This is an amazing piece! I am from Newfoundland and Labrador but have never been to the Torngat Mountains. I can't believe how incredible this is. WEll done!
I graduated from College with a diploma in information systems and lived in a city in NewBrunswick. I was brought up in the woods and on a river so I always needed my weekly fix of it so at the same time as my information system career I ran my own snow blowing company in winter and did some logging in the summer. It was all great but it never satisfied my sense of adventure but I continue to support my family. I am now semi retired, my kids are now adult and on their own so I have a sense of freedom that I don't want to waste. I was looking at the Yukon and found this. I think my next Journey just might be the Yukon or one of the Northern territories.
I came away from Hanover parish in the mountains of Jamaica thinking the same thing. It was the people that made it so special. Sights were amazing but the people where even better.
Thank you! So interesting, flat rocks used as cooking ware. Must be quite the task to find firewood for cooking. I don't see too many trees or driftwood out there. Would love to see culinary lessons from the natives.
We take land and make our homes But it still is nothing compared to nature ...One of the reasons we pack up and leave the cities on longweekends To remind us where we really should be
definitely gonna stop here and visit these people on my way out of this realm. heading north until I get to the center of the green and pink lights guiding us in and I don’t plan on returning 😊
Amazing film, thank you. Though I grew up in Western Labrador, I set my second novel in the Torngat Mountains. If anyone is interested in a northern adventure yarn that features Labrador history/facts as well, please check out Torngat by J. Richard Wright on Amazon.com and Amazon.ca. Happy reading...Richard
@@mooseknuckle8334 show her my channel with the northern lights and maybe she'll change her mind :) LoL life is too short and such an experience changes your perception of life
it's simple to understand how indigenous peoples survived polar bears in areas such as the Torngat. Humans operate as a collective, where polar bears operate in adult groups of only one. One on one a polar bear would easily ravage a human, but one polar bear verses a group of armed humans...there's no contest.
Great video. But it’s sad to see parks Canada not allowing drones in their parks to not “disturb wildlife” but here they are doing exactly that. Rules for thee but not for me.
Hi! Thank you for your message. Information about drone use at Parks Canada administered locations can be found here parks.canada.ca/voyage-travel/regles-rules/drones. This page includes information about permitted uses and related permitting. The risks and impacts of drone flight vary depending on time/season and location; therefore, each application is evaluated separately.
More movies like this please, please, please! Makes me proud to be Canadian.
people visit famous and most visited places.. Travellers visit places like this.. Beautiful..
This is an amazing piece! I am from Newfoundland and Labrador but have never been to the Torngat Mountains. I can't believe how incredible this is. WEll done!
Just OMG. Leaves you speechless. My dream trip.
Someone almost died there
I graduated from College with a diploma in information systems and lived in a city in NewBrunswick. I was brought up in the woods and on a river so I always needed my weekly fix of it so at the same time as my information system career I ran my own snow blowing company in winter and did some logging in the summer. It was all great but it never satisfied my sense of adventure but I continue to support my family. I am now semi retired, my kids are now adult and on their own so I have a sense of freedom that I don't want to waste. I was looking at the Yukon and found this. I think my next Journey just might be the Yukon or one of the Northern territories.
Thanks for sharing! You might find our recommended itinerary for Yukon helpful. Here's the URL www.pc.gc.ca/en/voyage-travel/region
Beautifully filmed with a powerful story about connection to the place! Two thumbs up Parks Canada!
That was incredible. Looked like some kind of heaven
WONDERFUL AMAZING PLACE!!! I hope to have THE chance to visit this precious valuable natural place
This place is my dream so next year i would like to visit there,beautiful people!
Did you visit?
omg! Loved this video so much! AMAZING!
Majestic. We were given Eden. I am grateful it is protected.
I came away from Hanover parish in the mountains of Jamaica thinking the same thing. It was the people that made it so special. Sights were amazing but the people where even better.
Wow! Makes me smile!
Thank you so much for your very interesting comments and beautiful filming of this Park... Thank you
Thank you! So interesting, flat rocks used as cooking ware. Must be quite the task to find firewood for cooking. I don't see too many trees or driftwood out there. Would love to see culinary lessons from the natives.
Gotta make it there someday
Simoly Amazing ~ thank you )
Incredible.
Parks canada is doing a really great job with these videos!
We take land and make our homes But it still is nothing compared to nature ...One of the reasons we pack up and leave the cities on longweekends To remind us where we really should be
Amazing we should come there soon.
So beautiful. I must go.
Ataahua (beautiful) love to go there one day
thanks for sharing
definitely gonna stop here and visit these people on my way out of this realm. heading north until I get to the center of the green and pink lights guiding us in and I don’t plan on returning 😊
so good !
Good luck ❤
Amazing film, thank you. Though I grew up in Western Labrador, I set my second novel in the Torngat Mountains. If anyone is interested in a northern adventure yarn that features Labrador history/facts as well, please check out Torngat by J. Richard Wright on Amazon.com and Amazon.ca. Happy reading...Richard
Trying to convince my wife to honey moon there...help me lol.
do you need a photographer for your honeymoon? LoL :)
@@carasavarelaxingvideos3367 Still trying to convince her to go lol.
@@mooseknuckle8334 show her my channel with the northern lights and maybe she'll change her mind :) LoL life is too short
and such an experience changes your perception of life
same...
@@carasavarelaxingvideos3367 nice please take me there
Great!
Thanks for watching!
No worries about the area being protected as it is EXTREMELY remote and inaccessible.
A typical one week trip will cost 6k plus.
Looks like a movie setting
hell0, almost there...
If you tried to imagine the prehistoric world after the ice age, when dinosaurs roamed the earth, this is probably what it looked and felt like.
Go through Cape Mugfords.
I want to get here
it's simple to understand how indigenous peoples survived polar bears in areas such as the Torngat. Humans operate as a collective, where polar bears operate in adult groups of only one. One on one a polar bear would easily ravage a human, but one polar bear verses a group of armed humans...there's no contest.
Mr. Ballen brought me here
Even though it was about one of your visitors getting mauled by a polar bear. Luckily he survived
I suspect many settlers lost their life to the bears.
Great video.
But it’s sad to see parks Canada not allowing drones in their parks to not “disturb wildlife” but here they are doing exactly that. Rules for thee but not for me.
Hi! Thank you for your message. Information about drone use at Parks Canada administered locations can be found here parks.canada.ca/voyage-travel/regles-rules/drones. This page includes information about permitted uses and related permitting. The risks and impacts of drone flight vary depending on time/season and location; therefore, each application is evaluated separately.
Sadly, only the rich can afford to visit.
Iceberg right ahead
I was born here too. So was my grandfather and so was his grandfather but I’m white so I can’t celebrate my heritage because then I would be racist.
Don't let anything stop you from celebrating your heritage. As this video says....We are all one.