Polar Bear, Churchill, Manitoba, Canada |
For many years I fantasized about seeing polar bears in their natural habitat. But our travels took us to other places – mostly warm – to do research on the various book projects I had been hired to write. Finally, in 2008, I decided to take the icy plunge and fly to the Arctic to see polar bears. I was working on a fiction book about a polar bear, so I thought it would be great to see them firsthand. After very little research, I realized that the most optimum place for viewing these elusive creatures was in Churchill, Manitoba, Canada. This tiny town bordering the Hudson Bay is inundated with polar bears from October and November. Polar bears wait there for the Hudson Bay to freeze so they can go out on the frozen ice to hunt seals.
Polar bears don’t eat much during the summer – just what they can scrounge up – so they are literally starving. This hungry state actually makes it very dangerous for the people who live in Churchill, including children. Polar bears don’t have a problem with eating humans. To them, food is food. Also, given that they are the largest bears in the world, at eight and a half feet long and more than two thousand pounds, these bears can cause some serious damage. I heard stories of polar bears breaking down front doors and rearranging the furniture--including knocking over a refrigerator!
My husband and I normally do not travel with groups. We are very independent travelers. But traveling to Churchill is completely different. You can’t rent a car and drive out to see the polar bears. You must travel with other people in tundra buggies, bus-like vehicles with wheels six feet tall.
Our package tour was five nights
long. The first and last nights were in
Winnipeg, but the middle three nights were in Churchill. When we arrived in Churchill in the early
morning, I was shocked at the size of the airport. It was only as big as a small house, but it
was literally stuffed with tourists, all searching for their tour company or
group. Once we found ours, we were
whisked away to the helicopter company and taken up to see polar bears from the
air. It was an amazing beginning. We saw a polar bear with an elk kill. We saw a moose slowly making its way through
the deep snow. We saw a mother and baby
polar bear. On Hudson Bay, icebergs
floated, looking like giant chunks of Styrofoam.
Later we visited the Eskimo museum where I got an invaluable contact for
my fiction book. Several weeks after the
trip, the owner answered many questions via email about the Inuit, which brought
an interesting twist to my story.
By the end of my trip, I had a firsthand knowledge of the
depth of cold in the Arctic. I had
firsthand knowledge of how to attach a carrybag to a helicopter to transport a
polar bear. I had firsthand knowledge of
how polar bears move and swim. All of
this was used in my book. Now my
book, a fiction story, The Hunted: Polar Prey has been
published through Speeding Star. It is
about a boy who has to save his mother.
She is floating on an iceberg and is being hunted by a polar bear. It’s a quick read and plot driven. If you’d like to check it out, you can get it
at http://www.speedingstar.com/books/The_Hunted/4261#.VG-Ybcm6j2s
With CarRental8 you can discover affordable car rentals from over 50000 locations worldwide.
ReplyDelete