© Dennis Minty
Photo Story
By Adventure Canada
Each Adventure Canada expedition holds its own unique highlights. Find out more about the top ten experiences on this trip of a lifetime. Welcoming Inuit culture, rich archaeological sites, jaw-dropping scenery, and aurora borealis viewing opportunities leave us lost for words in this beautiful region.
© Bodleian Library
Article
By Aaron Spitzer
When you travel through Frobisher Bay, imagine how it must have appeared to the crewmen of Martin Frobisher, the first Englishmen to come this way—as a place of magic, treasure, and high adventure, yet also one of cultural mistrust and conflict. Learn more about this compelling history.
© Jessie Brinkman Evans / Karen Longwell
Article
By Amy van den Berg
Adventure Canada and The Walrus magazine share similar values—education, connection, and fact-based storytelling. Read this special Q&A between two members of the fellowship program created by the valuable partnership between Adventure Canada and The Walrus.
© Dennis Minty
Photo Story | Northwest Passage
By Adventure Canada
Each Adventure Canada expedition holds its own unique highlights. Find out more about the top nine experiences on this trip of a lifetime. Poignant historical sites, spectacular Arctic scenery, beautiful Inuit communities, and incredible ice leave us in awe on Into the Northwest Passage.
© Dennis Minty
Photo Story | Northwest Passage
By Adventure Canada
Each Adventure Canada expedition holds its own unique highlights. Find out more about the top nine experiences on this trip of a lifetime. Welcoming Inuit communities, far northerly vistas, fascinating Arctic history, and aurora borealis viewing opportunities amaze us on Out of the Northwest Passage.
© Dennis Minty
Article | Newfoundland and Labrador
By Dennis Minty
L’Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland is the only authenticated Norse settlement in North America, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Learn more about this fascinating history—from Leif Eriksson and the Icelandic Viking sagas to archaeologist Anne Stine who discovered the site.
© Danny Catt
Expedition Journal
Jul. 18–Jul. 30, 2017
By Aaron Spitzer
And then—what’s the most-anticipated announcement on any Arctic trip? Polar bear. You might wait days or even weeks to hear it. So it almost felt too soon when those words crackled over the loudspeaker. “Bear ahead, port side, eleven o’clock.”