July 7, 2006
On the edge: a life-changing
experience
"I have never been
more shocked, inspired, altered or touched by anything"
JOHN
THOMPSON
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
For
one week in July, 16 lucky students from around Canada, the United States, China
and Saudi Arabia camped at the floe edge near Pond Inlet as part of the most
recent expedition by Students on Ice. (PHOTOS COURTESY OF STUDENTS ON ICE)
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Sixteen lucky students
from around Canada, the United States, China and Saudi Arabia traded their classrooms
for the floe edge past Pond Inlet last month, where they spent a week watching
beluga and narwhal dive through the sparkling blue waters, and the odd polar
bear saunter by in the distance.
The trip, organized by
Students on Ice, left its participants with a sense of awe and wonder - and
galvanized them to fight global warming, according to the online journal entries
of participants.
"This whole experience
has made me want to change the life I am living and be proud of our earth. I
have never been more shocked, inspired, altered or touched by anything else
I have ever experienced. I just can't believe I had the honour of seeing it,"
wrote Ophelia Snyder, 15, from New York City.
"This trip has proven
that climate change exists at a serious level and has inspired me to become
an environmental leader when I return home: an obligation I believe I have now
for the rest of my life," wrote Deeva Green, 17, from Toronto.
It's the seventh year Students
on Ice has taken teens to the Arctic and Antarctic, led by explorer Geoff Green.
Major backers of the program include the Canadian Museum of Nature and the Royal
Canadian Geographic Society.
The most recent trip began
with an extraordinary first day at the floe edge, on June 19, when as many as
100 belugas swam within sight.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Three
students peer over the edge of the ice near Pond Inlet, waiting for a marine
mammal to surface. During the most recent Students on Ice expedition last month,
students saw up to 100 belugas during their first day at the floe edge.
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"Beluga after beluga
kept coming, it was so beautiful. They swam so gracefully and even though you
could only see their creamy-white backs and the ends of their tails, it was
still so breathtaking. Some as far as 20 metres away, others only two metres,"
wrote Maggie Clark, 14, from Richmond Hill, Ontario.
To put things in perspective,
Dr. David Gray, who joined the expedition to share his knowledge from 37 years
of studying birds and mammals in the Arctic, had never seen a beluga until then.
What's more, Inuit guides
said spotting beluga in that area was almost unheard of.
As the belugas swam by,
the group listened to the whales' singing voices with a hydrophone dropped into
the water. "It just overloaded all the senses," Green said. "It
took us a while to recover."
Later that day, Gray gave
a lecture about seabirds of the Arctic, including the rare ivory gull, which
has suffered a severe population decline over the last decade. As if on cue,
as Gray spoke an Ivory gull circled the group - another first sighting for the
esteemed researcher.
"It's one of those
moments when you were speechless," Green said.
By the trip's end, the
group also saw polar bears, narwhal, curious seals, and thousands upon thousands
of seabirds at Cape Graham Moore, on the southeastern tip of Bylot Island.
"Visiting the bird
cliff during our expedition was like visiting a city of birds; the caves were
filled with their music and all that one can see on the cliffs and the surrounding
air were white kittiwakes that looked like flying snowflakes. Stunning, breathtaking,
and absolutely humbling," wrote Tereen Alireza, 16, from Jedda, Saudi Arabia.
Forget Microsoft PowerPoint
presentations in the classroom, Green said. "You just point."
The group also visited
Thule sod huts, where the skulls of bonehead whales jutted through the walls.
As a long-time leader of
expeditions to both polar regions, Green first dreamed up Students on Ice after
he noticed how jaded stockbrokers reacted to the environment with a newfound
sense of wonder of the natural world.
"Imagine if we could
eject that message to people in the beginning of their lives, and not the end,"
he said during an interview last Thursday.
Since then, Students on
Ice has led about 600 students, including about 50 Inuit, on their expeditions.
When Students on Ice first
began, climate change in the Arctic wasn't the hot issue it is today. But the
program's graduates have become prominent voices in the discussion on global
warming.
When the United Nations
held its climate change conference in Montreal last November, three of the five
youth who appeared as a special committee were Students on Ice alumni.
"They think they can
save the world, and I think they're right," Green said.
A film based on the recent
floe edge expedition will be produced by the Inuit Broadcasting System, to be
broadcast on APTN. As well, podcasts created by students will produced by the
National Film Board and Science North in Sudbury.
Two Students on Ice expeditions
are planned next summer, during International Polar Year. Students from Nunavut
are encouraged to apply. For more information, visit www.studentsonice.com.
While Students on Ice alumni
are galvanized to fight climate change, Green said it's disappointing that the
country's political leaders, including Nunavut's premier, send mixed messages
about the warming Arctic.
"The Harper government
is going in the absolute opposite direction, and it was particularly shocking
to see that Premier Okalik jumped onto Harper's anti-Kyoto bandwagon recently.
Of all the leaders in this country, Premier Okalik should be the one that is
most concerned and proactive about climate change."
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