Tax season here. 7 changes for 2015 (and 9 of the weirdest deductions)

To help you fill out your 2014 returns and plan for 2015, here are few tax changes, big and small, for 2015 – and nine of the most peculiar deductions.

10. Deduction: whaling equipment

Ken Balcomb/Center for Whale Research/AP/File
A new baby orca whale swims near its mother near Vancouver Island in the Canadian Gulf Islands of British Columbia.

Whale hunting is essentially banned in the United States, but it remains a protected trade for a small group of indigenous Alaskans. After 2004, that protection extended to taxes: Whale hunters can write-off up to $10,000 on whale-related expenses, including boat repairs, equipment, harpoons, and crew food.

Though you would think this would inspire an uptick in indigenous Alaskans pursuing bowhead whales in freezing waters, whale hunting is still limited to a seasonal, sacred tradition in which only a few whales are killed.

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