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NOTE
All itineraries are for guidance only. Programs may vary depending
on local ice and weather conditions and in order to take advantage
of opportunities to see wildlife. Flexibility is paramount
for expedition cruises.
Day 1 Embarkation Day
Optional charter air transportation is available from Ottawa
to Resolute or from Edmonton to Cambridge Bay. Call to enquire
about rates and availabilty. If you do not purchase the charter
air fare, you must make your way either to Resolute, Nunvaut,
or Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, where you will embark the Adventure
Ship, Akademik Ioffe.
Day 2 Lancaster Sound
The search for the Northwest Passage captured the imagination
of explorers for centuries. Many risked fortunes, and some
their lives to be the first to find the route to the Orient.
Perhaps the most tragic expedition was that of Sir John Franklin.
Today, on Beechey Island you might visit the graves of three
who lost their lives during in pursuit of Franklin’s
dream.
Day 3 Bellot Strait
Bellot Strait is a narrow channel that separates the mainland
of North America from Somerset Island. Halfway through the
Strait we will sail past Point Zenith, the northernmost point
of mainland North America.
Day 4 King William Island
Near Coburg Island, Franklin’s ships HMS Erebus and
Terror were beset in ice for two winters. The ships were abandoned
in 1848, north-northwest of Victory Point. Ten years passed
before remains of the expedition were found under a cairn
at Victory Point. Unlike the men of Franklin’s expedition,
Raold Amundsen easily followed the westerns shore of King
William Island, stopping to make scientific observations en
route.
Day 5 Gjoa Haven(Usqsuqtuuq)and Simpson Strait
Amundsen spent a winter in the small Inuit village of Usqsuqtuuq,
which he renamde Gjoa Haven after his ship. Nearby is the
Northwest Passage Territorial Park, with an interpretation
center that pays tribute to Inuit culture and depicts the
impact of European exploration on the region.
Simpson Strait, a shallow waterway that continues to defeat
many ships, was the route taken by Amundsen during his first
successful transit of the Northwest Passage. We will attempt
to follow in his wake, if local conditions permit.
Days 6-7 Jenny Lind Island
Moving sea ice, shallow water and limited charts make it impossible
to predict in advance exactly which beaches we will explore
and in which bays the Zodiacs will be lowered. That is the
exhiliration of expedition style travel, every day begins
with the element of the unknown.
Day 8 Holman, Northwest Territories
You enter the second of Canada’s three Arctic territories
today, the Northwest Territories (NWT). We plan to visit the
tiny community of Holman, where the indigenous people have
established a print shop and artists’ cooperative.
Day 9 Smoking Hills, NWT
Witnessing an extraordinary natural phenomemon will
be our goal for the day. The bituminous shale of the Smoking
Hills has been burning spontaneously for centuries. The phenonmenon
has affected the local vegetation and the acidity of the tundra
ponds in the vicinity.
Days 10-12 Amundsen Gulf to Queen Maud Gulf
The history of the Canadian Arctic is also the history of
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Hudson’s Bay
Company. Our shipboard historian will relate stories of the
redcoats, the fur trade and the merchants who ruled the Canadian
Arctic for nearly two centuries.
We will be on the alert for musk oxen, prehistoric looking
beasts with shaggy coats and massive heads.
Day 13 Cambridge Bay
We offer optional chartered air fare from Cambridge Bay to
Edmonton, or from Resolute to Ottawa. Please call for costs
and availability. Disembarkation is in Cambridge Bay or Resolute,
depending on the dates of travel chosen.
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