It’s my tenth failed attempt to see the northern lights, and here’s my conclusion: when you live in cold, sparsely populated northern climes, surrounded by unimaginable amounts of space, your mind begins to untangle. Your unwinding brain fires relaxing neurons into the backs of your eyeballs, resulting in beautiful hallucinations that can best be described as “lights dancing across the sky.” When a traveller arrives from out of town with hopes of experiencing such a phenomenon, here’s what he’ll hear:
Being here right now, on the other hand, results in clear skies with no dancing lights, or foggy skies with no dancing lights, or rainy nights with 12 Japanese tourists looking glumly toward the sky. This was my experience when I spent two weeks in Alaska. Ditto for a week in the Yukon. Likewise a week in northern Saskatchewan, and now, during a week in the best place to view the alleged natural light show, right below the aurora belt in Yellowknife.
Adding to my misery is the fact that my dad has flown up from Vancouver to join me, as viewing the aurora borealis has been the number-one item on his bucket list ever since he saw an awful eighties movie called St. Elmo’s Fire, which does not actually feature the aurora borealis but does contain the light going out of Ally Sheedy’s acting career. Bucket lists are personal, and I’m not one to question, but we still pass on Grant Beck’s offer to visit his comfortable Aurora Watching cabin on a cold, rainy night when Yellowknife is consumed by a permanent cloud. Grant, a champion dog musher who also runs mushing tours, is being wonderfully optimistic.
“Sometimes the clouds break, and we get a beautiful show!” he tells us. You can almost hear those nerves crackling behind his retinas.
We would spend the night with a dozen Japanese tourists, who visit Yellowknife in the belief that procreating beneath the northern lights ushers in extremely good luck for any resulting babies. Of course, they’re not seeing the lights if they’re actually procreating, at least not in front of us.
Northerners tell us that the fabled northern lights are the result of electrical storms caused by solar flares smashing into Earth’s magnetic field. Yellowknife sits directly under the aurora oval, where these lights can be seen at their most brilliant, attracting tourists from around the world in the hope that they, too, will share in this mass hallucination. Every local I meet is eager to share a story of the sky exploding in luminous shades of green, red, and blue, “like, just last week, on the day before you arrived.”
The rain continues to fall, but it doesn’t dampen the spirits of Carlos Gonzalez at Yellowknife Outdoor Adventures. After all, we’ve just spent the day fishing on Great Slave, and Carlos has seen the skies part like the Red Sea before. Just not tonight. The weather forecast is looking fantastic, however, for the day after we leave.
Thanks to Buffalo Air, we are now in Hay River. It’s cloudy, of course, which makes for poor (that is, impossible) aurora viewing. Before retiring for the night at the town’s Ptarmigan Inn, we ask the friendly receptionist, half-heartedly, to call us if he notices, oh, a natural fireworks display in the sky. Imagine, then, our reactions when the hotel phone wakes us shortly after midnight with exciting news! The sky, would you believe, is absolutely clear — but there are no lights in it. Seriously, guy?
At 2 a.m., the phone rings again. Something about lights in the sky. My dad is at the door before I open my eyes, and I meet him in the parking lot. He looks somewhat perplexed, repeatedly asking: “Where, where, where?” I direct his attention to a faint glow above us and the fact that we’re standing under a rather bright street light. We walk a couple of blocks to the river, where there’s less light pollution, and sure enough, a huge green band is glowing in the sky. To our right, spectacular bolts of lightning are firing on the horizon. To our left, a bright, half-crescent yellow moon bobs in the purple sky. My dad puts his arm around me, a huge smile on his face.
“Will you look at that!” he says in amazement.
Yep, I can see it clearly.
Unless we’ve officially spent too much time in the North, and now we’re starting to hallucinate, too.
START HERE: canadianbucketlist.com/aurora