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sparkyhodgo t1_iuzti16 wrote

Anytime someone tells me they were in “northern” Canada, I know they were in “northern” south Canada. They have no idea how far north northern Canada actually is.

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WorldlinessInner5413 t1_iuzw4nt wrote

As someone who spends a lot of time north of 60…can confirm. Friends will see me on the Snapchat map when I’m hiking in Baffin Island or up in pond inlet/inuvik and be like “the fuq?”

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colej1390 t1_iv13zkh wrote

Whatcha doin up there?

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WorldlinessInner5413 t1_iv483ib wrote

Long range hiking and mountain climbing. Ice climbing. Cold weather survival and remote back country first aid etc.

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EmergencyTaco t1_ivdwi6v wrote

That's sick dude, genuinely. You extreme mfs impress the hell out of me

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WorldlinessInner5413 t1_ive0c9s wrote

Thanks much!

What the key is- reverse engineering your goals.

Like if you wanna do something someone else has done before. Don’t get freaked about how hard it is to do, backtrack and learn from the ground up how they did it and train your mind and body accordingly. Taking courses from experts, learning and learning and learning all while remaining humble.

If someone’s done it. You can do it too.

It’s all about priorities and making sure you treat your time as the number one. Pursue everything you want until it gets to a point where the time you’re dedicating isn’t worth the happiness the end result will give you.

Don’t be comfortable. Always be safe. Never stop believing and always start, trusting yourself.

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bolonomadic t1_iv18mbh wrote

Ha ha, yes I get quite annoyed when people say they’re from Northern Ontario when really it’s the west part of Ontario that they are talking about. It’s north of Toronto technically, but it’s really not the north part of Ontario.

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jonny24eh t1_iv1tgsy wrote

Speaking in context of where most people are, rather than where most land is, seems more useful in most cases.

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R_V_Z t1_iv2773e wrote

That area, western Ontario, central Manitoba, and northern Saskatchewan, looks like it would be a massive pain in the ass to navigate around in today, let alone hundreds of years ago.

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uncannyinferno t1_iuzvfbm wrote

Even Canadians do go to northern Canada if they know what's good for them

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ColinTheMonster t1_iv0oges wrote

Ya right. Fucking $2000 flight tickets to get up there. I'd go if I didn't have to sell my leg to do it.

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CryoGuardian t1_iv1r2kj wrote

I see lots of Campers and RVs driving up to Alaska on the highway. idk why someone would fly up to Alaska without their own camping gear other than business or military.

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ColinTheMonster t1_iv2ew6g wrote

Campers and RVs are an awesome way to explore the north, but they're expensive.

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CryoGuardian t1_iv2jsmy wrote

Campers are cheaper here I guess, RV is pricey for sure But I'm on one of the last towns before the Alaska border, you can rent a camper for 100 or 135 a night for a huge 5th wheel, cheaper than some of the hotels around. I can provide much more info if your interested. Exploring the north & river caves is a large part of my towns tourism scene.

Plenty of low income young people come through from the states, I see them buying camping supplies at walmart all the time in the summer. People party in the woods with their campers bonfire ect. then rent them out for travelers.

*Edit: 100 CAD which is like 75 US

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visualgeomatics OP t1_iuzslel wrote

Source: Copernicus Elevation Data, Sentinel-2 satellite imagery

Tools: Blender, QGIS, Global Mapper, Photoshop

Description: I combined sentinel-2 imagery with surface model data to cast light on it and create a pretty image that looks 3d. Check out other examples on my instagram

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brent_superfan t1_iv0qe7d wrote

This view, to me, makes it bloody obvious the arctic shipping channel. Now that the planet has been so totally messed up, the Arctic Ocean will not have nearly as much ice. That reduction of ice will make shipping via the Arctic, rather than through Panama, feasible. It saves 4 days and $200k of fuel, plus boats can be filled 25% more, for this route has a greater water depth.

Seeing this makes me a little sad.

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phreeeman t1_iv1n1m7 wrote

Awesome. Love these things. Especially with the PNW and Northern Rockies thrown in.

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xeen313 t1_iv1qhb4 wrote

These are so cool. Thanks for making them OP!

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fabienv t1_iv1whfc wrote

This is a fantastic rendering! Can I buy a large print of it? wow....

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LostInRVA t1_iv0yaib wrote

This is more so a shaded map of the United States and Canada

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jonny24eh t1_iv1ts40 wrote

Most countries aren't rectangles, you're going to have bits of the neighbouring ones when you put it in a square picture.

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