Have hotdogs, need outhouses: Nunavut park overrun by eager Iqaluit campers - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 12:55 PM | Calgary | -8.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Have hotdogs, need outhouses: Nunavut park overrun by eager Iqaluit campers

There are always tents set up along the river at Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park in the summer but this year, there are a lot more tents than usual.

Staycationers fill up Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park with 80 tents and counting

Nunavut Parks staff member Caroline Ipeelie-Qiatsuk says no tent will be turned away by the park, but high traffic this summer means park amenities need more maintenance. (David Gunn/CBC)

There are always tents set up along the river at Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park in the summer but this year, there are a lot more tents than usual.

The park outside of Iqaluit has 30 permanent campsites where people can register to leave their tents up throughout the season from June to September.

Nunavut Parks staff member Caroline Ipeelie-Qiatsuk says there are 80 tents right now, and that number is still climbing. Visitors are asked to register their tents.

There's no limit to the number of tents that can be set up or the number of people that can visit the park. Ipeelie-Qiatsuk estimates that about 400 people visited the park last summer. Staff are putting that number at more than 1,000 now.

"Just in two weeks you can see the major jump in traffic," Ipeelie-Qiatsuk said, since the weather has warmed up.

There are 80 tents registered at Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park this season. The park has 30 permanent campsites. (David Gunn/CBC)

Park use increases amidpandemic

Non-essential travel is still discouraged by Nunavut's Health Department because of COVID-19, and a public health order requires any residents returning to the territory to isolate in hotels for two weeks first.

Indoor gatherings are capped at 10 guests, while 50 people are allowed to gather outdoors if physical distancing is acknowledged.

This means there are a lot more people staying in Iqaluit for the whole summer, and based on the numbers at the territorial park, residents arespending more time outside.

Nunavut's Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Michael Patterson has said that spending time on the land with people in your household is a way to safely physically distance.

"Dr. Patterson has encouraged us to do this to come out and camp but also keeping in mind distancing and limiting numbers of people in a tent," Ipeelie-Qiatsuk said.

For large tents, like the white canvas kind often seen at the park, staff are recommending that there be no more than six people inside.

Park maintenance, patrols increase

Because of the increase in visitors, Ipeelie-Qiatsuk says park staff are extremely busy and the park's amenities, like picnic tables, garbage bins, outhouses and fire pits, are seeing a lot more use.

"We're taking out garbage and sewage twice a day whereas it would be three times a week in previous years," she said.

"It's not just park staff that are doing our due diligence, it's also campers that are pitching in and helping out so thank you for that."

Nunavut Parks is asking campers to limit the number of people inside a tent, like this one photographed, to six people. (David Gunn/CBC)

Staff patrols have also increased on evenings and weekends to monitor the high traffic.

"We're still encouraging people to come out and camp," she said. "We're not going to turn people down, but our park staff have been monitoring, and making sure people are complying with the regulations."

Earlier in July, a polar bear was reported to have been seen at the park, but wildlife officers say no bear was found. Staff are reminding residents then that "the Arctic is bear country" and bears could be encountered at any time.

An annual summer learning series, the 'Learn To...' program, is still happening this year. While the park pavilion is closed, there are workshops at the park on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Some activities include learning to make bannock, identify plants or drum dance.