
Aqua Gliding with Beluga Whales in Churchill
- Starry Skies and an Erupting Volcano
- How We Travelled from Kona to Vancouver Island: Flights, Ferries, and Travel Tips
- Driving to North Vancouver Island for a Day Trip to See Puffins at Triangle Island
- Wildlife Photography Tour in Port McNeill: Otters, Orcas, and Eagles with Anthony Bucci
- Taking the BC Ferry from Port Hardy to Prince Rupert
- Visiting the Khutzeymateen Grizzly Sanctuary
- Returning to Port Hardy by Ferry and a Whale Watching Stop
- The Eagle Show in Campbell River
- Wildlife Watching in Tofino: Whales, Bears, Otters and Puffins
- Snorkelling with Harbour Seals in Vancouver
- Travelling to Churchill to see Polar Bears
- Fireweed Island: Polar Bears and Belugas in Churchill
- Aqua Gliding with Beluga Whales in Churchill
- Wrapping Up Our Time in Churchill: Kayaking, Tundra Crawler, and the Prince of Wales Fort
- Our Newfoundland Side Quest to Photograph Atlantic Puffins
- Puffins of Elliston: The Best Land-Based Puffin Viewing in Newfoundland
- Puffins of Bonavista: Close Encounters at Cape Bonavista Lighthouse
- Exploring the Canadian Rockies: Canmore, Lake Louise, and Jasper
A Rainy Morning and a Change of Plans
The town tour was short because Churchill is quite small; it spans just 53 km² (20 sq mi). For context, that’s about four times the size of Key West or about half the size of Coober Pedy. And it only has about 900 permanent residents.
The first stop on the tour was Miss Piggy, a WWII-era Curtiss C-46 cargo plane that belly-landed near Churchill in 1979 due to engine failure. All crew survived and it now sits colourfully abandoned on tundra rocks as a quirky photo landmark.

The next stop on the tour was the Polar Bear Holding Facility, nicknamed “Polar Bear Jail,” where problem bears are safely held in cinder-block cells for up to 30 days before relocation far from town, protecting both residents and the bears regardless of season. We visited here in 2008 so snapped a few “then and now” photos. Quite a bit of difference in temperature from August to November!
What is Aqua Gliding?


Into the Water with Belugas





Why We Travel (Even When the Photos Aren’t Perfect)
On paper, we came to Churchill for polar bears. They were the headline species, the animal that anchored the itinerary, the reason we booked this entire holiday.
In my book, Wanderlist Blueprint, step 1 of the wanderlist journey is discovering your travel values. For us, the sweet spot sits in the overlap of three circles: adventure, photography, and wildlife. When all three align, it’s magic.
Fireweed Island delivered on the wildlife and photography front: eight bears before we even landed, close encounters, clean compositions, the kind of day that looks good on a memory card.
But the belugas? This wasn’t our best photographic day.
The visibility wasn’t ideal, and we were limited to whatever we could shoot while clinging to a flimsy foam mat being dragged behind a zodiac. The images won’t win awards.
And yet, it was one of the best wildlife encounters of our lives (and the hardest I have laughed in recent memory).
The book Die with Zero talks about “memory dividends”: investing in experiences pays better long-term returns than buying things, because you can relive and reminisce about those moments. This day illustrates that perfectly. Even now, as I write this and remember singing “Baby Shark” to a beluga and Andy shouting at them in his snorkel voice, I’m laughing again. It was ridiculous, joyful, and completely unscripted.
The polar bears brought us to Churchill, but the belugas reminded us why we go anywhere at all. And sometimes, the best experiences aren’t measured in pixels.
We’re Andy and Jennifer—two former corporate executives who chose long ago to prioritise experiences over stuff while pursuing our passions for travel and photography. From the Arctic to Antarctica, and most places in between, we’ve captured the world through our lenses and love sharing those stories. Our careers gave us the means, but our purpose is inspiring others to explore and helping people create images they’re proud of.








