Discover the most magical spots to pitch your tent or park your rig on your next Sirmilik National Park adventure.
Explore a pristine, ice-sheathed wilderness where few others have been.
The clue is in the name: Sirmilik (meaning “place of glaciers'' in Inuktitut) is—you guessed it—chock-full of glaciers. Up at the northern tip of Nunavut’s Baffin Island on the Borden Peninsula, it’s one of the most accessible national parks in the Canadian Arctic, believe it or not. Even so, it attracts just a few hundred hardy visitors each year, perhaps due to its status as a backcountry park with no serviced campgrounds. Even the most intrepid travelers who visit usually enlist the services of Inuit guides. Outfitters set up safe camps and itineraries that might include skiing across glaciers; sea kayaking in Lancaster Sound (Tallurutiup Imanga) or Oliver Sound; visiting the migratory bird sanctuary on Bylot Island; or floe-edge wildlife expeditions during which—with any luck—you’ll see narwhals, beluga whales, and walruses.
Between late March and May, the park is open for snowmobiling, dog-sledding, and ski touring. Things shut down as the sea ice breaks up in summer (typically June and July) before reopening for August and September. Just as in Auyuittuq National Park, this natural region is a no-go from October to early March due to extremely cold winters and near-permanent darkness.