carldelo
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,568
- Location
- Astoria, NYC
Check out the cover of a book I picked up recently - Kayaks of Greenland by Harvey Golden:
"Cover: A hunter from Arsuk (between Paamiut and Qaqortoq) with a seal in tow and a light dusting of snow. 1937, Photographer: Jette Bang / Arktisk Institut (gjb02548)"
Yep, you can see the seal (his dinner?) floating in the water in the foreground. It's amazing that this guy is so tough he only needs a flat cap to keep warm while paddling in seriously cold conditions, no ear flaps in view. No life vest either, BTW. As I understand it, since they were wedged so tightly into the boats and the water is so cold, the only way to survive a capsize (seals often take the kayak on a 'ride' after getting harpooned) is to Eskimo roll back up. If you come out of the boat and have to swim, you ain't gonna make it anyway, so a flotation vest is pointless.
It's a great book, by the way, all you ever needed to know about Greenlandic kayak design evolution.
I should plug the book, since I'm borrowing the photo:
http://www.traditionalkayaks.com/AboutKOG.html
"Cover: A hunter from Arsuk (between Paamiut and Qaqortoq) with a seal in tow and a light dusting of snow. 1937, Photographer: Jette Bang / Arktisk Institut (gjb02548)"
Yep, you can see the seal (his dinner?) floating in the water in the foreground. It's amazing that this guy is so tough he only needs a flat cap to keep warm while paddling in seriously cold conditions, no ear flaps in view. No life vest either, BTW. As I understand it, since they were wedged so tightly into the boats and the water is so cold, the only way to survive a capsize (seals often take the kayak on a 'ride' after getting harpooned) is to Eskimo roll back up. If you come out of the boat and have to swim, you ain't gonna make it anyway, so a flotation vest is pointless.
It's a great book, by the way, all you ever needed to know about Greenlandic kayak design evolution.
I should plug the book, since I'm borrowing the photo:
http://www.traditionalkayaks.com/AboutKOG.html