Bearded seals are a common sight in the water and on the ice this summer. They are the largest seals in the area and although they tend to be loners, they are a little more gregarious around this area. They earn their name from their thick brush of whiskers. Like walrus, they are bottom feeders and they use their mustaches to search out clams, squid and fish. I've been told that the Bearded seals in this area have nice white whiskers because the bottom sediments here are so clean.
Bearded Seal getting some sun
I Hate Mondays.
hello.
Stretch and a snooze
Bearded seals are sometimes called "square flippers" because of their short, wide front flippers. When you get close enough to them, a lot of the seals here have scars. Some scars are from fights with each other and many are from close calls with polar bears. A Conservation Officer from Igloolik explained to me that a bearded seal's first instinct when it is hit by a harpoon or attacked by a bear is to roll. When they are escaping from bears, this creates a long spiral scar along the back. Some seals always roll left, some always roll right, and some are ambidextrous. You can tell which way a particular seal rolls by the direction of the scars.
The black line in the middle of the back is a scar from an escape from a polar bear
This hefty fellow carries his scars on his face and neck. Or maybe its a she - I can't tell the difference.
The have a bit of a flat head when they are spying on you from the water.
A nice day to catch some rays.
Metal harpoon for large seals, walrus, and beluga
Bearded seal is the only seal that I've genuinely enjoyed the taste. Cubes of meat, intestine, and fat boiled together tastes like a fish porkchop. The skin is the best skin for ropes and thongs and makes tough boot soles. The Igloolik Inuktitut name for bearded seals is ugjuk. The line on this harpoon is bearded seal, and the dog toggle below would have been on the end of a long bearded seal line and was used to attach a dog to a sled.
Its Lori Day in town! It only comes once a year, but it stays for 365 days.
Here are a couple photos that may or may not have been taken last summer. The person depicted in the moose flap cap is doing top secret research for an un-named archaeology subcontractor hired by a mysterious international environmental consulting agency. The unspecified agency was hired to prepare a confidential feasibility study for the development of a resource that I can't tell you about by a nameless client at an undisclosed location in Nunavut.
Here's an interesting thing about Lori that you might not know. She has the ability to call seals. She was trained in the technique by Inuit friends from Pond Inlet and Iglulik. Here she is perched on a seal calling rock at the ocean's edge. She'll take a beach cobble and rub it against the boulder. The grumbling vibrations travel through the water and if there is a seal nearby his curiousity will draw him towards the sound. Using this technique she was able to entice this bearded seal close enough to the shore to have his photo taken.
This fellow was eventually released from her siren call and swam away unharmed. Which was lucky for him -- boiled bearded seal tastes like a fish pork-chop. mmm......
Photo Credits: Left, Ainslie Cogswell Right & Bottom, Tim Rast