
The one-foot high kick is a popular event at the Arctic Winter Games, and world records are routinely broken.

The snow snake involves hurling a sharpened wooden pole along a snowy track as far as possible.

Chris Stipdonk won gold in the knuckle hop at the 2016 Arctic Winter Games, pushing himself nearly 55 meters using just the tips of his toes and knuckles.

The pole push -- in which two teams try their hardest to push the same wooden pole in opposing directions -- is one of the best-attended events of the Games.

Dene Games are another sport rarely seen by mainstream audiences, but which feature prominently at the two-yearly competition.

Futsal, a modified indoor version of football, was arguably the biggest draw at the 2016 Arctic Winter Games, packing out the 1,000-capacity arena.

Greenland's futsal players enjoyed boisterous home support -- the 12-year-olds were roared onto the pitch by hundreds of friends, family members and neighbors.

Athletes from Canada's Yukon territory get off the plane in Greenland -- for most of them, it was their first trip to this part of the world.

Nuuk is Greenland's biggest town, with a population of 17,000. The community nestles into the rockface of Greenland's southwest coast.

The northern lights flicker above the burning flame of the Arctic Winter Games in the center of Nuuk.

Deseray Cumberbatch represented Nunavik Quebec at her sixth Arctic Winter Games, but this was the first time her father -- born in the Caribbean but married to an Inuk woman -- was able to attend.

Not all athletes plan to set records at the Arctic Winter Games, which also features more conventional sports such as table tennis, volleyball and ice hockey. It's a first taste of a mini-Olympics for young teenagers -- such as these skiers -- who harbor sporting ambitions.

It is a chance for young athletes from nine different polar regions to spend time with each other -- particularly when there's a weather delay, like this one during the snowboarding.

The Arctic Winter Games' cultural program offers a chance for northern performers to come together and take center stage. Pictured is a performer at the closing ceremony.

Left-right: Ella Marie Haetta Isaksen, Hilda Lansman and Katarina Barrok perform a traditional Sami yoik song.