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Northern lights, dogsledding and other reasons to visit Iqaluit in the winter

Inukpak offers secret spots with sweeping city views, including a cemetery with a photogenic arch made from bowhead whale bones
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Inukpak Outffiting鈥檚 Martine Dupont stands on a hill by Iqaluit鈥檚 mysterious bell. Photo Jennifer Bain

Electric green Northern Lights are dancing through the black sky above a snow-dusted hill where a large steel bell on a twisted pole has been drilled into the rock.

Nobody knows for sure who put the mysterious red bell here or why, but is happy to share one of the urban myths floating around the capital of .

Our loved ones are up in the sky and when you ring the bell, they come down, in the form of dazzling lights, to say hello. There鈥檚 another legend, this one Inuit, which says the magical and fleeting lights represent spirits playing with a walrus head.

I know something of the science behind the aurora borealis, but let鈥檚 just say it always feels like a miracle to spot the lights in Canadian skies. Especially tonight when the aurora forecast was calling for just a 10 per cent chance of success.

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Jovan Simic leads dog-powered adventures with Kool Runnings. Photo Jennifer Bain

Dupont continues our aurora hunt by quickly zipping over to a boat launch that has an unobstructed view of downtown. The light show continues. Today it鈥檚 green. Other days it mutates to shades of yellow, violet, pink and even orange.

It鈥檚 the start of winter on Baffin Island. The sea ice is starting to freeze. The number of daylight hours has dwindled to five. The sun, even when it comes out, hangs low in the sky. The 8,000-odd people who call Iqaluit home are ready to have fun. So are the dogs.

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Preparing the dogs for a dogsledding adventure with Kool Runnings. Photo Jennifer Bain

Jovan Simic gets his sled dogs ready, putting on their harnesses and figuring out the current state of their hierarchy. His young company offers dog-powered adventures. It鈥檚 too early to safely travel on the sea ice, so we will brave the rocky tundra.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a short loop we can do 鈥 it won鈥檛 take much more than an hour,鈥 Simic promises. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to be pretty alone out there running through different valleys. I鈥檒l try not to flip you although I flipped Jagmeet Singh last week.鈥

It鈥檚 true 鈥 the New Democrat Party leader just visited Canada鈥檚 youngest territory with newly elected Nunavut MP Mumilaaq Qaqqaq. Singh, his party鈥檚 critic for Indigenous affairs, was thrown from the sled, but was a good sport and jogged through the snow to catch up.

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When the sea ice isn鈥檛 frozen, Kool Runnings heads out on the tundra. Photo Jennifer Bain

Dogsledding here is different than in southern Canada, where you鈥檙e likely to stand on your own small sled as pairs of dogs run in a straight line. Here, Simic鈥檚 12 Canadian Inuit dogs are each attached to a long, wooden sled by their own towlines and fan out to run. The musher (Simic) and the passenger (me) follow behind, seated on a qamutiq (traditional Inuit sled).

鈥淭here鈥檚 always a chance of ptarmigan and rabbits,鈥 offers Simic. 鈥淭here was a polar bear not far from here last week. I鈥檝e seen wolves four or five times in the last four years.鈥 None of those creatures come out today 鈥 just lots of ravens, a low-hanging sun and endless tundra once we pass through and cross a narrow river.

We dodge most of the exposed rocks, but it鈥檚 Simic who goes flying this time when the sled hits a large rock and comes to a dead stop.

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Khaldoun El-Shamaa owns Yummy Shawarma, Iqaluit鈥檚 first Lebanese eatery. Photo Jennifer Bain

We laugh about the ejection over lunch at Yummy Shawarma, Iqaluit鈥檚 first Lebanese restaurant. Owner Khaldoun El-Shamaa happily dishes out extra garlic sauce to go with my chicken shawarma. Later I pop into the popular Black Heart Caf茅 for a caffeine fix and food made from scratch

I鈥檝e been to Iqaluit four times 鈥 twice on the way to other Nunavut communities and twice as the main event. It鈥檚 a ridiculously expensive flight, so a journey that too few Canadians make. Here鈥檚 a secret 鈥 . It鈥檚 just 25,000 points for long-haul flights within Canada, but you have to call the Aeroplan Contact Centre to book so it鈥檚 still a largely unknown option.

Once you鈥檙e in Iqaluit, hail one of the flat-rate taxis for $8, but don鈥檛 be surprised when the driver stops to fill the empty seats. You can explore downtown by yourself on foot, but to cover more ground take the historical and cultural tours that Inukpak Outfitting offers when it鈥檚 not leading outdoor adventures.

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Iqaluit鈥檚 famous, and photogenic, 鈥渋gloo church.鈥 Photo Jennifer Bain

There鈥檚 the famous igloo-shaped church (St. Jude鈥檚 Cathedral), with its gift shop full of Inuit art, and Unikkaarvik Visitor Centre with its cultural exhibits and wildlife displays. There鈥檚 the Legion for wing night, and the beer and wine store, a pilot project that tracks and limits sales by making customers show ID.

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Apex is home to a pretty seaside cemetery with a bowhead whale bone arch. Photo Jennifer Bain

There are secret spots with sweeping city views, a cemetery with a photogenic arch made from bowhead whale bones, and impressive murals on the wall outside the hospital.

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Some of the murals that you鈥檒l see outside the Qikiqtani General Hospital. Photo Jennifer Bain

The old jail, Makigiarvik Correctional Centre, quietly sells carvings made by inmates every Friday.

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Outside an Iqaluit home, a polar bear and seal skin are seen drying. Photo Jennifer Bain

Keep an eye out for homes where Inuit hunters are stretching and drying polar bear or seal hides in the yard. Don鈥檛 miss the Inuit doll collection at the , which offers free tours.

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Part of the Inuit doll collection of the Nunavut Legislative Assembly. Photo Jennifer Bain

Cindy Rennie shows me the building鈥檚 dolls, art collection, coat of arms and impressive mace and explains how consensus-style government works.

Iqaluit has most things a remote city could need. 鈥淗opefully one day we鈥檙e going to have a local performing arts centre,鈥 says Inhabit Media鈥檚 Jesse Unaapik Mike, who recommends visiting during April鈥檚 .

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Caroline Ipeelie-Qiatsuk shows off Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park. Photo Jennifer Bain

Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park鈥檚 Caroline Ipeelie-Qiatsuk, meanwhile, favours June to August when the park promotes Inuit culture with free 鈥渓earn to鈥 sessions every Tuesday.

Whatever you do, don鈥檛 miss the satellite community of Apex. The Grizzlies, based on the true story of how lacrosse transformed an Inuit community, was partially filmed here and the beach is home to several historic and very photogenic Hudson鈥檚 Bay Company buildings.

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The red boat of Apex beach was immortalized in a White Stripes music video. Photo Jennifer Bain

And the abandoned red lifeboat on that same Apex beach? The White Stripes made it downright famous by putting it in their 2007 music video for 鈥淵ou Don鈥檛 Know What Love Is (You Just Do As You鈥檙e Told)鈥 when they visited Iqaluit during a cross-Canada tour.

I love that song. After admiring the red boat, I climb the hill between Apex and downtown Iqaluit one last time to admire the mysterious red bell, this time in daylight.

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