Table of Contents
Editorial:
The Bigger Picture
*
Featured Inuit Dog Owner:
Paul Landry
*
Book Reviews:
On Thin Ice
Of Dogs and Men
*
Poem: Brave Little Heart
*
Janice Howls:
Hypothyroid Disease
*
Fan Hitch Contributor
Receives Writing Award
*
Expedition
News:
The Thule 2000
*
In My Humble Opinion:
Traditional Advice
*
Updates:
The Nunavut Quest
2000
Ihe ISDVMA Meeting
Links
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comments and suggestions. |
In My Humble Opinion: Traditional Advice
by Mark Hamilton
Twenty five years of owning, breeding and raising Alaskan Malamutes was
not adequate preparation for the experience of having sixteen ISD puppies
(litters of 6, then 10, two weeks apart) running loose in our backyard.
First there was the issue of just keeping track of them all. Then we simply
stared in disbelief when our small herd of puppies began ripping up clumps
of grass and stripping the bark off of trees. It was the aggressiveness
of their play however, both within the litters and in our larger play groups,
that shocked us and for which we found ourselves totally unprepared. We
decided to follow the same advice we've offered to others so many times
in the past, we called the breeder.
"Jayko, the puppies are fighting. I mean, this is serious stuff, not
play. Tiri's pups aren't even four weeks old and they're grabbing each
other by the scruff of the neck and growling and shaking their head's violently.
They don't stop until the other one is shrieking. Amaruq's pups are two
weeks older and quite a bit larger, now they're bullying Tiri's pups. What
do we do?"
With a chuckle Jayko responded, “Let them fight. They can't kill each
other at this age." At the time we took his admonition to mean, "Oh, it's
nothing to worry about, they won't do any permanent damage to each other."
Now, we realize he was saying so much more.
That is often the case with "traditional wisdom". Simple sounding statements
hold a depth and breadth of information that is easily overlooked at the
time. Another of Jayko's pieces of advice will help illustrate this point,
"Don't feed them too much meat, their legs will be too short."
Well, we accepted that one at face value, and since the pups' primary
food source was EAGLE POWER PACK we didn't worry over the point. Later
we mentioned Jayko's advice to the chief veterinarian at EAGLE, Dr. Al
Townsend. His immediate response was that it was very sound guidance as
too much meat could throw off the calcium/phosphorous ratio which would
result in short legs. The thing is, at the time we didn't realize Jayko
was warning us to be sure to feed a balanced diet.
Similarly, an ISD in the north learns from the start that its job in
the contract between human and dog is to supply the
means of locomotion. Their natural instinct to pull is reinforced
as appropriate behavior. Arctic mushers don't encourage bad pulling
habits by “pedaling” or running along side their komotik. I well remember
several times in Greenland when, faced with a long and steep uphill climb,
we offered to get off the komotik to lighten the load for the dogs. Always
the answer was quite emphatic that the dogs would pull us up, and of course
they did. Now on reflection it sounds a lot to me like Jamie Nelson's advice
that you need to teach your dogs to pull. These days we realize how much
more Jayko was saying when he advised us to "let them fight". He was telling
us this is a breed driven to established itself within the hierarchy of
dominance within their pack. They must find their place and defend that
position. Let them establish the ground rules while they are incapable
of doing extreme damage to each other, because if you don't let them do
it when they’re little, you won't like the consequences when they do it
later. |