Photos from Tuktoyaktuk, Canada:
![[Linked Image]](http://ngaire.smugmug.com/Other/POSTING/i-HzkvBDg/0/L/IMG_4931-01S-L.jpg)
School bus was our mode of transportation in every landing.
![[Linked Image]](http://ngaire.smugmug.com/Other/POSTING/i-PjPgPTh/0/L/IMG_4936-01S-L.jpg)
A house made of driftwood and mud.
![[Linked Image]](http://ngaire.smugmug.com/Other/POSTING/i-MLpdX6B/0/L/IMG_4939-01S-L.jpg)
The ice house looks small from the outside, but it goes down 30 feet into the permafrost with many room inside for storage.
![[Linked Image]](http://ngaire.smugmug.com/Other/POSTING/i-XDDB5SS/0/L/IMG_4946-01S-L.jpg)
![[Linked Image]](http://ngaire.smugmug.com/Other/POSTING/i-vbDMS7q/0/L/IMG_4957-01S-L.jpg)
The rungs of the ladder were cold and slippery.
![[Linked Image]](http://ngaire.smugmug.com/Other/POSTING/i-TSkmNkx/0/L/IMG_4985-01S-L.jpg)
A dip in the cold water for Mau and Kat.
![[Linked Image]](http://ngaire.smugmug.com/Other/POSTING/i-fh2vxRX/0/L/IMG_5006-01S-L.jpg)
The mounds on the horizon are called Pingos. Pingos are mounds formed from ice trapped below the top soil
that pushes up the land. I am standing on one taking this photo.
There are more than 1,400 pingos in Tuktoyaktuk.
![[Linked Image]](http://ngaire.smugmug.com/Other/POSTING/i-wS2bJPL/0/L/IMG_5007-01S-L.jpg)
The DEW Line was a network of radar stations stretching from the Arctic region of Canada and the
Aleutian Islands of Alaska to Greenland, Iceland and the Faroe Islands of Northern Europe.