Things To Do
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Visitors' Top Ten
Our visitors vote with
their hearts and their feet.
These are the top ten events and top
ten attractions of Northern Frontier, as selected by you the
visitor.
EVENTS
1. Caribou
Carnival
Held the last weekend of March each year, this festival puts an
end to winter in Yellowknife. Big name entertainment, skidoo and
dog races and feats of strength and skill. Fun for the whole family.
2. Canadian Championship
Dog Derby
A three day, 150-mile race run on Great Slave Lake ice, held at
the end of March, and part of the World Cup of dog sled racing.
Run since 1955, the Dog Derby now features mushers from around the
world, custom bred dogs and high-tech sleds. Catch the excitement
at the mass start each day and marvel at the stamina of men, women
and dogs. www.yellowknifedogderby.com
3. Canada Day
July 1
This national holiday is truly a multicultural event in Yellowknife
with a parade, music and games, and citizenship ceremonies
in the park.
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4. Aboriginal Day
June 21
This territorial holiday honours the Aboriginal people of the North
and features traditional entertainment, storytelling, and lots of
caribou stew, bannock and tea.
5. Longest Day of the
Year - Raven Mad Daze
When the sun is high in the sky all day and all night, June 21,
Yellowknifers go raven mad. Street sales, live bands, and plenty
of finger food keep the family hopping till well past midnight.
Just when you think the sun has disappeared, it pops up again and
its time to go boating, or tee off at the Midnight Sun golf tournament.
6. Midnight Sun Golf
Tournament
A Yellowknife Golf Club annual event, sponsored by the folks at
Canadian North. The first flight is at midnight and features a special
guest. Then you contend with thieving ravens, sand fairways and
astroturf greens. Great prizes include trips for two on the airline.
7. Snow King
Winter Festival
For the past nine years, the Snowking has built his castle. He dedicates
his days to make this amazing, icy construction so the people of
Yellowknife and visitors alike can enjoy his magical palace. The
Snowking's castle has captured the imagination and hearts of many.
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8. Folk
on the Rocks mid July
Actually, this two day folk-blues concert is held in a beautiful
sandy amphitheatre on the shores of a shimmering lake. Its
a beautiful setting to relax, take in a few rays and enjoy your
favorite performers. Workshops and fun for kids are part of the
package.
9. Yellowknife International
Airshow
The Air Show is held b-annually with Air Show Static adn live displays.
The Next Airshow will be held in 2006. Yellowknife is a bush
pilot paradise...featuring awesome flying, and pilot reunions at
the Float Plane Fly-In Being held in June 2005.
10. Mining
week
Its time to dust off your samples, schmooze with the mining
execs and practice your skills as a hard rock gold miner. Or, like
the teams from every mine in the NWT and Nunavut, compete in the
annual Mine Rescue Competition, a test of skill and safety knowledge
in a simulated mine emergency. Our teams measure up to the best
in Canada.
ATTRACTIONS
1. Northern Frontier
Visitors Centre
Thats us! Were delighted we rate. Come, visit us any
time.
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2. Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre
3. Wildcat Café
and Old Town
Old Town, summer and winter, has a charm all its own. Great eating,
quaint ambiance, water views and historic buildings combine with
bush planes on floats or skis to take you back to the early days
of the city and of northern flying. The Wildcat Café rocks
through summer with local and visiting musicians dropping in for
dinner or for a jam session.
4. Bush Pilots
Monument
Top of the Rock in Old Town, this is our northern version of the
CN tower. With 360 degree view, six stories up, its a favorite
with locals for weddings, and one of the best places in the city
to see the fall and winter aurora.
5. Golf
Club
Everyone has to take a look at our Golf Club, and try to play its
unique sand fairways. Local rules permit replacing a ball stolen
by a raven.
6. Aurora Viewing
September to April
Look up, up, and around. In summer the sky over Yellowknife Bay
is as wide and blue as a prairie sky. Cruise to a welcoming island
in Yellowknife Bay for a northern style feast on a long summer afternoon
or evening. Fall and winter offer a different perspective, a midnight
blue dome filled with stars lends a ghostly light to gleaming snow.
The aurora, or the dancing northern lights warm your spirit on the
snowy landscape.
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7. Frame Lake Walking
Trail
Forget the rush and bustle of our vibrant city and take to the trails.
Skirting a picturesque little lake the Frame Lake walking and biking
trail offers scenic views of the lake and the city at every turn.
8. Legislative
Assembly
Shaped like a traditional snowhouse, and almost hidden in a natural
stand of spruce and jackpine, the NWT Legislative Assembly is the
scenic focus of the capital region. The Assemblys unique circular
chambers recall the traditional northern approach to government,
and encourage our unusual concensus style government.
9. Diavik
Diamond Display
Diavik Diamond Mines devotes the main lobby of its downtown office
to a series of displays highlighting the search for diamonds and
the development of a diamond mine, in the treeless tundra far to
the north of the city.
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10. Yellowknife Cultural Crossroads
Tracings of human hands from many cultural groups, a traditional
drum and a raven are etched into a rock face. The bronze sculpture,
designed by three aboriginal artists, celebrates the power of working
together.
Photographs by David Marcus (Outcrop), Tessa Macintosh, Fran Hurcomb, Terry Parker (NWTAT) and Ronne Heming (Outcrop).








