These games include the knuckle hop, airplane planking, foot racing and various hopping games. Each game requires balance and control and some closely mimic the skills necessary to be a successful hunter.

What sport did the Inuit play?

The Arctic Games include many of the same games as in the Winter Olympics (hockey, speed skating, and curling). However they also feature arctic sports such as dog mushing and snowshoeing along with traditional Inuit games like the Ear Pull, One Foot High Kick, Kneel Jump, Airplane, and Knuckle Hop.

What is the blanket toss?

a game in which a person is repeatedly tossed into the air and caught on an open blanket by a group of people who hold the blanket at its edges and stretch and relax it for each toss and catch.

What is the purpose of the Eskimo blanket toss?

The object: to maintain balance and return to the blanket without falling over.

How do you play knuckle hop?

Knuckle Hop In this game, the player takes a pushup position with his hands in fists so that all upper body weight is placed on the knuckles. The player then lifts up his legs and bounces forward on his fists and toes. The player who goes the furthest distance wins.

What is Inuit High Kick?

The Inuit one-foot high kick is a traditional competition that is similar to the two foot high kick. In this competition the competitor stands on one foot, jumps in the air and hits a ball or piece of seal such as a ringed seal, which is suspended from a gallows and then lands on the same foot.

What achievements did the Inuits have?

The Inuit made very clever things from the bones, antlers, and wood they had. They invented the harpoon, which was used to hunt seals and whales. They built boats from wood or bone covered with animal skins. They invented the kayak for one man to use for hunting the ocean and among the pack ice.

Do Eskimos celebrate Thanksgiving?

First, it is a celebration of thanksgiving for success. Second, it is the first of several times during the year when quaq (frozen whale meat) and muktuk (whale blubber and skin) are distributed to the community. The ability to produce and distribute wealth among the community is highly valued in Eskimo cultures.

What is the Alaskan high kick?

High kick is an Alaskan Native game that tests your ability to jump as high as you can, kick a ball that’s at head level or higher, then land back on that same foot. The game is played with some type of marker, usually a ball but you may use something else as well.

What foods do the Inuit eat?

These traditional Inuit foods include arctic char, seal, polar bear and caribou — often consumed raw, frozen or dried. The foods, which are native to the region, are packed with the vitamins and nutrients people need to stay nourished in the harsh winter conditions.

What are the rules of one foot high kick?

The One-Foot High Kick demands great flexibility and leg strength. From a standing or running start, athletes jump with both feet, kick a suspended ball with one foot, then land on the kicking foot—without losing balance (they may hop several times on the kicking foot to regain balance).

What is Alaskan whaling?

Whaling has been a part of the Alaska Eskimo culture since time immemorial. Alaskan whaling villages are among the most remote communities in the world. Not connected by the road system, they are reliant on the subsistence hunt of the bowhead whale for their survival.

Who are the Alaska Eskimo Whaling Commission?

The members of Alaska Eskimo Whaling Commission are the registered whaling captains and their crew members of the eleven whaling communities of the Arctic Alaska coast: Gambell, Savoonga, Wales, Little Diomede, Kivalina, Point Hope, Point Lay, Wainwright, Barrow, Nuiqsut, and Kaktovik.

Where are the whaling villages in Alaska?

This spring, Arnold Brower, Jr. and Billy Adams conducted village training in Utqiagvik, Wainwright, Point Hope, and Nuiqsut. Whaling has been a part of the Alaska Eskimo culture since time immemorial. Alaskan whaling villages are among the most remote communities in the world.

Why do Inupiat share the whale?

Sharing the whale is both an honor and an obligation. A hunter in training, this Inupiat youth participates in the Blanket Toss in Utqiagvik as part of Nalukataq, the celebration hosted by each successful whaling captain. Picture: Jenny Evans.