Nunavik teens on 90-km trek across frozen tundra - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 07:07 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Nunavik teens on 90-km trek across frozen tundra

Thirty-four teenagers from four Inuit villages in Nunavik trained for months to take on the challenge of cross-country skiing from one community to another.

'Dream coming true,' says 1 teen skier inspired by 4 Quebecers' 2014 trek from Mont-Tremblant to Kuujjuaq

Jaanimmarik High School students Joshua Nathan Willie Kettler, 15, and Karina Gordon-Dorais, 14, practise their 'Young Karibus' move while packing for an overnight camping trip last March. (Catou MacKinnon/CBC)

Thirty-fourteenagers from four villages in Quebec's Inuit territory of Nunavikset out on cross-country skis late last weekacross the frozen tundra, pullingtheir gear behind them in sleds plastic versions of the traditionalkomatik.

One group, made up of high school students fromTasiujaqandKuujjuarapik,left Thursday. A second group, students fromKuujjuaqandKangirsuk, left a day later because of bad weather.

They planto meet Monday inAupaluk, a village that lies betweenKangirsukandTasiujaq.

Inspired by Karibu expedition

The Inuit teenscallthemselves the YoungKaribus.

The organizer of the expedition, French teacherValrie Raymond, said students were inspired after witnessingfourQuebecers complete a 2,000-kilometre trek from Mont-Tremblant to Kuujjuaq two years ago.

That expedition called Karibu recreated for the first time a 1980 trip from the south to Fort Chimo, since renamed Kuujjuaq.

"I really wanted to be a part of this, it looked like a great experience," said KarinaGordon-Dorais, a 14-year-old from Kuujjuaqwho said she's looking forward to meeting teenagers from other villages.

"I've always wanted to go on an expedition, so this is like something of my dream coming true."

Gordon-Dorais and her fellow Young Karibusspent months training, in the dark after school, for the longest cross-country ski trip of their lives, over challenging terrain.

New to skis

On a recent Saturday morning in March,a halfdozen of the studentsmet inthe main hall of Kuujjuaq'sJaanimmarikHigh School to pack their gear, getting ready to head out for a one-night practice camping trip.

Joshua Nathan Willie Kettler told CBC he signed up after friends took part in the first such trip last year.

At the time, he'd only ever been on cross-country skis once.

"I kind of fell a few times," said15-year-old Kettler, adding that he'd improved since but was still expecting a tough haul.

"It's probably going to behard and cold, and we'll miss the internet there," Willie Kettler said. "But it's going to be fun."

One of the organizers of the Young Karibus expedition, Valrie Raymond, is a French teacher at Jaanimmarik High School in Kuujjuaq. (Catou MacKinnon/CBC)

No looking back

Raymond said for this second expedition, a 90-kilometre trek over four days,five times more students signed up than last year.

"It's a big challenge," saidRaymond. There is noprotectionfrom the wind because of the lack of trees and hilly terrain.

"Last year, the first day was by far the hardest day," She said. "You're not too far from the village, and they can just look back ... and go home."

She saidshe sat the students down and encouraged them to take the trip one day at a timeeven half a day at a time.

'This is school, too'

"My goal is to show them education and school under a new lens," said Raymond. "I keep telling them, this is school too."

The teenagers have to learn how to interact with each otherin less than ideal situations.

"We're tired, frustrated, it's not easy to be polite with each other," she said.

Raymond saidthe trip helps teach perseverance.

She recalledone student last year who developed blisters on the first day, yet she made it through the whole trip.

When the student was having trouble with mathematics, Raymondsuggested thinking about it as a blister:something she could suffer and work through.

Two groups of students who call themselves the 'Young Karibus' are to converge in Aupalik on Monday, April 18, following a 90-kilometre trek. (Nunavik Tourism Association)