BidZ.COM


 Features

 Front Page
 News Desk
 News Briefs
 News Summaries
 Columnists
 Sports
 Editorial
 Arctic arts
 Readers comment
 Find a job
 Tenders
 Classifieds
 Subscriptions
 Market reports
 Handy Links
 Best of Bush
 Visitors guides
 Obituaries
 Feature Issues
 Advertising
 Contacts
 Today's weather
 Leave a message


SSISearch NNSL
 www.SSIMIcro.com

NNSL Photo/Graphic


SSIMicro

NNSL Logo.

Home page text size buttonsbigger textsmall text Text size Email this articleE-mail this page

A light for the clueless

Andrew Rankin
Northern News Services
Published Thursday, June 4, 2009

INUVIK - One perplexed tourist walked into the Western Arctic Regional Visitors Centre last year and asked Naudia Lennie point blank whether the town's utilidor system was actually a subway system.

"This man inquired with a straight face. He wasn't joking," said the centre's manager. "Everybody wants to know what the utilidors are."

NNSL Photo/Graphic

Naudia Lennie, manager of the Western Arctic Regional Visitors Centre, shows off a small selection of what the tourist magnet has to offer. - Andrew Rankin/NNSL photo

She said there are many visitors who arrive stunned that the town isn't covered with ice, much less the fact that we get pretty darned hot summers here.

"Last year a couple of visitors asked whether it was a result of global warming," said Lennie.

But she doesn't mind. Lennie jumps at the opportunity to teach dumbfounded tourists all about her hometown and its surrounding communities.

In fairness, some, especially Europeans, arrive having done their homework.

The centre officially opened Monday for the summer season and Lennie has two guides to help her out.

"I really enjoy educating people," said Lennie, who is part Inuvialuit and part Gwich'in. "It's where I'm from. It's what I know. I'm proud of where I come from and I want to share that with people."

The centre is a dense but uncluttered site with a balance of text displays documenting the history of the region and Inuvialuit and Gwich'in traditional items.

Moccasins, mukluks and intricate beadwork displays decorate the centre, as well as a stuffed muskox and caribou.

This time around, the trio will be trying a few new tourist activities such as a Dempster Highway photo scavenger hunt, where visitors will take their cameras out on the highway, snapping shots of various landmarks.

They're also planning to establish a walking trail behind the centre.

Like last year, they're hoping to showcase some local soapstone carvers on site, which was a hit with tourists.