There are several ways/times to hunt natsiqs(seals) ... summer time you shoot them from a boat and have to speed up and harpoon or hook them before they sink ... in fall when the ice forms they're fatter and float so you don't have to worry about them sinking. Winter time, you snowmobile out on the sea-ice ... shoot them from long distance or sneek up on them from behind a sled-blind andshoot them from close ... or you can stand over a seal hole for possibly hrs waiting with a harpoon or hook/club ...
is there a season for it? or can u shoot them al year round? do you hunt them?
-Chinook: Is it now forbidden to go sealing in NL? I worked in Iqaluit with east-coast guys who LOVED seal
-Otokiak: Qanupiq! Natsiq mumaktopualo (sp?)
My son's grandfather can barely see the type on a newspaper and, could single-shot seals I couldn't even see. They are not in the same league as groundhogs for sportin! I'm thinking anybody can hit a whisltepig (big 'ol marmots of eastern half and, not those tiny little ground squirrels you westerners practice on) but, you have to pretty sharp out there sealing
ikedaboy: I'm thinkin that sustenance hunting in the arctic for the Inuit (please correct me if I'm wrong!!!) isn't something you need a licesne for...I don't have a clue about "tourist" seals. There are people(tourist hunters) who spend tens of thousands for the privilege/oportunity of taking a polar bear (no bear guaranteed)
Maybe the question was more about the legal aspect of the sealhunt at least I'm interested in that part first for myself.
As a non-resident can I buy a seal tag in Nunavut? (If yes, it would worth a trip to Moosonee for sure!)
Maybe the question was more about the legal aspect of the sealhunt at least I'm interested in that part first for myself.
As a non-resident can I buy a seal tag in Nunavut? (If yes, it would worth a trip to Moosonee for sure!)
Moosonee ?....longs ways from Nunavut. I think most of the travel to Nunavut is through Montreal via First Air but I could be wrong.
Actually all of the waters of Huson Bay and James Bay and any rock that sticks out of them, are within Nunavut, regardless of which province they border, Manitoba, Ontario, or Quebec. I don't know if a license would be sold to a nonresident, better make some calls.
Otokiak, I don't stray very far from land locked ice, but a day with no wind and an onshore tide I've been known to stray where I probably shouldn't.
Actually all of the waters of Huson Bay and James Bay and any rock that sticks out of them, are within Nunavut, regardless of which province they border, Manitoba, Ontario, or Quebec. I don't know if a license would be sold to a nonresident, better make some calls.
Otokiak, I don't stray very far from land locked ice, but a day with no wind and an onshore tide I've been known to stray where I probably shouldn't.
I have hunted a lot of Sea ducks from ice pans... and it is fun and can be dangerous...
Last few years it seems that it's mostly slob ice in around the harbours and coves though..(NFLD)



























