Seal Hunting calibre choice ...

Otokiak,
Don't kid yourself about the barrel life on the 204. I have one and I don't think you couled ever shoot enough uo there to burn out a barrel. Super accurate little rounds.
We used to use the 22-250 mostly but the 223 was also used alot. The 243 would be a good round if you can find some light hollow points.
I remember eating seal and RICH and STRONG is not how I remember it, Black and fishy seems more like it.

Cliff
 
Otokiak,
Don't kid yourself about the barrel life on the 204. I have one and I don't think you couled ever shoot enough uo there to burn out a barrel. Super accurate little rounds.
We used to use the 22-250 mostly but the 223 was also used alot. The 243 would be a good round if you can find some light hollow points.
I remember eating seal and RICH and STRONG is not how I remember it, Black and fishy seems more like it.

Cliff

I find Guinness the perfect compliment to seal..:D
 
My friend is a member of this board. Here's a pic of another one of my friends who went with him seal hunting on July 4 ... this is my buddy Brian sitting with the ugjuk and Kevin who shot/caught it took the pic. He apparently used a 6mm rifle.

Otokiak
Rankin Inlet, NU
CANADA

KevinSudsUgjuq.jpg
 
Ice? What ice? I though the ocean water was about boiling up there at this time of the year. Damn it, maybe Al Gore, Greenpeace and David Kawasaki must have made an honest/tiny mistake and maybe have mispredicted the sea temperature by a small margin. Oh well, just an honest mistake.

Awsome guys, I can only wish I could go hunting at this time of the year. :(

Please, keep the pictures coming! ;)
 
Ice? What ice? I though the ocean water was about boiling up there at this time of the year. Damn it, maybe Al Gore, Greenpeace and David Kawasaki must have made an honest/tiny mistake and maybe have mispredicted the sea temperature by a small margin. Oh well, just an honest mistake.

Awsome guys, I can only wish I could go hunting at this time of the year.

Please, keep the pictures coming!

Gunlover, I took this picture of our inlet just 2 days ago ... the ice has since started to be blown out into the Hudsons Bay water ... couple more days and we're out in our boats ... :D

DSC00058.jpg


Nice pic, I suppose the skin is so flabby because seals are "lean" at this time of year ?

RobSmith, that's only showing one side of the ugjuk and the flabby part would be the skin already cut out and the sea being turned on his side with it ... ;)

Otokiak
Rankin Inlet, NU
CANADA

p.s. back on topic ... WHAT CALIBRE would my fellow CGNer's use for seal hunting? ;)
 
Gunlover, I took this picture of our inlet just 2 days ago ... the ice has since started to be blown out into the Hudsons Bay water ... couple more days and we're out in our boats ... :D

DSC00058.jpg




RobSmith, that's only showing one side of the ugjuk and the flabby part would be the skin already cut out and the sea being turned on his side with it ... ;)

Otokiak
Rankin Inlet, NU
CANADA

Still in that thick ice?!!! Wow!!!! We're swimming in 84 degree pool water in Montreal today! So much for global warming!

p.s. back on topic ... WHAT CALIBRE would my fellow CGNer's use for seal hunting? ;)

Still in that thick ice?!!! Wow!!!! We're swimming in 84 degree pool water in Montreal today! So much for global warming!

I would use my .30-30!
 
Thanks for the explanation, as the only "wild" seal I've ever seen was somewhere way up in Cape Breton, NS (don't even know for sure where the hell I was exactly, just stopped by the side of the road and there it was down the cliff). ;)

As for caliber, why not use your trusty M14 and it's .308 death pills ?

RobSmith, that's only showing one side of the ugjuk and the flabby part would be the skin already cut out and the sea being turned on his side with it ... ;)

Otokiak
Rankin Inlet, NU
CANADA

p.s. back on topic ... WHAT CALIBRE would my fellow CGNer's use for seal hunting? ;)
 
My dad bought a .22 Hornet off a native seal hunter.

I still have the gun.
 
I dont have caliber advice but I was wondering what seal meat tastes like?
Cooked of course.

As was already stated, its very rich/strong and has somewhat of a fishy hint to it. Seal flipper is definitely an excellent sunday dinner.

You'll still smell it in the kitchen next sunday though.

If some would love to use the 22WMR, why not the 22 Hornet. Its a centerfire.

Not nearly as cost effective for factory loads, especially for the volume required for a commercial seal hunter.
 
First off most tree hugger offensive thread in a long time, GOOD WORK! Second I have never shot a seal but I think I would take my trusty 22 hornet.
 
i want to go to .bring my shotgun with slugs .sounds like a good way to spen some time when it is this hot at home wow DUTCH
 
17 hmr

When I lived in Iqaluit, around 2002-2007, it seemed that the 17 HMR was all the rage for seals.

The CZ Heavy Barrel in that caliber was in high demand. The East Arctic Armory always seemed to be out of stock for this ammo.

What happened? Was that just a passing fad?
 
Please tell us more about seal hunting. from land to land? Land to water? Boat to water?

What kind of distances involved?

I find myself think maybe a SKS would be about right. Cheap ammo. reliable.
 
Please tell us more about seal hunting. from land to land? Land to water? Boat to water?

Here in Newfoundland there are two kinds of sealing.

Firstly, there is, of course, the much maligned commercial hunt. Most of this takes place at what they call the "Front", the leading edge of the ice pack off the northeastern coast. That's where the seal herds are encountered in the thousands, and most of the harvest takes place from the deck of a boat shooting at seals laying on the ice.

The smaller scale hunt, some of it commercial and some of it for personal use, takes place in the smaller bays and along the coast. On the northern parts of the island, you can sometimes walk onto the sea ice from the shore and take seals on the ice. Otherwise, you're trolling around in small boats trying to catch them on the ice or shooting at heads bobbing around in open water. The latter is especially challenging, for obvious reasons.

In recent years the ice pack hasn't advanced as far south as before, making it much tougher to hunt seals in the southern and eastern parts of the island. In some places, seals were having their pups on the shore because of a lack of ice.

Otokiak no doubt gets much better quality ice than us, but maybe even he has seen a change in the character of the ice in the last few years.

What kind of distances involved? I find myself think maybe a SKS would be about right. Cheap ammo. reliable.

Relatively short distances, 100 yd or less, especially in open water or broken ice. Further is possible if you have a larger boat and can get into a good number of them on the ice, but in that case you might not need to be making longer shots anyway.

Either way you're always looking for head shots so as not to spoil the pelt. In open water it can be like a game of "aquatic whack-a-mole", heh. :D
 
I had no idea rifles were involved in teh commecial hunt. the last time I saw the commercial hunt (1956) it involved walking out on the ice from boats and whacking them over the head with a club.

I saw it from the Canso spotting plane.
 
QUOTE: Otokiak: "Only way to describe it is RICH in flavour ... very strong ... never had it cooked ... ;)"

Well then buy some propane for the barby!:p:D
Something I would like to try hunting/ eating in this lifetime! Have fun!...:D
 
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