13
MAKING PROGRESS BY DAVE SHIVELY // PHOTOS BY ROBERT ZALESKI

Making Progress

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Canoe & Kayak Managing Editor Dave Shively and Staff Photographer Robert Zaleski's photo essay flipbook feature from their story in the May 2012 "North Issue" on exploring the lonesome rivers of Nunavut.

Citation preview

Page 1: Making Progress

making progressb y d av e s h i v e ly / / p h o t o s b y r o b e rt z a l e s k i

Page 2: Making Progress

a lone cairn marks apex beach near the weathered ruins of the Hudson’s Bay Company’s original South Baffin Island headquarters.

Page 3: Making Progress

No roads lead to iqaluIt. the broad spat of plane-landing tundra has kept this “New york city of the North” the gateway for any air travel deeper into Nunavut—a vast uninhabited territory almost three times the size of texas.

Page 4: Making Progress

Yes, just like New York City, only with 7,000 people and polar bear-shaped license plates.

Page 5: Making Progress

the community cemetery’s whitewashed wooden crosses reinforce every Wild West parallel.

m a k i n g p r o g r e s s

Page 6: Making Progress

every board and nail, every vegetable and piece of fruit, must be shipped from the south—every kilowatt of energy generated from a massive store of diesel fuel that arrives on a barge before freeze-up and must last through the winter.

Page 7: Making Progress

Climate change is magnified. We get one reply: “It IS WHat IS.”

Page 8: Making Progress

We pack for the bush flight to the pristine Soper River, rolling 16-foot inflatable canoes into tight bundles and loading food five days’ food into bear-proof barrels.

Page 9: Making Progress

The days blur in Two-hour incremenTs of waking, waiTing and waTching for a weaTher window ThaT never opens.

Page 10: Making Progress

louis’ dashboard hula daNcer doubles over as we bounce and scrape through the road’s puddles of unknown depth. air-travel be damned, we rally as far we can up the sporadically maintained road north out of town along the Sylvia Grinnell River.

Iqaluit

Page 11: Making Progress

louis-philip, the “inukpak” (big giant), and i gear up head-to-toe. Louis is wearing shorts, with some neoprene underneath and SIze 14 CHaCoS. He bends to fill his water bottle directly from the river. I follow suit. Nowhere to go but out, to the arctic waters of the labrador sea

Page 12: Making Progress

We unload and start the hike out, the beach quickly covered in the risen tide.

Page 13: Making Progress

the human-shaped stone inukshuks are the emblematic guides, signaling that you are not alone out on the land.