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Map showing Barrow and Fairbanks, Alaska

The blanket toss is part of Naluqatak, a spring festival held in Native Alaskan villages across Alaska's Arctic north slope. Most people in Barrow are at least part-native and hundreds have turned out, many in traditionally-made coats of animal fur, to celebrate another catch: whale.

Twice a year Native Alaskan communities like this hunt whale. It's legal and not commercial, and for thousands of years people in the Alaskan Arctic have depended on the meat.

Major environmental groups don't condone the hunting but tolerate it as an intrinsic part of a subsistence culture.

It's not really subsistence any more, but tribal elders say chicken or steak bought in a shop is not enough - their bodies crave whale blubber.

At the spring whaling festival, everyone rejoices and shares in the harvest.

Local meats are cooked and served, including caribou stew and goose soup. But the main attraction is boiled whale meat, including the giant mammals' organs.

The delay effectively puts back Shell's plans till next year but the company says it will be back.

"The Gulf of Mexico may have been a wake-up call for some but not for Shell," says Pete Slaiby, vice-president of Shell Alaska.

"We would not have put the money down on these leases had we not felt we could go in and drill these leases safely."

Earlier this year, before the order to postpone, Shell reassured the US government it could work safely in Arctic waters.

It said it would be drilling at a depth of 150ft (46m), not 5,000ft as in the case of BP's leaking well, making it easier to deal with a blowout.

Shell also pointed out the cold Arctic waters would render any spilled oil more viscous, so it would not spread as far. (The converse is that the warm waters and sunshine in the Gulf of Mexico help break down oil.)

And the company said it would position state-of-the-art vessels by the drill site so it could respond to a spill within an hour.

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