Learn English 100% free...Get 1 free lesson per week // Add a new lesson
Log in!

Click here to log in
New account
Millions of accounts created on our sites.
JOIN our free club and learn English now!



  • Home
  • Print
  • Guestbook
  • Report a bug




  • Get a free English lesson every week!
    Click here!





    Partners:
    - Our other sites
       


    Learn English > English lessons and exercises > English test #3280: Life in the Far North
    > Other English exercises on the same topic: USA [Change theme]
    > Similar tests: - British English/American English - Wanna Gotta Gonna - New Year in the USA - History of the USA - Voting in the USA - British English-American English: residence 3/3 - American States - Halloween
    > Double-click on words you don't understand


    Life in the Far North


    Nick’s diary

    Saturday December 18 1999.

    Document Can Do

     

     

    Life in the Far North

     

    Nick is travelling with his parents who are visiting the capital of Nunavut, Canada’s newest territory.

    Here is an excerpt from his diary.

     

    The brilliant sun is setting as we arrive shortly after 1 p.m., in the capital of Nunavut. With a population of about 4500 inhabitants, Iqaluit is the new territory’s largest community.

    Smoke comes out of chimneys of tiny homes in the centre of a vast white landscape. Residents move around by foot, by vehicle or by Skidoo. They transport goods with husky-drawn sleighs. The snow crunches when we walk, briskly, in the -20° C weather of the eastern Artic.

    We go into a warm bar and meet Jim Harris a 53-year-old “southerner” who is having a drink. He moved to Nunavut from Poughkeepsie; N.Y., five years ago, and lives in the bush, about four hours from Iqaluit. “I love the outdoors” he says. ”I come to Iqualuit once in a while, when I need to buy things”. He is fascinated by the Far North. “My back yard is home to moose, bears, and porcupines. I love being able to walk out of my back door into a heart of nature.” His next-door neighbour is 30 miles from his place. “I don’t think I would be able to live next to other people” he says. “It doesn’t work for me”.

    He lives the Inuit traditional way of life: hunting, fishing, and sculpting. To get through the long winter he grows hundreds pounds of potatoes and preserves hundreds of fish. He is quite happy with this simple food. He says he doesn’t miss the sophisticated food he had when he lived in the States.

    He talks about the new house he is building in the forest. “It is shaped like an igloo” he says. “It has small round windows like those of submarines. It needs to be well-protected from the winter snowstorms and the freezing winds”.

    He takes us out into the freezing outdoors to see the natural, spectacular show in the night sky. We don’t have our coats. We are freezing. But we don’t mind. The northern lights are more beautiful than anything you can imagine. Their beauty takes our breath away.






    Twitter Share
    English exercise "Life in the Far North" created by bridg with The test builder. [More lessons & exercises from bridg]
    Click here to see the current stats of this English test

    Please log in to save your progress.


    1. At what time does Nick arrive in the capital of Nunavut? at

    2. What is the temperature?

    3. How old is Jim? years old

    4. Was Jim born at Nunavut?

    5. What is the distance between Jim’s house and his neighbour's?

    6. Why does Jim move to Nunavut?

    7. Where is Jim building his new house?










    End of the free exercise to learn English: Life in the Far North
    A free English exercise to learn English.
    Other English exercises on the same topic : USA | All our lessons and exercises