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.

Book Review

Two Years in the Antarctic 
by Kevin Walton

reviewed by Geneviève Montcombroux

This is a very well told story of a young man's experiences in Antarctica.  First published in 1955, Two Years in the Antarctic contains many black and white photos and tells of a time when being part of a polar expedition was a real adventure. In keeping with others who have worked in Antarctica, Kevin Walton emphasizes the awesome beauty of this ice-locked land. It was also a time when the principal means of transport was by dog team, itself an exhilarating adventure.  The dogs, which they called huskies, were far more than just beasts of burden. "We have, I know, all come back from Antarctica with a love and affection for huskies, deeper and more personal than the most sentimental among us believed possible." These were the original Canadian Inuit dogs from Labrador, Canada. 

Reading Two Years in the Antarctic is like taking a step back in time to an age when there was no Internet, no computer, no television, or cell phone. Radio transistors had not yet discovered. This book would make a welcome addition to the library of history buffs, armchair adventurers and sled dogs lovers. 

It is available directly, for £15.00 Sterling, from: 
                    Kevin Walton 
                    Fossils Bluff, 
                    Colwall, 
                    Malvern 
                    Worcestershire 
                    WR13 6PR 
                    United Kingdom 
 

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