32 degrees , May 30....

So you want to go some place you have never been. You figure , well I'll buy a couple of maps and off I go. Wrong!
As you can see on the above photo we have Topographic maps that I have made copies of and taped together...I also have marine charts and low level aeronautical charts. So what happens next is I will collate the info from the charts onto the topo maps and then as we get local information I'll add that to my new office wall art and by the time we leave we should have a pretty comprehensive chart of the area.
Nautical for the sea , topo for where we can land and hike if we have walk out , and air charts for wind and glaciers. Local knowledge cause there is nothing like it to keep you in the know than true on the spot knowledge.

This is roughly the route we intend to take to our cross point to Devon Island. As you may be able to tell a fair bit is in the Sirmilik National Park . If you go on line you can check out the park..truly one of Natures' masterpieces. www.parcscanada.gc.ca/parks/nunavut/sirmilik/ Lots of glaciers and 70 species of birds that come here every year to nest and lay eggs. Well known for climbing , whale watching , and hiking this area has had humans for about 4000 years and is one of the places kayaking started and was a true way of life.
As I read (the Park System graciuosly sent one via e-mail) Pre-trip planning information guide 2008 there were a few things that kept coming back to me from other things I have read about the Arctic...and also came back to me from my own experience in subarctic Labrador as well as the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.and I quote," For thousands of years the ancestors of Inuit traveled this place.They knew their survival depended on their obedience to the dictates of the land and its weather.If the wind blew and the temperature plummeted , they stopped and found shelter , and continued when the land became kinder again.Inuit travelers to this day let the weather , the seasons and the rythms of the land set their travel schedules."
So shall we.
Russell.




















