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'It had to be done': Hot weather forces pleasurable dip in the Arctic Ocean

Temperatures neared 22 C in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, on the weekend. Hot enough for a sweet summer swim.

21.6 C in Cambridge Bay Saturday breaks 2013 record of 21.4 C

Emily Warren and Jana Angulalik take a screaming dip into the Arctic Ocean Saturday. (Submitted by Jana Angulalik)

Unusually warm weather had some people in Cambridge Bay seeking refuge in cold waters this weekend.

"We went to the beach on Saturday and weren't the only ones," said Jana Angulalik. "There were about 10 kids in the water."

The beach she's referring to is Long Point, a 20 to 30 minute drive from Cambridge Bay on the western entrance to the Northwest Passage and well above the Arctic Circle.

Angulalik describes it as a "nice long stretch of sand" facing the Arctic Ocean and says, with no wind, "it was "gorgeous."

Eric Otokiak, Jana Angulalik, Emily Warren and Malachai Angulalik took a cool dip in the Arctic Ocean. (Submitted by Jana Angulalik)

The temperature Saturday maxed out at 21.6 C just above the 21.4 C record on that day from 2013, and well above the average high of 10 C.

Angulalik said it felt more like 25.

Even before she left town, she spotted about 15 kids jumping in the water from the town dock.

Cambridge Bay, pop. 1,700, lies on the western edge of the Northwest Passage. (CBC)
It's not unheard of for people to swim in Cambridge Bay. Summer weather often forces people into the local river.

An ocean dip is a bit different.Angulalik said some kids were swimming in the sea "like it was a bathtub."

"For the big kids, like me and my friend Emily, we went in and right back out screaming the whole time."

But, she says, it was necessary.

"It had to be done. It was too hot," Angulalik said. "They begged me to go in so I had no choice."

The kids stayed in for much of the afternoon. Angulalik eventually coaxed her nephew out before he caught cold.

"The wind picked up later on but we were still sitting out there in shorts and the kids were playing in the sand. It was really nice," Angulalik said.

"We don't get many swimming opportunities up here so when the day comes around, it's time for a good swim."

How right she is: the temperature today is 10 C.

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With files from Loren McGinnis