This trip is a birder’s paradise, where you’ll take advantage of the spring migration to add rare arctic birds to your “bird list”.
This 170 mile long canoe trip on the Clarke and Thelon Rivers lies inside the Thelon Wildlife Sanctuary and almost dead-centre in the Barren Lands (mainland tundra).
The Thelon is, without question, the most remote and the most pristine wilderness river of any considerable size left in North America. Our 120 mile (193km) long route is 80% river paddling.
The Elk River lies on the tundra in the south-central Barren Lands and is one of the most remote places left in the world.
Our 65 mile long canoe trip lies a short distance past the treeline (edge of the forest) in the Barren Lands, west of the Thelon River headwaters.
By Northwest Territories standards, the 300 km Upper Horton River journey is as remote a river trip as one is likely to find and enjoy in North America.
As you'll be paddling in the remote Arctic, chances at spotting large animals such as caribou, arctic wolves, grizzly bears and muskoxen are excellent.
From deep in the Mackenzie Mountains, you can fish along the shores of the Keele River for Bull-Trout and Arctic Grayling.
Breathtaking cliffs on both islands are built from rock as old as 2.7-billion years (the oldest in the world), making for some of the most epic campsites you’ll ever experience.
Our sea kayak expedition on the North Arm in a wilderness adventure on Great Slave Lake!
Reached by bush plane from Yellowknife, our trip on the Coppermine River involves 14 days of adventure - and provides a lifetime of stories.
The Boreal and Taiga forests that grace the shores of the Great Bear River offer spectacular views of the Mackenzie lowlands. The current on this river often reaches speeds of 10 to 12 km per hour with icy-cold, crystal clear water.
Breathtaking cliffs on both islands are built from rock as old as 2.7-billion years (the oldest in the world), making for some of the most epic campsites you’ll ever experience.