The two skipped Banff National Park to catch Canada’s Yukon territory while the weather was still warm. The area turned out to be Paquette's favorite.

“Yukon was always a mystery to me because it’s so far north and isolated from everywhere else in Canada,” he told T+L. “The landscapes here were insane since everything is so spaced out and you have nature that’s much more intact with less human pollution.” One of their stops in Yukon was Tombstone Territorial Park, which is known as the “Patagonia of the North” thanks to its striking combination of peaks and tundra terrain.

"It's where the forest and the tundra meet and once you go any farther north, the forest starts turning into tundra and you can't see a single tree in sight, but you see rows and rows of these spiky towering mountains that surround you,” Paquette said of the Tombstone Mountains.