Kangiqsujuaq

  Snowpark & Club

Kangiqsujuaq, Snowpark

Wakeham Bay proposes an amazing scenic area and a nice playground at the community's doorstep. (You could probably ski right down to the bay from any house in the community!)

Located at the 60th parallel some 450km north of Kuujjuaq, Kangiqsujuaq, the plateau starts to climb a few hundred feet above the ocean. The strongest winds come from the West and North.  

Mountains on each side of the bay create a wind tunnel, which increases wind power significantly, making it an ideal kite-skiing area.  Kangiqsujuaq is nestled at the bottom of a horseshoe-like bowl offering a very accessible, yet challenging downhill skiing area.

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Kangiqsujuaq About

Meaning: The large bay
Population: 591

Kangiqsujuaq bird-eye viewKangirsujuaq occupies an exceptional site, 10 km from the Hudson Strait, on the south-eastern shore of Wakeham Bay. The village is snuggled in the hollow of a splendid valley surrounded by majestic mountains, a landscape of unspeakable beauty. Of particular note is the method employed by local Inuit to harvest mussels in winter. As the tide ebbs in shallow areas, they pierce holes in the sea ice. With the water having receded, they drop themselves through these holes and are able to crawl under the ice to collect this succulent seafood delicacy.


In 1884, members of the Canadian Hudson's Bay Expedition, aboard the steamship Neptune, arrived in the area anxious to establish a commercial route to Europe through the Hudson Strait. An ice observation and meteorological station were built at Stupart Bay (known as Aniuvarjuaq by the Inuit). Inuit began to trade frequently with observers posted at the station: seal-skin mitts and boots for tobacco and gun powder.

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