North

Here are some of CBC North's most-read stories of 2024

From grolar bears, to paragliding mishaps, and an emergency flight landing - here are some of CBC North's most-read stories of 2024.

Grolar bears, paragliding mishaps, and an emergency flight landing feature in our most-read stories of 2024

A collage of images of people, and a polar bear.
Images from some of CBC North's most-read stories of 2024. (CBC)

Every year, CBC North publishes thousands of stories online — breaking news, investigative reporting, political coverage, community features, longform storytelling, and much more.

Some of those stories reach a huge audience, with hundreds of thousands more readers than actually live in the North.

Here are some of CBC North's most-read stories of 2024.

Yukon woman recounts grizzly attack

Vanessa Leegstra and her husband David at their wedding in 2023.
Vanessa Leegstra and her husband David at their wedding in 2023. (Submitted by David Leegstra)

In June, Vanessa Leegstra of Haines Junction, Yukon, had the sort of wildlife encounter that many Yukoners dread, when she was charged and attacked by an aggressive male grizzly bear.

"He grabbed my head and wrapped his paws around me. And I just remember the claws digging into my back... I could feel him biting my arm, my head," she later recounted to CBC News, from the hospital where she was recovering from her injuries.

Leegstra credits a large plastic hair clip she happened to be wearing that day, for saving her life. She said it shattered when the bear bit down on her head, forcing him to let go and allowing Leegstra to scramble away.

Read about Leegstra's terrifying encounter here. 

Sentencing of woman found guilty in Inuit identity fraud case

A woman wearing a grey sweater with the hood up and a grey face mask and handcuffs is seen through a fence with two sheriffs on either side of her.
Karima Manji, who pleaded guilty to defrauding Inuit organizations, was taken into custody in Iqaluit on June 24, 2024, after a judge decided to revoke her bail. (Kate Kyle/CBC)

It was a story that generated a lot of anger and anguish, in Nunavut and beyond. 

Karima Manji pleaded guilty early this year, for falsely claiming her twin daughters had Inuit status in order to defraud the Kakivak Association and Qikiqtani Inuit Association of grant and scholarship money that was only available to Inuit beneficiaries. Charges against her two daughters were dropped.

Manji took "full responsibility for the matters at hand," a Toronto courtroom heard, and was sentenced to three years in prison. She was also ordered to repay the $158,000 her daughters received from the Inuit organizations.

Read more about the case here.

How one 'strange' female polar bear made a family of hybrid grolars

A bear that appears to be a light brown colour, with dark spots around her eyes and a darker brown stripe running down her back
A photo of a hybrid bear spotted during a monitoring flight in the western Arctic in 2012. Polar bear researcher Evan Richardson believes it's bear X15718, a female hybrid who mated with grizzlies and went on to have four known second-generation hybrid offspring of her own. (Jodie Pongracz/Government of the Northwest Territories)

A research paper published last spring in the journal Conservation Genetics Resources shed more light on an unusual northern family tree.  

The researchers used a new tool to look at samples from hundreds of grizzly and polar bears across Canada, Alaska and Greenland, collected between 1975 and 2015. They expected to find more polar and grizzly bear hybrids, or grolars, in the data — but only found eight, all of them descended from the same "strange" mother, a polar bear that apparently had a thing for mating with grizzlies.

Read more about this story here.

Air India emergency landing in Iqaluit

Dozens of people stand inside airport security terminal.
211 passengers and crew on board Air India Flight 127 spent 18 hours confined inside Iqaluit Airport's international security zone in October. Their plane was grounded due to a bomb threat. (Samuel Wat/CBC)

It's not uncommon for aircraft to make emergency landings in Iqaluit, as the city is close to many transpolar flight paths.

In October, an Air India flight landed in the Nunavut capital, citing an online bomb threat and saying the landing was a precautionary measure.

That left more than 200 passengers stranded for 18 hours at the Iqaluit airport's international security zone. 

Read more about the incident here.

Yukon paraglider's high-altitude mishap in the Himalayas

A close up of a man in a neck brace with bruises on his face.
Ben Lewis of Watson Lake, Yukon, was injured after a paragliding mishap in India in October. (Submitted by Ben Lewis)

Ben Lewis of Watson Lake, Yukon, had given himself up for dead as he got pulled higher and higher into a violent storm over the rugged Himalayan landscape in India, in October.

But somehow, the paraglider survived. A bit battered and bruised, but mostly OK after his harrowing ordeal and grateful to be alive.

Read about Lewis's misadventure here.

The challenges of charging an electric truck in Yellowknife

A man in a green coat and a black hat standing in front of a dark coloured truck.
When Ben Baird of Yellowknife purchased his electric truck, he didn't realize he'd have to pay $12,000 to upgrade the transformer his home is connected to. (Liny Lamberink/CBC)

When Ben Baird purchased a fully electric truck, he expected to install the Level 2 charger it came with at his Yellowknife home. 

But in order to provide enough power to his home for that charger, Baird said, power distributor Northland Utilities told him he'd have to pay $12,000 to upgrade the transformer in his neighbourhood as well.

Read about Baird's experience and some of the challenges of owning an EV in the North, here

U.K. man's 510-kilometre non-stop swim down frigid Yukon River  

A smiling man in a wetsuit sits as another person stands beside them with a hand on their back.
U.K. swimmer Ross Edgley, after a 510-kilometre non-stop swim down the Yukon River in June. (Submitted by Ross Edgley)

Ross Edgley has done many long-distance swims all over the world, and is most famous for becoming the first swimmer to circumnavigate the British mainland, over 155 days in 2018. 

But in June, the U.K. man set himself a new sort of challenge: a non-stop long-distance swim down a remote northern river. He chose the Yukon River, and managed to swim 510 bone-chilling kilometres over two-and-a-half days.

"Often I say with swims like this, you have to outsource common sense," Edgley said, back on dry land.

Read about his amazing feat here.