
Dempster Highway to Tombstone Territorial Park. The southern part of our
journey passes through the valley of the North Klondike River and skirts
the Ogilvie Range. After crossing the North Fork Klondike River, we ascend
above the treeline to encounter the dramatic Tombstone Range, considered
by many to be the most spectacular mountain range in the Yukon. We'll
visit the Visitor Information Centre and stretch our legs on a one-hour
hike in Tombstone Valley.
We continue our ascent up the Dempster
to North Fork Pass, past the treeline and into open tundra. An elevation
of 1289 metres marks the highest point on our Dempster Highway tour and
our first of three crossings of the Continental Divide. From this point
on we enter a region of near-continuous permafrost and tundra.
Heading north along the Blackstone
Uplands we stop at Chapman Lake, the largest lake along the highway. Here
we encounter a fertile area rich with bird life. Leaving Tombstone Territorial
Park, we climb over Windy Pass, making our way along the ridge of the
Eagle Plateau and completing our second crossing of the Continental Divide.
Before the night's rest at Eagle
Plains, we stop at the Ogilvie-Peel viewpoint that provides one of the
best panoramas of the northern fringe of the Ogilvie Mountains. Entering
the land around Eagle Plains, we'll see a rolling, hilly region covered
with stunted black spruce forest. Due to permafrost under the soil, the
trees lean in all directions, giving them a comical, drunken appearance.
Our 430 kilometer drive from Dawson City leads us to the self-contained
truck stop on Eagle Plains, the only place on the Dempster to eat, sleep
and fuel up. We'll largely be in the company of long haul truckers, road
maintenance crews and locals.
We arrive at our hotel in Eagle
Plains in late afternoon. From Eagle Plains, the Richardson Mountains
provide an incredibly beautiful sight, forming a narrow north-south line
of softly sculptured ridges. They are believed to be the most northerly
range of the Rockies.
Accommodation: Hotel (basic)
Included Meals: Hot breakfast
Day 5. Inuvik, NWT.
Just north of Eagle Plains our Arctic tour arrives at the Arctic Circle monument
at N 66°33'. We then ascend to the last mountain pass, which takes
us over the border to the Northwest Territories. Here we change our clocks
one hour ahead and cross the Continental Divide for the third time. We
now descend into the expansive valley of the mighty Peel and Mackenzie
Rivers.
During the ice age, continental
sheets of ice stretched across much of this area. Consequently, thousands
of small lakes and ponds attest to the passage of the grinding of massive
glaciers. We'll look out for wildlife as we make to the Peel River Ferry
Crossing. After the crossing we stop at the Kutching community of Fort
McPherson, an early Hudson's Bay Company post and now home to 800 first
nations people. Time and store hours permitting, we'll visit the Fort
McPherson Tent and Canvas Shop , famous for famous around the world
for their prospector tents, tipi's and sturdy luggage.
The areas of the Peel/Mackenzie
lowlands are mostly flat and marshy. But the warm waters of the mighty
Mackenzie bring to this arctic area allow a diversity of biological zones
to exist far north of their usual boundary. Stands of white birch, white
and black spruce, cottonwood and tamarack are common. While none of these
forests can compare to the magnificent west coast rainforest, some of
the white birch have been documented to be up to 800 years old. An essential
resource for the native population of the Western Arctic, whitefish, Arctic
char, trout and burbot (freshwater ling) are fished from the river.
Canada's longest river, the Mackenzie
River, is our last river crossing; this river empties into the Beaufort
Sea in a region known as the Mackenzie Delta, one of North America's great
migratory bird flyways. Five globally significant Important Bird Areas
(IBAs) and one continentally crucial IBA stretch along the river. These
IBAs are vital staging and nesting areas for tens of thousands of waterfowl,
such as tundra swans; greater white-fronted, lesser snow and Canada geese;
canvasback and mallard ducks; and thousands of songbirds. Roughly 100
species of migratory birds are present in the Mackenzie River Delta alone,
including the last known breeding habitat of the highly endangered Eskimo
curlew. All travelers are encouraged to keep their cameras and
binoculars handy! We arrive at our hotel in Inuvik, located two
degrees above the Arctic Circle, in the late afternoon.
Accommodation: Hotel
Included Meals: Hot breakfast
Day 6. Invuvik, NWT.
We depart our hotel mid morning
for a guided two hour tour of Inuvik. Sights include Our Lady of Victory
Roman Catholic Church (The Igloo Church), Inuvik's Inukshuk, Inuvik Community
Greenhouse, t he most northern greenhouse in North America and the only
one of its kind in the world. We'll also s top by the Town Hall and sign
our guest book and pick up a Town of Inuvik souvenir pin.
We then embark on a four-hour boat tour into the Mackenzie Delta. In more
southerly climates, deltas are usually prime agricultural land. In the
North, however, productivity is expressed instead in seasonal abundance
of various forms of wildlife. Many of these wildlife species are migratory
and also play a vital role in the traditional lives of peoples living
in and around the delta. Approximately fifty-four species of mammals,
one hundred and thirty-seven species of birds, one amphibian, and a total
of fifty-five fish species are known to occur in the delta region.
As we cruise through the creeks
and channels, your guide will describe the unique ecosystem of this area
and point out traditional native camps. Arctic wildlife spotting opportunities
include moose, bear, mink, fox, beaver, muskrat, golden and bald eagle.
Wolves and wolverine may also be sighted. Part way through the tour, we
pull over at a local cabin, build a fire and partake of traditional native
fare.
After the boat tour, we'll wander
down Mackenzie Road, the main street in town, where we can shop for northern
souvenirs take dinner in one of the local pubs. A number of restaurants
offer a range of eating experiences including northern delicacies, take
way food and fine dining. In the evening, we can explore the nearby Jimmy
Adams Peace Trail around Boot Lake.
Accommodation: Hotel
Included Meals: Hot breakfast and lunch.
Day 7. Inuvik, NWT.
During the winter, the highway extends another 194 kilometres to Tuktoyaktuk,
on the northern coast of Canada, using frozen portions of the Mackenzie
River delta as an ice road. However, today is summer and so it's off to
the Inuvik airport to meet our chartered plane.
After a one hour flight over the
Mackenzie delta, we touch down in Tuktoyaktuk, where we'll be met by our
local guide. This is the northernmost point on this tour and we'll
spend some time exploring the town with its old mission vessel, many old
cabins and the ice-house.
During the tour, we'll sample
some local fare, and stop for a traditional toe dipping ceremony in the
Arctic Ocean. We'll also learn about the impact climate change is having
on this community and how it is affecting the traditional hunting and
gathering of its residents.
Tuktoyaktuk is also the gateway
for exploring Pingo National Landmark, an area protecting eight pingos
in a region which contains approximately 1,350 of these arctic ice dome
hills. We'll visit this Landmark, which comprises an area roughly six
miles square, just a few miles west of the community, and includes Canada's
highest (and the world's second-highest) pingo, at 160 feet. It is managed
by Parks Canada within the national park system, and, although a nationwide
Landmarks program was envisioned, Pingo remains the country's only national
landmark.
Accommodation: Hotel
Included Meals: Hot breakfast and lunch
Day 8. Whitehorse,
YT.
In the morning, we'll have time for a leisurely breakfast, some last minute
shopping and to pack before heading to the Inuvik Airport for our afternoon,
three-hour flight to Whitehorse. Your Arctic holiday concludes
when you arrive at the Whitehorse Airport. Please advise us if you wish
us to book accommodation in Whitehorse for this night.
Included Meals: Hot breakfast
Accommodation: On own
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Call toll free
1-800-255-5057
for info on tour availability
Arctic Circle Wildlife Tour Photo Gallery
Click a picture to see a larger view.













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