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travel / express yourself / your adventures / journey to the ice

Your Adventures
Journey to the ice
Students on Ice takes 110 adventurers on a journey of learning and discovery in the North
Canadian Geographic writer James Raffan spent two weeks aboard the Arctic Ambassador last August. This shipboard log of his journey is his second contribution to a year-long series of stories in Canadian Geographic in recognition of International Polar Year 2007-08.

Click for more photos from Day 10
Day 10 — Of whales and whaling
Location: Kekerton Island

By now, with all that has happened along the way, I'm sure heads are spinning. In addition to the wonderful scientific lectures, which tell us the facts of climate change and about the life cycles of plants and animals we're encountering on our travels, for me it is the contributions from some of the Inuit leaders aboard that cause the most generative thinking. Being in the North, having those voices aboard, being able to greet community leaders along the way in their own language and having a working sense of more traditional ecological knowledge as part of the ongoing conversation is a delight. More to the point, watching, listening and occasionally participating in conversations among the students, I'm learning of a dawning awareness of a northern perspective on all of this. For example, in a session led by Mary Simon and Robin Anawak on Inuit perspectives on climate change, they talk about climate change impacts on the health of northerners, about persistent pollutants in the environment and about how this, in concert with climate change, is affecting food and the security of food, as well as the social and mental health of northerners.


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So when we stop at the 19th-century whaling station on Kekerton Island, in Cumberland Sound, there is a discussion about whaling and how that industry and the demand for its products decimated the bowhead whale population of Davis Strait. But, as people stroll on the boardwalks, soaking in the ambiance of the place, looking at old Inuit houses, old foundations of whalers' houses and work stations, iron tools, pots and storage bins, the conversation is only partly about the demise of the whales themselves. Because of the path we have taken to get here, and the voices of northerners, on the ship and in communities along the way, there is an emerging understanding that northern peoples, be they First Nations or Inuit through the circumpolar world, cannot be separated from the land or the animals that make up this northern world. Someone asks: how it is that a bowhead whale skull could be at Kekerton Island, when every other piece of bone evidence of whaling has long since been removed or weathered away?  We learn that this bowhead skull is from a fairly recent rotating hunt that is part of modern-day life for the people of Nunavut. On this expedition, that piece of information makes perfect sense.

Posted by James Raffan on Sunday, August 12th, 2007

« Previous Day Next Day »
Click map to enlarge
Arctic 2007 Shipboard Log
Day 1What a diverse crowd!
Day 2Setting Sail!
Day 3Orcas!
Day 4‘Tooth-Walkers’, polar bears and thick-billed murrs
Day 5Building a Northern Conservation Strategy
Day 6Arctic games
Day 7A wet and wild ride
Day 8Feasting with the elders
Day 9Crossing the Arctic Circle on foot
Day 10Of whales and whaling
Day 11Students on Ice!
Day 12Students in icy water!
Day 13Making sense of it all
Day 14Goodbyes at Iqaluit


Photo Gallery

Arctic expedition photos


Video Gallery
Arctic expedition videos


Arctic 2006 expedition

In-depth: Travels with Louis

Feature: Policing the passage


Resources

Fisheries and Oceans Canada - Drift Bottle Project

Students on Ice

International Polar Year

Quark Expeditions

Arctic Climate Impact Statement

World Wildlife Fund

Inuit Circumpolar Council

Canadian Wildlife Service


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