Living off the Land or Out of the Can?
What did the members of the CAE eat?
Mealtimes for the members of the CAE ran the gamut
of the expected
and the
distasteful.
Off the Land
"When I returned home Billy [Natkusiak] had a supper of
wolf meat cooked for me. Wolf meat is fine eating and somewhat resembles chicken,
but as usual the thoughts of taking some unaccustomed food was repugnant to me
but never-the-less I enjoyed the supper, and any more wolf meat that we have will
not go to waste if I am hungry" (Wilkins Diary, September 1914, northern
Banks Island).
Out of the Can
"Have been doing a little writing today, and tired of
being pestered by Pete for the menu I have made out a weekly one as follows: Sunday
bacon, potatoes, carrots; Monday rice and peas; Tuesday tomatoes,
string beans, sweet potatoes; Wednesday honey, cabbage; Thursday
corn, mashed vegetables; Friday fish, rice, cabbage, sweet potatoes; Saturday
beans, oysters, tomatoes. Every day we have some kind of dried or canned fruit
and always doughnuts and preserves and butter on the side, so we are not actually
starving, although we might easily die because of our food, for it is not extravagantly
prepared. I can hardly blame Pete for it, for we have not enough coal to keep
the stove going all day, so he has to do the best he can with two primus stoves"
(Wilkins Diary, December 1, 1915, Kellett Base).
Feeding on Fish
For the Southern Party, whose expectations of living on caribou
meat were dashed when the caribou migration moved farther east along the coast,
fish became a major local source of food. Anderson bought 300 pounds of dried
salmon from Albert Bernhardt in Teller, Alaska, on the way north, but additional
supplies of fish had to be gathered almost constantly.
Off the Country
Although Stefansson promoted the idea of living off the country,
his parties carried large amounts of food to supplement their hunting. Food supplies
were a major part of the preparations of the Expedition and took up much room
on the Expedition ships. For the men working from Expedition headquarters or major
camps, only the variety of the food was a problem.
The men of the Northern Party were pleased to discover a cache
left on Melville Island by Captain Bernier during a previous Canadian arctic survey:
"Oct 25, 1916. Have been occupied the last 3 days in repairing harnesses,
making blankets for the dogs with thin fur, hauling ice and various other chores.
Took a walk yesterday but saw nothing but fox and hare tracks. Storkerson Castill
and Split arrived at 2 pm. today. They have been to Winter Harbor where they found
a fine cache which was left by Capt. Bernier at the Arctic Expedition 1906-10.
In the cache was a large variety of things which will as far as the years work
is concerned will put us on easy street. There was sugar, milk, beans, peas, corn,
butter, lanternes, axes, rope, sawes [?], and in fact everything one could wish
for. The coal oil of which there is about 40 gal. is the best of all, with this
we can with a little economy get along very well this winter and next spring"
(Harold Noice Diary, 1915 - 1917, National Archives of Canada MG30 B16).
While the northern Party was out travelling on the sea ice,
seals and polar bears provided the food for men and dogs. At Banks Island, and
along the mainland coast, carcasses of bowhead whales killed the previous year
(some by the schooner Polar Bear) provided abundant food for dogs and were
a major attraction for polar bears and foxes.
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- Video:
Stefansson dragging a seal
- Video:
McConnell and Storkerson skinning a seal on the ice
- Video:
Hunters returning to camp with Arctic hares
- Video:
An Inuk filling a sealskin poke with blubber.
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Caching Food
While travelling, the advance teams made caches of supplies
for those who followed. This diary note on a cache left on southern Melville Island
is typical:
"Cache at Cape James Ross. Made by Storkerson, Thompson,
Anderson, Illun, Picalo and myself. The cache is about 1 mi. W of the Tip of the
Cape. It is in a hole chopped in the ice on the landward side of a high pressure
ridge. The English Flag was lashed to an ice spear which was driven in the ice
beside the cache.
Rice
|
130 lbs
|
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Blanket Pants
|
2pr.
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Sugar
|
160
|
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D[ee]r. [pants]
|
3pr.
|
Chocolate
|
110
|
|
Snow Pants
|
3
|
M[an]. Pemm.
|
468
|
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Snow Shirt
|
1
|
D[og]. Pemm.
|
96
|
|
Fur Mitt
|
3pr
|
Crachlins
|
84
|
|
Wool Socks
|
12
|
Milk Dry
|
50
|
|
Wool Socks, Light
|
3
|
Condensed Milk
|
14 cans |
|
Fur Socks |
3 |
Butter |
6 |
|
Fur
stockings |
1 |
Tobacco |
4 |
|
Moose
H Mitt |
2pr |
Pea Soup |
5 |
|
Horse
Hide |
1pr |
Alcohol |
4 gal |
|
Gloves
|
1pr |
Distilate |
20 |
|
Wool
Mitts |
2pr |
Kerosene |
30 |
|
Wool
Duffles |
7pr |
Tea Tablets? |
2300 |
|
Cod
line |
2 coils |
Matches |
3 cans |
|
Ogruk
line |
2 coils |
Boots
|
8pr
|
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"
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Harold Noice Diary, 1917 (National Archives of Canada, MG 30 B16)
Raiders of the Cache
Caches of prepared and packaged food were relatively safe from
prowling wolves or polar bears. However, when fresh meat such as caribou or muskox
carcasses were cached in winter, they were usually vulnerable to these predators:
"January 8th. Started out again and crossed the gulf to the other side were
Storkersen had a meat cache. Dist 17 m weather good. On our arrival there, we
found the cache robed by wolfs not a splinter of meat left. As I have always maintained
depending on meat caches this time of year where day and night is alike and a
man has got no tjans [chance] to get game if the cache faisl [fails] is fools
work and poor managment and should not exist in an expedition like this. We will
have to cache our loads here, and go home for dog feed" (Karsten Andersen
Diary, January 1917).
For those travelling by dog sled in winter, the presence or absence of game was
critical. When supplies began to run out and hunting was not successful, even
an old garbage heap could be a potential and welcome source of food. At times
men on the Northern Party were reduced to eating rotting meat from long-dead muskoxen.
"On trail 2 P.M. reached the Cape Grassy camp at 12:00
midnight. found the camp deserted. Note left here by Alignak stating that they
left here the 16th. They had no meat and very little fat. they left us one gal
coal oil and we found a little tea which they evidently had overlooked. We had
about 1 lbs of flour left. Billy went out and found an old ox head along with
the pound of flour gave us supper and a little for breakfast. Fed the dogs some
old booth [boot] soles and some scraps of skin. They had nothing but soles and
scraps of skin since April 24th. When we leave here we will have to depend on
the country for game if we get something tomorrow we might save all our dogs.
Two of which are completely played out. "Tansie" one of Seymores old
dogs had to be led in he could not stand up in harness. Weather. Overcast with
strong breeze from SW. Clear at midnight" (Castel Diary, April 28, 1917,
Melville Island).
"Started out on an empty stomack. Billy and Storkersen
went overland hunting. Castel, Ikuma and I sluged on the sleeds. Janser droped
on the trail was unable to stand up any more. I put him on the sleed trying to
save him as he is our old leader. We got to the snowhouse in the bay late at night
all in. Storkersen and Billy was there ahead of us, they had no luck hunting.
We started diging for some muskoxen carcus left here last fall, we dug all night
and finaly had the luck to strike one towards morning under an 8 foot snowbank,
the wolfs had eat one side, but there was still enough left for a feed for us
and the dogs. It was very roten but we did not wait, went down on hand and knees
and dug in with our knives to fill our stomack, when we finaly had enough we feed
the poor dogs they had almost forgoten what a feed was. It come too late for Janser,
he died soon after" (Karsten Andersen Diary, April 30, 1917, Melville Island).
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