Even before the hunters were off the phone, Kristin Laidre was out of her pajamas and struggling into a survival suit. She ran down to the beach, where a motorboat awaited. The night was frigid with ice-chip stars; the northern lights glowed green overhead. Laidre and a colleague sped past looming bergs and black cliffs plated with ice to the spot offshore where the villagers' boats were circling. The whale was there, a thrashing ton of panic amid the swells. Laidre could see its outline in the water and smell its sour breath.
The scientists and hunters maneuvered boats and began hauling in the nylon net that had been strung from shore and floated with plastic buoys. It was exceptionally heavy because it was soaking wet and, Laidre would recall, "there was a whale in it." Once the mottled black animal was in a secure hammock, they could slip a rope on its tail and a hoop net over its head and float it back to the beach to be measured and tagged.
But something was wrong. The whale seemed to be only partially caught—snagged by the head or tail, Laidre wasn't sure. The hunters screamed at each other, the seas heaved and the boats drifted toward the fierce cliffs. The hunters fought to bring the whale up, and for a moment it seemed as if the animal, a big female, was theirs—Laidre reached out and touched its rubbery skin.
Then the whale went under and the net went limp, and with a sinking heart Laidre shined her pale headlamp into water as dark as oil.
The narwhal was gone.
Kristin Laidre did not set out to wrestle whales in the devastatingly cold waters off Greenland's west coast. She wanted to be a ballerina. Growing up near landlocked Saratoga Springs, New York, where the New York City Ballet spends its summer season, she discovered the choreography of George Balanchine and trained throughout her teens to be an elite dancer. After high school, she danced with the Pacific Northwest Ballet, one of the nation's most competitive companies, and while practicing a grueling 12 hours a day performed in Romeo and Juliet, Cinderella and The Firebird.
Wearing hiking boots instead of toe shoes, she still carries herself with a dancer's grace, a perfect surety of movement that suggests she can execute a plié or stand up to a polar bear with equal competence. Laidre's three-year dance career ended after a foot injury, but she says ballet prepared her rather well for her subsequent incarnation as an arctic biologist and perhaps America's leading expert on narwhals, the shy and retiring cetaceans with the "unicorn horn"—actually a giant tooth—found only in the Greenlandic and Canadian Arctic.
"When you are a ballet dancer you learn how to suffer," Laidre explains. "You learn to be in conditions that aren't ideal, but you persist because you're doing something you love and care about. I have a philosophy that science is art, that there is creativity involved, and devotion. You need artistry to be a scientist."
Like the elusive whale she studies, which follows the spread and retreat of the ice edge, Laidre, 33, has become a migratory creature. After earning undergraduate and doctoral degrees at the University of Washington, she now spends part of her year at its Polar Science Center, and the rest of the time she works with collaborators in Denmark or Greenland, conducting aerial surveys, picking through whale stomachs and setting up house in coastal hunting settlements, where she hires hunters to catch narwhals. Along the way she has learned to speak Danish and rudimentary West Greenlandic.
The Greenlandic phrase she hears most often—whenever the weather blows up or the transmitters malfunction or the whales don't show—is immaqa aqagu. Maybe tomorrow.
That's because she's devoted to what she calls "possibly the worst study animal in the world." Narwhals live in the cracks of dense pack ice for much of the year. They flee from motorboats and helicopters. They can't be herded toward shore like belugas, and because they're small (for whales) and maddeningly fast, it's little use trying to tag them with transmitters shot from air rifles. They must be netted and manhandled, although Laidre is trying a variation on an aboriginal method, attaching transmitters to modified harpoons that hunters toss from stealthy Greenlandic kayaks.
Related topics: Whales Weird Animals Biology Arctic Ocean
Additional Sources
Greenland's Winter Whales: The beluga, the narwhal and the bowhead whale by Mads Peter Heide-Jorgensen and Kristin Laidre, Greenland Institute of Natural Resources, c. Ilinniusiorfik Undervisningsmiddelforlag, 2006
"Winter Feeding Intensity of Narwhals (Monodon Monoceros)" by K. L. Laidre, School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington (Seattle), and M. P. Heide-Jorgensen, Greenland Institute of Natural Resources, Nuuk, Greenland, Marine Mammal Science, January 2005


Comments
a nice picture of mysterious narwhal. great picture!!!
Posted by abigail liang on April 21,2009 | 05:44PM
I so enjoyed reading the article on the narwhal. We have a floor lamp made from a narwhal tusk. My husband's grandfather was a sea captain in the early 1900s and brought it home to Yarmouth NS, Canada where someone had it wired and made into a lamp which we use every day. I would be interested to know if this is legal to sell because of the age. My husband and i are in our 70s and 80s so we might possibly have an auction in the near future.
Posted by Marcie Rogers on April 23,2009 | 07:32AM
Marcie, The author advised in the article that "It has been illegal to import narwhal tusk into the United States since the 1972 Marine Mammal Protection Act, but material known to have entered the nation earlier can be bought and sold." Therefore, it would appear your fine to sell the ivory. However, if it was mine, I would hand it down to your husband's family members so his family has a connection to the past. (along with other personal effects from your husband's grandfather)
Posted by Steven Rowell on April 24,2009 | 08:35AM
Is the book Greenland's Winter Whales available in the US? It does not come up in a search of Amazon.com nor bookfinder.com Thank you.
Posted by Lee Barnhardt on April 27,2009 | 03:51PM
Just finished reading this, what an amazing story. Kudos to Ms. Laidre for taking on such an amazing and elusive animal for study. Such single minded focus, I hope that her efforts are rewarded handsomely and the scientific community benefits from her efforts.
Posted by Gene Harrison on April 27,2009 | 07:33PM
What majestic creatures!
Posted by Katie on April 29,2009 | 08:34AM
Marcie Rogers--instead of seeking to profit from your narwhal tush, why don't you donate it to a museum or place like the Smithsonian so future generations and the scientific community can benefit?
Posted by Melitta on May 1,2009 | 08:57AM
Congrats to Ms. Laidre, I know her from UW and the professor she worked with and being a fellow dancer turned scientist she has inspired me to keep doing both, which I am equally passionate about although my animal is Killer Whales.
Posted by Kailey Genther on May 3,2009 | 10:26PM
awww. i want a narwhal
Posted by melissa on May 4,2009 | 10:13AM
A fantastic piece of writing.
Posted by Chris on May 7,2009 | 07:25AM
I hope she never catches this animal, because their goals are too cruel.
Posted by Nikita Kondraskov on May 7,2009 | 05:46PM
Very revealing. The resemblance between narwhal tusks and the unicorn horns seen in paintings is remarkable.
Posted by Cleve on May 8,2009 | 11:20AM
Thanks I so surprised and enjoyed reading about narwhal and Kristin Laidre.I wish all the best to Kristin.
Posted by Piret Kerem on May 12,2009 | 11:23PM
Not only did I enjoy the topic of this article, but I was thoroughly impressed by how well-written it was. It reads like a story. Now who to root for: Laidre for her perseverance or the narwhal to maintain their fairytale mystery?
Posted by Julie on May 19,2009 | 05:09PM
Do You Think We Should Hunt Narwhals? i vote No GO NARWHALS!!!
Posted by on October 9,2009 | 03:52AM
Unicorn of the sea?
I disagree, they are more like the Jedi of the sea.
.... And inventors of the shish-kebab.
Posted by Krev Zabijak on October 25,2009 | 05:18PM