Long before marine biologists began tagging pinnipeds or calculating biomass, Kwakiutl families, my family, understood the rhythms, migrations, and behaviours of ts’áxwi (harbour seals) intimately.
Seals were never merely animals of the sea; they were participants in the community of beings, woven through stories, ceremony, and the practical technologies that allowed coastal life to flourish.
This deep relationship is reflected vividly in one of the most important annual institutions of Kwakiutl society: the Seal Society.
The Seal Society (Tsawadi): Winter Dances, Identity, and the First Step Into Knowledge
During the winter tseka—the great ceremonial season—First Nation communities transformed their bighouses into worlds between worlds. Flames swayed across cedar-planked walls. Dancers and masked performers embodied supernatural beings, ancestors, and the animal nations with whom the Kwakiutl share their homelands.
Among these dramatic and spiritually potent societies, the Seal Society (Tsawadi) held special significance.
For younger initiates, it was often the first step on a lifelong path into deeper ceremonial knowledge. Through dance, drama, and story, they learned to see the seal not only as a source of subsistence but as a teacher of adaptability, cooperation, and ocean wisdom.
The performances were more than representations—they were conversations across species, reaffirming relationships renewed each winter.
The Most Useful Animal of the Salt Chuck
Kwakiutl oral historians often remark that no other sea animal has been more consistently useful than the seal. Before the arrival of Europeans, seals provided:
- Meat and fat — rich, nutritious, and vital for winter survival
- Skin and fur — warm, water-resistant, stitched into clothing, blankets, and waterproof gear
- Intestines and sinew — fashioned into floats, fishing nets, and line
- Oil — for lamps, waterproofing, and trade
Because the seal was gentle and could be quietly approached on rocky islets and river-mouth sandbars, it became an essential part of coastal subsistence rounds.
Even feasts—the great ceremonial showcases of wealth, generosity, and status—featured seal meat as a prestige dish. The most tender portions were reserved for honoured guests. Thus, the seal became a motif in carved feast bowls, cooking vessels, and serving dishes, often inlaid with glistening abalone shell. I have a beautiful carved seal bowl that holds a place of honour in my house.
To eat seal at a potlatch was not simply to partake of food; it was to acknowledge relationship, territory, and gratitude.
The Thunder Bird and the Cedar Stump: A Kwakiutl Legend of Hunger and Humility
Stories, like tides, reveal deeper truths beneath the surface. Among the Kwakiutl, one legend tells of Tootooch, the Thunder Bird—a being of immense power and appetite—whose hunger leads to a moment of both humour and humility.
One day, Thunder Bird descended near the mouth of a river where a herd of seals slept on the rocks.
Using a rough club, he struck them down, piled them into a great roast, and consumed the lot.
But even after the feast, he remained ravenous—a reminder that supernatural hunger is never easily satisfied.
Borrowing a man’s canoe and seal spear, he hunted four more seals and placed them atop fire-heated rocks to cook. Needing skunk cabbage leaves to wrap the meat, he left his feast unattended beside a great cedar stump.
Before leaving he teased the stump:
“Don’t you wish you had some?”
But cedar stumps are not as passive as they appear.
While Thunder Bird was away, the stump crept over—quiet as old growth moss—and sat directly on the roasting seals, flattening and spoiling the meal. When Thunder Bird returned, he wept and cursed, fearing the long hunger ahead before he could find more seals.
To the Kwakiutl, the story is a reminder of humility before the natural world—and a playful nudge toward respecting even those beings we think rooted and still. Kwakiutl stories and practices align strikingly with ecological realities that scientists are only now fully appreciating.
Harbour Seals (Phoca vitulina richardsi)
Common along the BC coast, they haul out on beaches, rocks, and estuaries—the very places described in oral traditions. Genetic studies show strong site fidelity: seals return to the same haul-outs generation after generation, much as families return to ancestral fishing grounds.
Elephant Seals (Mirounga angustirostris)
Once hunted nearly to extinction, they are now returning to Vancouver Island, Haida Gwaii and all the waters of the Pacific Northwest—something First Nation Guardians and researchers alike have noted with fascination.
Today, we Kwakwaka'wakw continue to honour seals through art, stories, and cultural practice. This knowledge offers a vital human perspective to modern marine conservation—our ecosystems are not only ecological networks, but relationships of reciprocity, story, and responsibility.
And in every tale—from scientific surveys to Thunder Bird’s misadventures—one truth remains:
The seal is not merely an animal of the sea. It is a relative, a resource, a teacher, and a partner in the great living web of the Northwest Coast.


.jpg)












.png)


%20(1).png)












