Australian Reacts to Unboxing & Canada Road Trip to the ARCTIC - Exploring TUKTOYAKTUK! | AussieTash

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • G'day mates!!! We're back with another canada reaction video called 'Unboxing & Canada Road Trip to the ARCTIC - Exploring TUKTOYAKTUK!' and it was a "AWESOME' video to record. Don't forget to like and subscribe if you enjoy my content and reactions! Cheers!
    Original Video: • Canada Road Trip to th...
    🐨Netherlands Reactions by Aussie Tash! - / @moreaussietash
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Комментарии • 46

  • @karlweir3198
    @karlweir3198 Месяц назад +1

    I love how you genuinely love our country ❤ it's so nice to watch. I love watching these reactions because I even get to learn things about things in my country that I never knew about and I love watching people reacting to things in our country that they didn't know we had so thanks from Nova Scotia Canada

  • @ReggieWarrhol
    @ReggieWarrhol 3 месяца назад +2

    When I was a lot younger , I lived and worked in the Artic. I started off in Churchill Manitoba, was sent to Inuvik, then Tuktoyuktuk, Pangnirtung, Cape Dorset, Baker Lake and finally back to Churchill. Churchill was the furthest south I'd been in 8 years and it wasn't any warmer.
    I saw herds of Caribbo, Musk Ox, Wolves,and many many Polar Bears .
    I am proud to be able to say I've been in all three oceans that surround this country, and yes the water up north is really cold. Churchill used to do the Dip and Race on Canada Day and it included ice in the water in July!
    Trees are stunted because of the permafrost, and as a rule one sided due to the constant winds. Most of the land is flat, a small hill can be a big thing when used as a landmark to help detrmine where you are.
    I got to meet so many interesting people, learned a different way of life and enjoyed every minute of it.

  • @wayneblanchard4635
    @wayneblanchard4635 3 месяца назад +1

    I don’t know what I would do without your channel tash your videos are awesome and I especially love when your live and we can all hang out together…..cheers

  • @melodychapman9185
    @melodychapman9185 3 месяца назад

    Hi ya Tash such a cute couple love their channel too. Always enjoy your reactions so genuine. Sweatshirt looks great on you too. Have a super weekend🫶

  • @pamelalambe1356
    @pamelalambe1356 3 месяца назад +6

    I learn so much about my country from Aussie!! Thank You.

  • @philpaine3068
    @philpaine3068 3 месяца назад

    I have very fond memories of Tuktoyaktuk, which I visited thirty years ago, when it could only be reached by plane. At the time, the Dempster Highway only went as far as Inuvik. The landscape that road winds through ---- the Ogilvie/Tombstone Mountains, the Eagle Plains, and the Mackenzie Delta --- has an unspoiled and desolate beauty that cannot be described with words. The people of "Tuk" are a tough and hardy bunch, much like the kind of people you would meet in lonely stations in the Australian outback.

  • @JimMerritt-cu9pd
    @JimMerritt-cu9pd 3 месяца назад +10

    There is no university there. It's just a joke.

  • @MrYoup11
    @MrYoup11 3 месяца назад

    The section of road from Inuvick to Tuk was official opened in 2017.

  • @user-fj5qf7gt6n
    @user-fj5qf7gt6n 3 месяца назад +3

    The trees aren't as tall that far North because of permafrost, it stays frozen year round at a few feet below the surface restricting root growth.
    If flying to Inuvik, you stop over in Whitehorse, Yukon. It's surprisingly arid there. Another stop in Old Crow, a primarily indigenous village where a couple arrived on our plane with a new baby. It looked like the whole village turned out to welcome them! Inuvik had one stop light, the buildings were colourful, the normally underground services/pipes were above ground I'm sure for access in frozen winters and insulated. Wooden ramps over them where they cross roads. Food is up to 4X the cost in Vancouver from what I saw. There are spruce trees, wild roses, and lingonberries. And I think almost all vehicles were pickup trucks.

  • @lucforand8527
    @lucforand8527 3 месяца назад

    There's a stop for fuel, food and rest about half-way to Inuvik. I think Tuk is another 140 km further.

  • @jimturner3301
    @jimturner3301 3 месяца назад

    I remember seeing a video of a couple going to Tuktoyaktuk in the winter, where they had to drive the ice highway up the frozen Mackenzie River. When they arrived, some elders showed them how to build an igloo. I too have been above the treeline when I visited Iqaluit. It's like walking on the moon.

  • @katnero-campbell6393
    @katnero-campbell6393 3 месяца назад +1

    My dad worked on construction in the early 1970's on Ellesmere Island, which is now in Nunavit. One of his jobs, was to go to an isolated cabin ( winterized tent) that was about 25 km from the main camp, he was driving a caterpillar (large vehicle on tracks). They set up 4 large drums for about 1.4 km, and told him to drive perfectly straight from them, which ment he had to look backward, while he was driving, to make sure he stayed perfectly straght. He arrived there alone, and was to use a grader to keep the runway cleared for a small plane to land on. A storm came in, and he was stranded there alone for 22 days instead of the week he had been sent there for. After the weather cleared , an Otter (small airplane)came in to rescue him, that is when he found out that the previous guy who had been working there, had gone (in his caterpillar) onto thin ice and drowned in the Arctic ocean. He had to keep the runway open for search and recovery of the man's body. In 1981 dad worked in Guyana, on construction as well. He came back from there a week after my oldest son was born.

  • @martincampbell7774
    @martincampbell7774 3 месяца назад

    Good video, as always! I eco another comment, where even though I am Canadian, I learn about Canada from your videos. Many thanks!

  • @lucforand8527
    @lucforand8527 3 месяца назад

    The Northwest Territories is dominated by the GREAT MacKenzie River; the 2nd longest river in North America after the Mississippi. It drains into the Arctic Ocean near Inuvik and Tuk (short for Tuktoyaktuk).

  • @lauriegunn9636
    @lauriegunn9636 3 месяца назад

    My Dad used to threaten to send us to Tuktoyaktuk. We also called a friend from back in the day 'Muktuk' or 'Muk' for short, lol. lmao 🐳🦭❄

  • @lucforand8527
    @lucforand8527 3 месяца назад

    Tuktoyaktut is on the Arctic Ocean where the land is permanently frozen. There are no trees that far north.

  • @luckyskittles8976
    @luckyskittles8976 3 месяца назад +4

    Love the shirt , never seen one before, great joke. Enjoyed the reaction and chat.

  • @BarnDoorProductions
    @BarnDoorProductions 3 месяца назад

    Tuktoyaktuk has a population under 1,000. It's too small to have a university. The old joke is "I went to the University of Tuktoyaktuk. Tuktoyaktuk U. Good old Tuck U." With the obvious pun intended. BTW, the 'toy' in Tuktoyaktuk kind of gets squashed to half-way between 'tie' and 'tay'. An Aussie can get it but a Kiwi would hit it bang on naturally. 😄

  • @TheCanadiangirl4
    @TheCanadiangirl4 3 месяца назад

    I've been to the Yukon and plan to revisit it next year. I want to see YellowKnife (NWT) when I head back north again. I love it there, it's just so beautiful. I want to dip my toes in the arctic and swim in the Pacific. I've already swam in the Atlantic so far.

  • @nfbody
    @nfbody 3 месяца назад +3

    Ooh, in primary school I had a pen pal from up north, Northwest Territories if I remember well. I still have the pictures she sent me of the sky still being sunny at 11pm. I hope that tradition continues, I’d love for my child to have a penpal up north ❤

  • @stephenpublicover8818
    @stephenpublicover8818 3 месяца назад

    You hope for 3-4c at least!!LOL!!😀👌👍👍✌ Water Temp!

  • @lucforand8527
    @lucforand8527 3 месяца назад +1

    The water is about 0 degrees Celsius.

    • @ElsaDewitt
      @ElsaDewitt 3 месяца назад

      Sounds about right with all the ice chunks there.

  • @444dkm
    @444dkm 3 месяца назад +4

    Lol! Great sweatshirt.

  • @JT.Pilgrim
    @JT.Pilgrim 3 месяца назад +3

    Cheers from up over.

  • @NewfieOutdoors87
    @NewfieOutdoors87 3 месяца назад +3

    Lmao 😂 he said that’s warmer than the Atlantic and here in Newfoundland the Atlantic is all we got lol…good fishin but it’ll freeze the 🥜 off ya on the warmest day eh b’y 😅

  • @lucforand8527
    @lucforand8527 3 месяца назад

    Unfortunately there is no university in Tuktoyaktuk or in any of the Terrirtories. There are a few colleges in the Territories that handle some post-secondary education.

  • @carlop.7182
    @carlop.7182 3 месяца назад

    My girlfriend used to visit Yukon and part of the North West Territories 20 years ago (back in 2004), you're in inuit land over there, very welcoming people, because it's so remote that they don't have many visitors, and when people go there, you get a royalty treatment (that's what the inuit lady where she slept told her. And you get to experience more than just Canada, but indigenous people trafitions & culture--not many people (even in Canada) had this experience. Yes, it's far, but totally worth it. Have a nice day, Tash.

  • @wayneblanchard4635
    @wayneblanchard4635 3 месяца назад +1

    Loved watching you live and chatting with you.

  • @byronbunny8488
    @byronbunny8488 3 месяца назад

    If the water is open regardless of ice and the weather, Canadians are willing to take a quick dip 🇨🇦
    You're a natural at saying Tuktoyaktuk 🐰👍

  • @gamexsimmonds3581
    @gamexsimmonds3581 3 месяца назад +2

    Cool sweatshirt, Tash, you and Ajoobe gotta move to Tuktoyyaktuk...eat that Whale Blubber

  • @user-lw2hj6mz3t
    @user-lw2hj6mz3t 2 месяца назад

    It’s a joke!😅

  • @Rascallyone
    @Rascallyone 3 месяца назад

    No TUK U .😊

  • @user-ww2hi1qf6m
    @user-ww2hi1qf6m 3 месяца назад

    Tuc Trudeau !!!!