Arctic outfitter draws ire for trash left at floe edge - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 27, 2024, 11:49 AM | Calgary | -11.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Arctic outfitter draws ire for trash left at floe edge

Luxury outfitter Arctic Kingdom is drawing ire in Nunavut after hunters posted photos online of trash left behind on the floe edge near Pond Inlet, where the company was setting up a luxury wildlife viewing camp.
Hunters from Pond Inlet recently posted photos on social media of an abandoned Arctic Kingdom camp on the floe edge. The company says the photos were taken while its staff were in the process of relocating the camp. (Twitter)

Some Inuit in Nunavut are not happy withoutfitterArctic Kingdom after hunters near Pond Inlet posted photos online of trash left behind on the floe edge.

The debris, includingplywood, propane tanks and bags of garbage, made up the outfitter'sbase camp for a luxury narwhal watching expedition.

Propane tanks at an abandoned Arctic Kingdom camp on the floe edge near Pond Inlet. (Twitter)

The company says in a statement on its Facebook page that the sea ice began breaking up while its staff was setting up for its Narwhal and Polar Bear Safari tour near Pond Inlet on June 20.The company said crews shuttled back and forth from a new camp at a safer location to rescue as much equipment as possible.

"The photos recently distributed over social media were taken in the process of us relocating our camp," the statement says."Over the next week we were able to retrieve more equipment, supplies and materials. We provided extra compensation to the hunters who helped us salvage our supplies and equipment and also gifted them with the remaining plywood and a few other materials."

Plywood and other building materials at an abandoned Arctic Kingdom camp on the floe edge near Pond Inlet. (Twitter)
"We actually still have some of our staff working with our guides," owner Graham Dickson told the CBC."They're still out there even now to make sure if there's anything that's still there that they can reach, but I think that we were successful bringing back the vast majority."

Igloolik resident Guillaume Saladin says this isn't thefirst time the company has left trash behind.

"My friend ...asked me to go help him get all the garbage that stayed where people camped. So I just went there removing, Idon't know what, like 15 garbage bags. Very stinky stuff."