Explore Canada’s Arctic. View the world’s most spectacular Aurora Borealis, take part in the Great Northern Arts Festival, retrace the route of the Klondike Gold Rush of 1898, relax at a remote lodge and enjoy the land of the midnight sun. Whatever your passion, you can find it in Canada’s North.

SHOW SPECIALS BELOW!
Spectacular Aurora Borealis - Yellowknife 
World Class Aurora Viewing in a serene traditional aboriginal setting. Offering comfortable aurora viewing in heated "Aurora Kotatsu" seats! Other activities: sliding (tubes provided), snowshoeing, dogsledding, snowmobiling, ice fishing, aerial wildlife viewing tours, aboriginal craft lessons and much more. Winter clothing rentals available. Tours are available in Japanese/English.
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Ice Road Truck - Yellowknife
Take a drive on the ice road - experience what the "Ice Road Truckers" drive on. A one day trip from Yellowknife to Dome Lake, the first truck stop on the Tibbitt Lake to Contwoyto ice road. Spend two nights in Yellowknife, the capital of the Northwest Territories. Enjoy a city tour and learn the history and culture of the people that make this area unlike any other.
Great Northern Experience - Yellowknife & Great Slave Lake
For a Great Northern Experience! We invite you to experience Yellowknife Great Slave Lake for fishing, bird watching, sightseeing, fish fry, Northern Gourmet shore lunches. Guided snowmobile day trips(4-6 hours) Great Slave lake and boreal forest trails, sightseeing, photography, wildlife viewing. Aurora viewing by snowmobile (4-6 hours), warm up in a cozy cabin on Great Slave Lake.
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Trophy Fishing at Trout Rock Lodge .JPG)
This pristine wilderness area is also home to Bald eagles, various waterfowl and many other types of wildlife. The chances are good you may spot a moose or a black bear (don't forget to bring your camera). With its ruggedly splendid landscape, the area looks today as it did a thousand years ago.
Read more about Trout Rock Lodge & Enodah
Midnight Sun Arts, Culture and Arctic Circle - Inuvik & Yellowknife
Since 1989, up to 80 visual artists and 40 performers from across the North gather each summer in Inuvik to celebrate the diversity that is Canada's North. They are Inuit, Inuvialuit, Gwich'in, Dene, Metis and many of Canada's additional First Nations, as well as non-Aboriginal artists and artisans; they come from as far away as Pangnirtung on Baffin Island, Gjoa Haven in the Arctic Archipelago, Fort Smith on the NWT/Alberta border, and from the Yukon Territory. They come to show their work, meet other artists, see different styles of work and learn new techniques.
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Check out our other Northern Tours!
Blachford Lake Lodge
Come experience the northern lights playing directly over the Lodge in awesome multicoloured displays. You'll have an exclusive, front row seat for nature's own light show after dark. Blachford Lake Lodge is set on a remote jewel of a lake, just 20 minutes by charter aircraft from Yellowknife, capital of Canada's Northwest Territories. In late summer, the Aurora can often fill the night sky, reflecting off the shimmering waters of Blachford Lake. On crisp winter nights, the Aurora, the moon and the stars light your way on snow covered paths.
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Bathurst Inlet Lodge
Come to a land beyond the reach of all roads, to a land that throbs with life during the brief northern summer. Man is dwarfed by this landscape. Huge diabase sills tower over the Inlet's dark waters; the deep gorges hold in their depths the mystery of prehistory, and the tundra stretches a thin green cape across the rocky skeleton of the land.
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Nahanni National Park
Nahanni National Park encompasses 300 square kilometres of the South Mountains in the south-western
corner of the Northwest Territories. The Nahanni River, named for the Naha, a tribe of fierce warriors who vanished from the valley, is a dangerous river notorious for other mysteries as well, like the story of the headless men found in Deadmen Valley.
The geological history of the area is unique. Much of the region was never touched by glaciers and so has evolved differently. The four canyons of the South Nahanni have cliff walls that rise as much as 1500 metres above the river. It was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979, the first natural region in the world to be so designated.
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Great River Journey
The Great River Journey is a unique world-class geotour. It combines the adventure of a wilderness river safari with a journey of personal discovery — there is no other product like it in North America. The Great River Journey begins in Whitehorse and unfolds over eight days and 600 kilometers (373 miles) of wilderness leading to Dawson City.
Read more about the Rivery Journey
Mackenzie River Delta 
Although the Mackenzie Delta begins officially just past the confluence of the Mackenzie River and the Arctic Red River, at Point Separation, it is not a static waterway. About 210 kilometres in length, with an average width of 62 kilometres in width and an area of 13,500 square kilometres, Canada's largest delta (the 12th largest in the world) continually changes shape within the boundaries of the Richardson Mountains to the west and the Caribou Hills to the east. Tours to Inuvik, Tuktoyaktuk and the Dempster Highway are available.
Read more about the Mackenzie River