In the past however, nomadic Eskimos had relied on ice fishing as a primary means of survival. Eskimo ice fishing would also include several different concepts, like the hunting of seals and sea lions for their oil and fur, and also the exploitation of these animals to capture fish. Seals and sea lions are left free but harnessed and their throats bound with cord. When they swam underwater to catch fish, the cords would prevent them from swallowing their catch.
The actual Eskimo ice fishing practice is really no different from today's methods, chipping a hole in the ice and putting the lure through. Eskimos are usually padded warmly, but sometimes they would erect temporary igloos as shelters or else built a direct bonfire shielded from the wind by a snow wall. This would give them suitable heat during the duration of the Eskimo ice fishing.
There's no fill on Eskimo ice fishing. Eskimo fishermen would catch all the fish they can, stringing unconsumed fish and drying them in the sun. They would salt these fishes and store them over periods as long as a year.
Meat can be available to Eskimos by the means of hunting snow borne animals. These include bear, moose, caribou and almost all mammals that the nomadic Eskimos happen to cross by. That is because game animals are very scarce in the artic region and leather and fur are very prized commodities. It is not uncommon that leather especially is reused, with leather garments aging several generations or else recycles to entirely new garments.
Because the purportedly solitariness of Eskimo ice fishing, many non Eskimos have taken ice fishing but as an extreme sport. As a sport of fishing, it is as challenging as it sounds. The first real challenge is patience. Though fishing is always an application of patience, compounded with the fact that it's often bitterly cold, and there's not much to see beyond an expanse blanket of white, Eskimo ice fishing is known to break down patience. That's why Eskimo ice fishing is getting popular as a social activity than a solitary adventure, where groups of acquaintances will travel together and live together for a few days, with the sole purpose of Eskimo ice fishing.
As reflective to its solitary nature, Eskimo ice fishing had also become an increasingly popular rehabilitating pastime. For a sport, it gives the right amount of contemplative
... ice shelter houses moved by the ice mobiles, the development of ice fishing augers to drill deeper holes in a lesser amount of time, ice fishing heaters that come in different types and models, and other ice fishing gadgets that help anglers focus on fishing instead of just preparing to fish. If ice fishers ...
... prepare the proper gear and gadgets that call for such circumstance. No angler would want to go ice fishing and freeze to death, so ensure that everything is ready --- from warm clothes, to drilling and fishing equipments, portable ice fishing heaters, ice shelters, etc. It's better to be safe, protected, ...
... Fjords, Sj , Mj sa, Vatn, Tjern, J vr sj, and J vrre make up the estimated 450,000 bodies of water found in Norway. Some of these lakes, the Vatn, are small and shallow, making ice form easily, and a good few of them, the Mj sas, encompass an area of more than 5 square kilometers. These lakes freezes ...
... in your area for ice fishing guidelines and tips, or other available public records in the internet or in your library or in your ice fishing unit for updated facts and information. Well, you may actually just go out and enjoy ice fishing without checking but be sure that you are willing and ready to ...
... the most interesting fish species to study, with their lifecycle the rarest to be found of all fish. They are the only fish specie to migrate upon hatching from a freshwater basin to the nearest sea. There they will take their time to mature, where upon maturity and on spawning seasons, these mature salmons ...