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Explore: Manitoba, Canada

It may not be easy to reach the north of Manitoba, Canada, but Rupert Parker discovers wildlife well worth the effort

April 20, 2018 10:51
3 Bears.jpg
3 min read

Our first stop in Manitoba is polar bear jail. Arriving at Churchill airport, I’m told to head to the polar bear facility — effectively the jail for bears who’ve been caught in town.

And this morning they’re going to release a mother and her cub. We’re kept at a distance, but near enough to see that the animals are sedated, looking like lifeless glove puppets, ready to be transported 50 miles by helicopter and then released. The cub is put inside the chopper while its mother is suspended in a net beneath. It’s not exactly first-class travel but it might teach her to stay away.

It’s not that easy for people to get to Churchill for now either. At the moment, the only option is a direct flight from Winnipeg, since the railway line has been out of action after flooding damaged the track last May. During the winter, temperatures get to -40C and the sea freezes over.

The town itself began as a fur trading outpost on the shores of Hudson Bay, and subsequently became a busy port in the early 20th century, exporting grain from the prairies. During the cold war in the 1950s, it housed a huge military base where soldiers were trained to survive Arctic conditions. Now the troops are gone, the port is closed and a deserted rocket launch pad is the only eerie reminder.