Seal, ring seal in particular, is considered a "country food" and is on of the most plentiful and commonly harvested of all the marine mammal country food sources in the Canadian High Arctic. It is very nutritious and of high caloric value which is necessary for dogs (and humans) who live and work in severe polar conditions.
Seal is but one of the many responsibly harvested food sources consumed by both hard working dogs and humans who prefer nutritious traditional country foods to much of what is imported from the south.
Sue Hamilton
Editor/Publisher, The Fan Hitch, Journal of the Inuit Sled Dog International
http:/homepage.mac.com/puggiq
The Inuit will eat fish, and deer and seal meat, also caribou if available
Yes of course you can. Seal eyeballs are the tastiest part and are prized by the Inuit as a delicacy.
polar bear,seal,fish,berries,birds,and carabou.
bearded seal, ringed seal,walrus,beluga whale,caribou,polar bear,and muskoxen
"Seal" translates to "natsiq" in Inuktitut.
Natsiq
Seal blubber. Lots and lots of seal blubber.
No - Inuit leaders have repeatedly informed EU Commissioners that as the Inuit sell seal pelts to open fur auctions they suffer the same market price decline due to the EU ban as non-Inuit sealers
fish, whale, and seal that's all i can remeber right now sorry if i dont have all.
caibou seal and narwhale
They use seal bone and fur.
Whale bone and seal skins and wood