The Fan Hitch Volume 3, Number 1, November 2000

Official Newsletter of the Inuit Sled Dog International

Table of Contents

From the Editor
*
Featured Inuit Dog Owners:
Scott & Terry Miller
*
Nunavut Dogsledding Association
*
Update: No Resolution in Iqaluit
*
Season's Greetings from Toadhall
*
The Homecoming, Part II
*
The Russian Connection, Part II
*
Meeting Ken Pawson and Kevin Walton
*
Arctic Sojourn
*
The Ted Fox ISDI Foundation Fund
*
Book Review: 
Two Years in Antarctica
*
Janice Howls:
No Click and Treat for ISDs!
*
IMHO: 
All Breed Kennel Club Registry


Links

ISDI Home Page

Newsletter Home Page


Publisher's Statement

The Fan Hitch, the official publication of the Inuit Sled Dog International, is published 4 times a year.  It is available to those who do not have access to the world wide web by subscription for $4.50 USD/$8.00 CAD to cover the cost of printing and mailing.  U.S. subscription requests should be sent to Sue Hamilton, Editor, The Fan Hitch, 55 Town Line Road, Harwinton, CT  06791, USA.  Send Canadian and international requests to Geneviève Montcombroux, P.O. Box 206, Inwood, Manitoba, ROC 1PO, Canada. * Contents of The Fan Hitch are protected by international copyright laws.  Neither photos, drawings nor text may be reproduced in any form without written consent.  Please forward these requests to the Editor at qimmiq@snet.net * The Fan Hitch welcomes for publication your letters, stories, comments and suggestions.


On the picket line in Iglulik               Montcombroux photo

Arctic Sojourn

by Geneviève Montcombroux

This year, I was privileged to visit the Nunavut communities of Resolute Bay, Iglulik and Iqaluit. 

In Resolute Bay, I counted Canadian Inuit Dogs. A dismal picture. only one out of six was a pure ISD. How long will these few be able to breed pure?  Aziz and Aleasuk Kheraj offered me the greatest hospitality at their South Camp Inn lodge. Walking on the gravel beach watching the tide bring in small floes of wind-shaped ice, it was easy to imagine the ships that passed this very shore on their quest for the Northwest Passage.  Aleasuk is very conscious of the dog situation and would like to see more young people using dogs. She recognizes that the pure ISD is superior to the crosses, but finds it difficult to acquire pure specimens. 

Next stop was Iglulik where I stayed at the family run Turjormivik Hotel with its friendly atmosphere.  In Iglulik, I found more traditional hunters who are using pure ISD. But in the words of Apayata Kokierk, "It is very difficult to keep the dogs (pure) because of the white man's dogs." Pride and care are not enough to prevent the roaming German Shepherds or Rottweilers to breed a female tied to her picket line.  All the young people I talked to here were very excited about the Nunavut Quest sled dog race. Unlike southern races, one rule of the Quest is that teams have to be run in the traditional manner, i.e. a qamutik and the dogs in a fan hitch. Participants have to live off the land and are pretty much on their own. It calls for traditional traveling skills. Young Timen Avingak talked proudly of his father and his dogs. He would like to enter the race but has no dogs of his own. He had, however, many questions. His friend Matthew's eyes were full of dreams and pride when he related how his grandfather used to run dogs and would take him along when there were tourists wanting to go on sled dog excursion. He talked much about the race and even invited me to come with my dogs to enter the Nunavut Quest. He hopes that one day he can own a team. 

Roaming dogs, and they are almost  exclusively southern breeds, are the bane of Iqaluit. The ISD team dogs sometimes get loose, but they tend to stay with their team mates still picketed on the line, that is unless a roaming female in heat comes so close to a team, that a male will do its utmost to get free. The carelessness of so many owners who allow their dogs to run free has caused grief to dog team owners. At a time when Nunavut has adopted the Canadian Inuit Dog as the official mammal emblem, the city of Iqaluit is trying to get rid of ISD teams. Are the authorities trying to turn Iqaluit into a southern capital? It would seem that they ought to be reinforcing the cultural identity of Nunavut. The powers-that-be should think about what the impact Canadian Inuit dog teams, or lack thereof, would have on tourism, which is the main industry of the Territory. 

I suggest that the Nunavut government move to protect the last aboriginal dog breed  of Canada by enacting a law requiring any dog of a southern breed coming to, or already residing in, a Nunavut community to be neutered/spayed. Then maybe in time, the Canadian Inuit Dog could be restored in sustainable numbers to the land where it rightfully belongs and from where it originated. 


                                                Montcombroux photo

Acknowledgments

I would like to thank the sponsors who made possible two trips to the Baffin Region to begin a survey of the CISD in various Arctic communities. In addition to the scientific data gathered during the visit is a beautiful female pup, "Lulik", who is a great addition the ISDI Foundation stock. 

                    Joan Lewin, from Ontario, Canada 
                    Jerry and Sharon Roberts, from Ohio, USA 
                    Barry Salovaara, from Ontario, Canada 
                    Susan Wells, from Florida, USA 
        Geneviève


                                                                     Montcombroux photo
Six week old Lulik waiting at the Iglulik airport 
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