I was in a field camp with a group of Inuit hunters a couple years ago. We were drying a bunch of fish (Arctic char) and the gulls were getting into it all the time. What the guys do in that situation is to kill a gull and lay it on the rocks by the fish - keeps the others gulls away. A bunch of the guys were down on the beach with an old rusty bolt-action 22 LR shooting at the gulls. The gun owner shot and missed twice, he passed the gun to another guy who shot once and missed. I walked over and laughed, asked for the gun, and told em it was going to take a white guy to show the Inuks how to shoot. I got down on the rock they were using for a rest, lined up the sights, and smoked the biggest gull there. I looked back at the guys, laughed, and said "told ya". It wasn't an impossible shot by any means, really nothing to brag about, but it increased the level of respect the local hunters had for this "southerner" in their camp.
I always find that being able to shoot and hunt makes a world of difference when you're in the Arctic, these guys hunt and fish for a living (subsistence), literally living of their shooting ability, and being "one of the boys" is a huge help in the camps. A similar case last summer, in a different place, I had a Remmy 870 there for bear protection, and a box of cheap # 4 for practice. I took all the local hunters with me to teach them how to shoot the shotgun (they're generally rifle people and not that familiar with shotties). After everyone had a couple shots to get a feel for the gun, I took it back and asked one of the locals to throw an old piece of bone up in the air. I put three shells in the gun, hit the bone in the air with the first shot, hit it again as soon as it hit the ground, and then hit it the third time as it was landing again. I'm no Tom Knapp or anything, but when I turned around all the Inuit hunters had their mouths wide open, speechless. The first one to speak smiled and said "can you teach me how to do that?", and the younger kids followed me around very closely for the rest of the week - every time they saw me with the Remmy they came running down the beach, haha.