Above the 52nd parallel lies a land of taiga and tundra with a reputation as big as itself. This is Québec's Far North, taking in the territories of Baie-James and Nunavik, an Inuktitut word meaning "the land to live in."
This is the home of polar bears, seals, muskoxen and the largest caribou herd in the world. It is also the land of the Inuit, Cree and Naskapi, who have spent centuries learning how to adapt to a hostile environment. They invite you to share their rich cultural traditions and ancestral way of life, and marvel at the wonders of nature in this unique part of the world.
There are lots of ways to experience the Far North, depending on the season and your interests: trekking or rock-climbing in the Torngat Mountains, the highest range in eastern Canada; running down spectacular rivers in canoes or sea kayaks; coursing across frozen lakes behind a dogsled, cruising around Hudson or Ungava bay on a snowmobile, or perhaps soaring in a bush plane over the sparkling tapestry of lakes flashing in the northern sun, all the way up to the astonishing and mysterious Nouveau-Québec meteorite crater.