Karen, he always was!An updated report (hope I can find it) said he was not hunting per se, but went out to check the hunting area, which is not in good shape.
He went out on snowmobile, and was heading back on the hard and icy trail when he saw the gap in the ice. He already had a satellite phone with him. A chopper dropped extra batteries, a tent and food. He set himself up very well, but sure was getting tired of being out there.
My dad was stationed in Inuvik (100 miles north of the Arctic Circle) during my ages og 5 - 9. He was a pilot with the RCMP and I recall him referring to a few trips where he was flying to "Resolute". Even then - early 60's - they at least had radio contact.
(Inuvik had only a movie theater and CBC radio...that was IT! lol)
Here is the bit I was looking for:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/...rticle1442681/
And just found this update - Oh, dear.David Idlout, a 39-year-old hunter from Resolute, Nunavut, set out from his home Friday morning to check on the sorry state of local hunting grounds when he ran into trouble.
For much of the winter, warm weather had softened his favoured sealing grounds, turning them into a chunky porridge of floe ice. With temperatures plunging below minus-30, Mr. Idlout hopped on his snowmobile to see if conditions had improved.
They hadn't.
As he roared homeward from the floes, making sure to re-trace his icy path, he noticed the trail ahead fall away into an expanse of open water. He realized then that the pan of ice he'd been whizzing across had broken away and was now drifting slowly across the Arctic Ocean.
A seasonal hunting guide, he was prepared for disaster. He dug a satellite phone from his gear and called his common-law wife, Tracy Kalluk.
If only technology could change the weather!
http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2010/...-stranded.html
Bad weather continues to hinder the rescue of a hunter who has been stranded on a drifting ice floe in the Northwest Passage since Friday.
A Cormorant helicopter remains grounded, waiting for better weather to fly out and lift David Idlout to safety from his icy raft south of Resolute, Nunavut.
Blizzards thwarted attempts to rescue Idlout over the weekend. But a Hercules transport aircraft was able to drop food, water, a tent, batteries, fuel and a locator beacon for him.
Idlout, 39, left Friday on a seal hunt and was snowmobiling at the edge of the sea ice, about 15 kilometres from Resolute, when a large chunk of ice broke free and he drifted out to sea.
The weather is 31 C, feeling like 40 C with the windchill.
The experienced hunter had a satellite phone with him and called his wife, Tracy. She called her father, who called the coast guard. Idlout was able to build himself an ice shelter.
Early attempts at a rescue were thwarted when a helicopter sent to Resolute to pluck the man off the ice was unable to take off due to mechanical problems.






An updated report (hope I can find it) said he was not hunting per se, but went out to check the hunting area, which is not in good shape.
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