Discover the most magical spots to pitch your tent or park your rig on your next Quttinirpaaq National Park adventure.
Near the North Pole, this polar desert is as off-grid as it gets: uninhabited and mostly unexplored.
With annual visitor numbers hovering in the double digits, this remote northern park is truly the back of beyond. You’re much more likely to encounter Peary caribou, muskoxen, and Arctic hares than you are a fellow human. Quttinirpaaq is empty and elemental—in a good way. There are no marked trails or designated campsites here, just vast tracts of tundra, mountains, and the odd pre-Inuit archaeological site. Most visitors establish a base camp at Tanquary Fiord or Hazen Lake, and either embark on multi-day treks between the two or a looped route around the Ad Astra and Viking ice caps.
The best time for ski touring is April and early May. Parks Canada staff, however, aren’t present until later in the year, so you’ll need to be self-sufficient during this time. For hiking, late May through mid-August is best, when there’s 24-hour sunlight and surprisingly mild weather around Lake Hazen, a thermal oasis with its own microclimate.