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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 5
Day 5 — Building a northern conservation strategy
Location: Eric Cove  

 
At Cape Wolstenholme
Sun
Shadow
Busy wings highlighted
in shadow
beyond bus stops.
Light 
dark
together in blue water sky 
and black rock singing
while new life grips and teeters.
Are you my mother?
Answers
questions
like feathers and wind.
Without one and the other
and the truths that make them soar
will we ever stop long enough
to experience the place
where lives the wisdom of birds
on this sovereign morning
in the middle of somewhere?
We start the day under the overarching cliffs at Cape Wolstenholme, the northernmost tip of Quebec. I've never seen as many birds, anywhere, in my life. Such a profusion of life aswirl in the northern air sums to impressions that words can probably never touch. By the look of the people watching Linda Mackey, resident ship's artist, as she paint the scenes, it's apparent her artwork mirrors what some people are feeling about being here.  

As part of the ongoing lecture/discussion series aboard ship, we hold a session on building a conservation strategy for the Arctic, led by Stephen Price, a senior conservation policy specialist with the World Wildlife Fund, under the open sky at Eric Cove in what has to be the most alluring outdoor classroom one can imagine.

Price outlines the task, which is to identify elements to include in a northern conservation strategy, first talking about values and moving on to the challenge of identifying three elements in the northern ecosystem that deserve recognition in the building of a conservation plan: species, process and habitats.


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We break into three subgroups: international students; northern Canadians; and southern Canadians. Each group is assigned a facilitator who reiterates the task: identify species, habitats and processes worthy of protection in a northern conservation strategy. To my surprise and delight, after the facilitator with the northern Canadians opens the "tundra" for suggestions, the first thing mentioned is "language." What follows, when groups report back to the whole, is that the northern Canadians have a very different view about people and nature.

One view allows easy separation of matters cultural and matters natural. From another perspective, the northern or "traditional" view, culture and nature are totally connected. We had talked on the ship about conventional scientific knowledge and so-called "traditional ecological knowledge." Here, we're living that difference and learning how to blend the two perspectives.

Posted by James Raffan on Tuesday, August 7th, 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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