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Lifelines: Canada's East Coast Fisheries

Swales and Whales
Atlantic Canada's Sea Mammal Harvest
 
Into the Fat
Swales and Whales: Atlantic Canada's Sea Mammal Harvest

 

When hunters located the seal herds, they set about their work with harsh efficiency.

Young seal pups with still fragile skulls were struck dead with gaffs, while older seals were shot. Newly killed animals were then stripped of their fur and blubber. Sculping, as this was called, required considerable skill and was accomplished with speed.


Ice Hunters - 
National Archives of Canada - PA 129900

Ice hunters in action, mid-20th century
(Courtesy: National Archivies of Canada
PA 129900)


The sculps - skin with blubber attached - were piled to await collection. A distinctive flag marked the spot. If the site of the hunt was distant from the vessel, the sculps had to be hauled to an ice pan that the ship could reach.


Towing Sculps - 
Provincial Archives of Newfoundland and Labrador - A8-136

Towing sculps to be panned
(Courtesy: Provincial Archives of Newfoundland and Labrador A8-136)


Once aboard, the pelts were stowed below deck in pounds where the crew's bunks were located. As the holds were filled, the men were displaced, eventually being forced to sleep on top of the slimy, stinking cargo.



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