Husky Dog Sledding in Lapland

Similar documents
Family safari Tuesday & Friday at 15:00. Icefishing by snowmobile Tuesday at 10:00. Lappish Hell Canyon Thursday at 10:00

Please initial and date as your child has completely mastered reading each column.

VOCABULARY CLICK WORDS FOR MORE!

Reader s Theater. A short play on the rules of the Iditarod Race. Written by Jennifer Slifer, Cromwell Middle School, Cromwell, CT.

Read the article The Pony Express before answering Numbers 1 through 5. The Pony Express

Nebraska Dog and Hunt Club Junior Hunt Test

Clean Air. Ann is sick. But I have a pal who may know. She. is a fine doctor and I think you need to go see

PARTICIPANT INFORMATION 8-day arctic mushing safari package

Apples. Quiz Questions

The Black Dog PRE-READING ACTIVITIES. 1 Look at the picture. Then write the correct letter next to each word. 2 Match the sentences to the pictures.

Peter and Dragon. By Stephen

Sam and the Bag Spelling Words Vocabulary Words. The Hat Spelling Words Vocabulary Words. Tap Map Mad A The. Cap. Mad. Up Go

Did you know the peanut is not really a nut? It. looks like one, but it s not. Peanuts are the seeds of a plant and belong to the pea family.

Finnish Predators 23rd September to 2nd October 2017 Photographic tour with tour leader Danny Green

Collars, Harnesses & Leashes

How much wool does a lamb grow every year? About seven pounds altogether. That s enough to make two warm coats or four pairs of pants.

The Yukon adventure for Youngcare

Tenses worksheet for class 9

EUROPEAN KANGOUROU LINGUISTICS ENGLISH-LEVELS 5-6 ENGLISH. LEVEL: 5 6 (E - Στ Δημοτικού)

The Fearsome Machine

Seventeenth Annual Multnomah Service Area Klondike Derby

"My Friend Earl" As told by Clayton Roo

Fifteenth Annual Three Rivers District. Klondike Derby

Fostering Q&A. Indy Homes for Huskies

Tania's Safari Adventure

TEMPLE PROJECT APRIL 2015

A Dog s Life. Unit 7. Speaking. Vocabulary - Dogs. Dog breeds: poodle husky German shepherd Labrador Yorkshire terrier

TAPE 1-A. 2 angry. indifferent excited. confused regretful

Information to Mushers

Step by step lead work training

A U T O B I O G R A P H Y

Iditarod Musher Q & A with the 2016 Iditarod Class

First we make a net, said Turtle. Netmaking is hard work. When I do it myself, I work and get tired. But since there are two of us, we can share the

The Slow Sloth. In a forest of Central or South America, a sloth hangs in the trees. It hooks its

How Turtle Cracked His Shell from the novel Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe

READING TEST PRACTICE LEVEL 2 Section 1 READING COMPREHENSION

What to do to prevent the start of Separation Anxiety

REHOMING A RESCUE DOG: an all-encompassing guide

ISBN 13: ISBN 10: Library of Congress Number:

Arctic Paws Dog Sled Tours Frequently Asked Questions??

Copyright 2015 Edmentum - All rights reserved.

THE ULTIMATE POLAR CHALLENGE!

CONTENTS. Spoilt for choice? page 4. Chosen page 8

L ED. A birth defect meant that Spencer had to look for a different sport. His choice has been a howling success.

Gold Experience B2 Progress test 2

JUNE 2010 tm MARCIA MOTHER TO THE STREETS. Trying to Save? TRY THE ENVELOPE SYSTEM. Your Toddler THE TERRIBLE TWOS. Joys & Challenges OF JOB SHARING

A few years ago, Lenny the lion told all of his friends in Craylands School his adventures in the jungle. I am going to tell you one of my favourites.

Emergency Below the Ice Shelf. Narrative (Imaginative) Presenting a School Speech Procedure (Informative) The School of the Air

IDITAROD miles (1600 km) across Alaska from Anchorage to Nome (Bering sea) Marcelle Fressineau and her 16 dogs team.

Water Issues By Rosemary Janoch

Who Am I? What are some things you can do to help protect my home? Track: Ohio Department of Natural Resources Photo: Cottonwood Canyons Foundation

The Blimp. DOWN 1 To steer, the pilot into a place under the air bag. 2 The large air bag is made of. 4 What is floating in the sky?

RACE RULES and TRAIL PROCEDURES

Lucy S SecRet ReindeeR. Anne Booth

It s A Foster Animal Collage!!

Kids programme Monday, Time Program Age

Supplied for Success and Survival Lesson Plan and Teacher Notes

Bewfouvsft!pg!Cmbdljf!boe!Hjohfs!

By Shelby San Juan Bautista, California

My Favorite Stray Cat:

Crate Training a New Puppy

CHAPTER ONE. The Jurassic Coast

Common Core Lesson Plan. Title: The Tortoise, the Spider, and a Woman Spinning Gold

Taking a Service Dog to School by Jackie Smolinski

Understanding your dog's behaviour will help you prevent and reduce behaviour problems.

2015 North Route RACE RULES & TRAIL PROCEDURES

BOOK 4. The python problem. The. problem $4.99 ISBN >

HOUGHTON MIFFLIN HARCOURT

it was a cold winter day, and MolLy was restless. She was hungry, and her stomach hurt.

Hawaiian Winter. Chief Black Dog & Southern Skies Klondike Derby Phillippo Scout Reservation. February 16 th through 18 th.

Hetta Huskies- A Veterinary Experience? (Written by pre- vet volunteer, Emmanuelle Furst).

Adopting a Dog. The New Arrival

Mystical Mara! By Ingeborg Tinius copyright 2000 Publisher FIT

Table of Contents. About Finish Line New York ELLs Unit 1 Speaking 5. Unit 2 Listening/Reading/Writing 32. Unit 3 Transition to ELA 139

BUSINESS & MARKETING CORNER. Tales of a MDT Artic Adventure Fiona MacKenzie, PT, Dip. MDT. Week 1

A NOTE FROM THE CREATOR

Majestic Tigers 28th November to 9th December 2018 Photographic tour with tour leaders Danny Green and Stan Tekiela

FLAME! The Story of a Very Special Dog. by Carol Rea

Unzipped Bonus Scene Finley

Dogs. WORD BANK: blind, cattle, companions, countries, guard, hunt, sleds, warn. Level 2.0, Story 1. Copyright 2012 Read Naturally, Inc.

Welcome to the world of Poodles! This chapter helps you

The Amazingly Adapted Arctic Fox By Guy Belleranti

2014 KLONDIKE DERBY. Information Package January 17-19, 2014

Part4. Saint Fatima Language School Form 3 Second Term 2018 / The Vision of the School : Distinct Environment for Refined Education

ST NICHOLAS COLLEGE HALF YEARLY PRIMARY EXAMINATIONS. February YEAR 5 ENGLISH TIME: 1 hr 15 min (Reading Comprehension, Language and Writing)

Name: RJS-FARVIEW BLUEBELLA. Birthdate: OCTOBER 10, Sire: S-S-I Robust Mana 7087-ET. Dam: RJS-FARVIEW BUTTERFLY

Carol & Garston Blackwell

TRAINS, MULES, AND SQUIRREL WHISKEY A Slightly Fractured Fairytale of Life Along the NYO&W Railway

Author s Purpose. Author s Purpose

START: Read 1 Guide for Repeated Interactive Read-Alouds

It s a wonderful thing when we can help provide a dog less fortunate with a furrever home and we all know how good can that make us feel right??!!

Welcome. Your Training Team. Natasha-Anne Davies - Head Trainer

The White Wolf. Matterhorn. of the. Written & created by A.J.Young. Illustrated by Anna Maria Marcovici

HOW THEY FOUND THE MAGIC WOOD

LEASH OFF GAME ON EMPOWER & SUPERCHARGE YOUR RELATIONSHIP

What if? By Rosemary Janoch

Measure time using nonstandard units. (QT M 584)

Health, happiness and wellbeing. Our whole school theme for the spring/summer term, is health, happiness and wellbeing.

WESTERN TRAILS KLONDIKE 2016

3. Chicks weigh 86 grams when they hatch and gain 100 grams a day until they are about 50 days old when they are ready to take care of itself.

Transcription:

Husky Dog Sledding in Lapland New Year 2014 Paul & Fiona Devon Paul, Lumi & Xenia I d wanted to do this ever since watching the Ititarod Trans-Alaska race as a child. It took me a little while to overcome Fiona s natural aversion to all things snowy, but once the idea had taken hold, that was it we were off!... Husky dog sledding in Finland over the New Year! 8 days in Finland above the Arctic Circle, 5 days of which on a safari driving my own team of Huskies. Plus, with sunspot activity the highest for 10 years and no moon in the sky for the time we d be there, there was a more than fair chance of witnessing the Northern Lights. What better way to spend the winter holiday?

We flew from Heathrow on my birthday, and spent the first night in Helsinki between flights. It was dark, and we only saw the briefest glimpse of the city on the way to the hotel. On Sunday, we flew 548 miles north to Kittila in Finnish Lapland; 280 miles above the Arctic Circle. Our flight landed around 9:15am, before the sunrise. About 3 months before the sunrise! At this time of year, and this far north, the sun doesn t get above the horizon. A bus journey took us a further 50 miles north to the town of Muonio on the Finland/Sweden border and we arrived in time for lunch at Harriniva which was to be our jumping off point. Later that afternoon we collected our insulated snow suits. Temperatures were unusually mild at -5 C, but were forecast to fall to the normal -30 C later in the week. It was hot work getting into the heavily padded salopettes and jacket in the gear room, but we were glad of them later. Snow boots were next and they were heavy and thickly insulated with removable ¾ inch thick insulated booties inside. They must have weighed about 3kg each! We met our guide at the introduction dinner that night and early on Monday we met the dogs. They would be our transport and responsibility for the next 5 days. There were 7 clients and one guide. Our guide was a girl called Hanski. This turned out to be her surname, but she was known by it to everyone. She had a 10-dog team as her sledge carried all our food and other gear for the week, and the others had 4-dog teams. I had a heavier sledge, so needed a fifth dog to help out. We carried our own personal luggage, as well as spares for the teams, harnesses, sleeping bags, thermal gear, lunch etc. The instructions on sledge control were brief and a little scary. Once harnessed, the dogs know what s coming and they get really, really, really excited. Yapping, howling, barking, whining, tugging on the gang-line and generally winding each other up. More than one fight broke out before we started, and the alpha male on my team (Tundra) had to be forcibly removed from the throat of his harness mate. The other dog was put back in a pen and more timid one brought out. Tundra Then, a few minutes after the sky had brightened enough to see, Hanski pulled out of the kennels and our teams leapt after her. She works with these dogs all year and knows each one personally. We took 39 of her 60 dogs with us and they kept right behind her all the way. The energy was astonishing. They pull like crazy and if you re not holding on tight you ll get left behind, and these dogs DO NOT STOP for anything. Unlike a horse that you can rein in, dogs only have one speed flat out. The only way you can stop them is by standing on the foot brake, which drives a pair of steel spikes into the snow beneath the sledge. Leaving the hotel/kennels we were soon in open countryside and the yapping subsided as the teams settled into their job. The swish of the runners on the snow and the soft slap of webbed pads on snow was all you could hear. I was mesmerised. We swished through woods, along paths between the trees and then burst into the open to cross hard frozen lakes and swamps. We ran for about 2 hours before Hanski called a halt for lunch. I realised that my hands were aching from holding too tightly to the handles, my calves were aching from the constant movement of the runners under my feet, and my jaw and face ached from the maniacal broad grin that had been

there all morning. Lunch was cooked over an open fire in the woods, and the dogs took the chance to rest.

Lumi & Xenia 30 minutes later we restarted and once more the dogs sensed something was happening and began their excited howling. It split the forest. It was like the starting grid of some huge car race, with all the drivers revving their engines. The restart was fast and exhilarating again. The afternoon journey was a shorter one. We took another hour to cover the remaining 12-15km in order to arrive at our cabin for the night just before the sky darkened at 3pm. Head torches were needed to unharness the dogs and clip them to their chains for the night. They sleep outside, but when the temperature gets below about -20 C they get some straw to insulate them from the snow. They have been bred for so long to tolerate such low temperatures that they work best at about -15 C and cannot run at all above 10 C. Throughout the summer off season they don t even exercise them, but allow them to remain in their kennels or runs and take it easy. They will have run between 3000 and 3500km through the winter so they ll need the rest. Our cabins were wooden, basic, but very comfortable and warm. No lights, no power and no sink. No running water (hot or cold) and no privacy. Hot water was only provided if you lit the wood fire in the stove or sauna after fetching water from a hole in the ice in a nearby lake or river. This was the first task every night. Heat enough water to make dog soup, a thin gruel to give the dogs a warm drink. After this we would chop their meat and put it in the sauna to thaw out. More boiling water was added later and then a high energy dog food was mixed in to make a thicker mince-like concoction. They are fed once a day after they ve run and by then they are more than ready for it. Over the next few days, my affection for these dogs rose remarkably and it was the same for the others there. Conversations at dinner each night were mostly about the dogs. It turned out I was the only actual dog-owner amongst the whole group but we were united in a love of dogs. It was only when the dogs were bedded down for the night could we think about ourselves. More wood would be brought for the stove, sauna heater and sauna boiler, food cooked and personal luggage taken inside. We did everything lit by candles or head torches. It was amazing. Dinner was always absolutely delicious. Traditional Lappish meals cooked simply over the fire, or in a single pan or pot. Wholesome, tasty and just what you needed. By 9pm it had been dark for 6 hours so bedtime came early. We were all knackered anyway and even on New Year s Eve (after 35km on the trail) we were all in bed by 11pm!

Our outbound route took us north for a further 2 days (and about 70km), so we were well within the Arctic Circle. The Northern Lights were reportedly spectacular on Wednesday night, but all the time we were there, there was a thick and continuous cloud cover. The forecast clear skies and plummeting temperatures never appeared and we had snow for the full 5 days and 175km of our safari. We were disappointed not to have experienced the Foxfire (as the Lapps know it), but we had gone for the dogs and here they are Everyone was sad on the last evening and most insisted on sitting with their team into the night. I was certainly attached to mine now and missing Sweepy (my own dog) all the more for it. Our last day was the coldest by far with a driving wind pushing the temperature down to about -17 C. It was fantastic! I d go again tomorrow if someone told me it was free! On our return to the hotel we glided into the kennel area and simply unhitched the dogs. This was their home and they unceremoniously scampered off to wee on things, scavenge food and find their way back to their own pens and kennels. We spent a few minutes cuddling some of the cutest puppies you ve ever seen, then ditched our gear and headed for the bar! Pinja & Visla All text and images are Copyright the author.