The Fan Hitch Volume 7, Number 4, September 2005

Journal of the Inuit Sled Dog International

In This Issue...

Editorial: Building Bridges
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F.I.D.O.: Marit Holm
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Nunavik Dog Slaughters, Part III
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Greenland Dog / Inuit Dog, The Same Dog
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Differences in Mushing: Greenland and Arctic Canada, Part I
*
Fan Mail
*
Behavior Notebook: The Human Role
*
Book Review: Frozen Horizons
*
Product Review: Wheel Dog Harness
*
Tip for the Trail: Pack a Pruning Saw
*
 IMHO: The System
*
Annual Index for Volume 7


Links

ISDI North America Home Page

The Fan Hitch Home Page


The Inuit Sled Dog International

The Inuit Sled Dog International (ISDI) is a consortium of enthusiasts whose goal the preservation of this ancient arctic breed in its purest form as a working dog. The ISDI's efforts are concentrated on restoring the pure Inuit Dog to its native habitat. The ISDI's coordinators welcome to your comments and questions.

ISDI Coordinator Canada
Geneviève Montcombroux, Box 206, Inwood, MB R0C 1P0; toadhall@mts.net
ISDI Coordinator USA
Sue Hamilton, 55 Town Line Road, Harwinton, CT 06791, qimmiq@snet.net


Editor's/Publisher's Statement
Editor-in-Chief: Sue Hamilton
Webmaster: Mark Hamilton
Print Version Publisher: Geneviève Montcombroux for Whippoorwill Press


The Fan Hitch, journal of the Inuit Sled Dog International, is published four times a year. It is available free online at: http://homepage.mac.com/puggiq. Print subscriptions as follows: in Canada $18.00 Cdn, in USA $16.00 US, elsewhere $22.00 Cdn per year, postage included.  Send requests, with checks payable to "ISDI", to Whippoorwill Press, Geneviève Montcombroux, P.O.Box 206, Inwood, Manitoba, R0C 1P0, Canada or info@whippoorwillpress.com. Single copy issues and back issues (if not sold out) are available. Contact Whippoorwill Press for details.

The Fan Hitch welcomes your letters, stories, comments and suggestions. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit submissions used for publication.

Contents of The Fan Hitch are protected by international copyright laws. No photo, drawing or text may be reproduced in any form without written consent. Webmasters please note: written consent is necessary before linking this site to yours! Please forward requests to Sue Hamilton, 55 Town Line Rd., Harwinton, Connecticut  06791, USA or qimmiq@snet.net

Fan Mail...


Taken in Iqaluit June 2005       Photo: Julie B.

July 15, 2005

Hello Sue,

I don't know why I originally ran across The Fan Hitch online. Perhaps I was doing some research on the Qimmik out of personal interest. I really enjoyed what I found and went back, re-read old issues over a few days period, and then (brutally honest) forgot about you.

My interest in the Qimmik was probably developed as a child reading the great adventure novels set in northern Canada and Alaska. More recently, I spent three years living in Nunavik (Nouveau Quebec). While attending workshops in Kuujjuaq, an intriguing pup followed back and forth from our workshops. The pup was steady when approached by humans or other dogs. (Dogs all too frequently run loose in Kuujjuaq and other Nunavik settlements.) Moreover, he seemed to have a well-developed chase drive.  It was a shame that the pup would probably be destroyed early the next week when dogs roaming free would be shot to cull the numerous abandoned dogs and reduce the threat of a dog attacking a child. I'm not a bleeding-heart and the thought of a dog cull for the greater good of society, given the circumstances presented in the north, didn't drive my next position. I brought him home. He is definitely mostly Qimmik but he, like so many dogs in the north, also has a good eighth to quarter of southern dog in him. After my three years in the arctic, we moved to the bush of northern Ontario.

Earlier today, while researching yet another move - this time to either the Northwest Territories or Yukon - I came across The Fan Hitch again. At first I was drawn in by Google's reference to the Makivik court case against the government. I was following that story while in Nunavik but hadn't heard anything about it since moving away. Now, I'll definitely have to tune into The Fan Hitch again in September for the next installment of that story.

Regards,
G. K.
 

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