Those wooden sea yaks are a work of art! Way cool post.
Traditional arctic kayaks were made by skin-on-frame construction, similar to early airplanes. Seal skin was traditionally used for the skin, thought ballistic nylon is now much more common.
This is the frame of one I built last year before skinning. Strong and light, the completed kayak is 18.5' long and weighs just 27#.
The event is centered around Traditional Greenland kayaking, but anyone with another suitable kayak is welcome to learn the paddling and rolling techniques. Or, they can hop in a fleet kayak, first come, first serve. Greenland kayaks, Aleutian baidarkas (Actually baidarka is the Russian term for "little boat". Ikyax is the Aleutian name.), and modern sea kayaks in everything from skin-on-frame, stitch and glue, and strip-built, to polyethylene, fiberglass, and kelvar construction were in attendance.
Dang, that looks really cool! No way I would get in that water though. I'm cold just looking at it lol
Hence, you see everyone in drysuits and tuiliks.
Cold water actually isn't bad at all when dressed for it.
I love the under quilts. Did you buy them? If so, where? I need a good one myself.
These are 850+fill goose down quilts from Underground Quilts (UGQ). I've had quilts by 3 manufacturers, and these are the best quilts made, IMO. I have 20* set and a 40* set of their Zeppelin and Flight Jacket quilts. Their underquilts are quite wide for excellent coverage and have a great suspension that doesn't let the underquilt shift or sag.