When the fathers first reach the beach, and set about making the home
ready for their families, they will not allow any of the young bachelor
seals to land near the rookeries. They force them either to remain in the
water, or to go to the highlands above the village.
The bachelor seals think they have as much right to a comfortable home as
the older seals, and so they fight hard to enter the villages.
This fighting keeps up the whole summer while the seals are out of the
water, and those who have seen these battles say that "night and day, the
sound of them is like that of an approaching railway train."
So steadily does the fighting continue that the old seals have no time to
eat, and during the three or four months they stay with their families on
the beaches they never take a mouthful of food. At the end of the time,
when they leave the rookeries, they are thin and miserable, and covered
with battle scars.
The killing of the seals should be carefully arranged with a knowledge of
these habits.
The proper rules are that no mother seals, baby seals, or father seals
shall be killed, but that the hunters shall watch until the badly behaved
bachelor seals have got tired with fighting, and gone up above the
rookeries to rest. The hunters ought then to creep in between the seals
and the water, and making a noise to frighten them drive them inland.
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