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A Kid's Thoughts
Articles
about the Iditarod
Iditarod,
hailed as greatest dog race? Call it grotesque shame, animal abuse
(page 2)
It
is March madness of a too literal sort.
Dogs die; it is a matter of how many. The Iditarod toll was 117 deaths
as the latest race commenced Saturday. The real figure is higher because
casualties from the early years are not known. The figure excludes dogs
who perish in training, or who later die as a result of the sanctioned
torture.
You can imagine the Iditarod folks don't like sharing such info. It's
like getting the cigarette industry to chat up lung cancer.
The Iditarod is America's most controversial sporting event, if you'd
call this ''sporting'' in any way.
You either buy into the rugged-outdoors adventurism of the Iditarod as
America's ''last great race,'' as a celebration of endurance and courage.
Or you see it as America's most widely accepted display of animal abuse,
a grotesque shame masquerading as sport.
There
is a compromise: Make the race much, much shorter, with more required
rest stops. But that doesn't interest the Iditarod folks, who guard their
''freedom'' to grossly overtax their canine chain-gangs.
Dogs have died of hypothermia, strangulation in towlines, heart failure
and pneumonia, and been killed when gouged by sleds and attacked by a
moose. Iditarod hero and former champ Rick Swanson lost a dog in '96 after
running his team through waist-deep ice water.
The dogs are pulling sleds totaling more than 400 pounds each. To prepare,
teams might pull a truck. No wonder anabolic steroids are an issue.
Now, I don't offend easily. Few would call me a soft heart in terms of
my view of animals.
I hold no prayer vigil for a catfish who winds up dusted in cornmeal on
somebody's plate.
I don't consider horse racing cruel.
I see Fifi in a doggy sweater and I'm not thinking, ''Cute poodle,'' I'm
thinking, "Loony owner.''
(I have no problem telling you that my own dog, Sandy the mutt, is dumber
than a piece of driftwood.)
I hear about cosmetic-testing on laboratory mice and I picture a small
rodent looking pretty good wearing lipstick and eyeliner.
I have lobbed jabs at the radical People for the Ethical Treatment of
Animals (PETA), which, no lie, advocates the football team change names
from Green Bay Packers (as in meatpackers) to Green Bay Pickers (as in
veggies).
People can surely go nuts on animal rights.
Let's not lump fishing with organized cockfighting, OK?
And let's please make a distinction between greyhounds racing a few laps
and these Alaskan and Siberian husky dogs being made to run the equivalent
of Miami to Washington, D.C., in a death-wish grind interrupted by only
three mandatory rest stops.
A Miamian, Margery Glickman, happens to be the Iditarod's staunchest foe
through her Sled Dog Action Coalition (www.helpsleddogs.org), which she
runs from a ranch-style home in south Kendall in which she and her husband
have raised three children.
The website does not solicit or accept donations. She gives away information,
grows awareness.
Glickman, 54, owns one dog herself, a mixed-breed named Bailey, who was
rescued from the county pound.
''I always cared about animals,'' she said Monday. ``But I wasn't always
active at the level I am now.''
That grew from a 1998 Alaskan summer cruise with her two sons. The sightseeing
happened upon a huge ''dog lot'' where more than 200 animals were being
raised as Iditarod runners.
''I found the conditions horrific,'' she said. ``The dogs live tethered
permanently on these short leashes. I was appalled, and that feeling stayed
with me. I'm taking a stand to help these dogs.''
There are musher kennels all over Alaska. Documented on her website is
a musher saying he might breed 300 dogs to get ''five good ones.'' The
rest are ''culled,'' often killed.
Using dogs as they are used in the race itself would be illegal in many
states, including Florida, yet Alaskans somehow romanticize the event
as part of their wilderness heritage.
Glickman, a retired elementary-school teacher, gets loads of nasty e-mail
but plugs on, filling her website with tons of credibly sourced indications
of the race's cruelty. Pro-animal groups across the country decry the
Iditarod but it enjoys a continuing acceptance embodied by the recent
Disney movie Snow Dogs, which glorified dog-sled racing.
Yet Glickman's work is seeing results. Plenty of companies such as Microsoft,
Sherwin Williams, Bank of America and Home Depot have dropped their sponsorship
of the race or of individual mushers. (Others have not. Glickman's group
just ''awarded'' Heat owner Micky Arison its Iditarod Dead Dog Award because
his Carnival Cruise Lines supports the race.)
While
mushers in Alaska are thinking this week of the Iditarod's more than $600,000
in cash and prizes, Margery Glickman is as far away as she could possibly
be -- across the country, and philosophically -- thinking instead of the
Iditarod's voiceless victims.
''I feel angry. And I feel helpless to a certain extent,'' she said. ``Mostly,
I feel sorry for the dogs.''
Articles about the Iditarod
Dog deaths
Poor veterinary
care
Mushers
mistreat their dogs during race
Dog injuries,
sicknesses and extreme stress
Problems
with Iditarod rules
Greed
fuels the Iditarod
Abuse
in kennels
Cruel
dog training
Iditarod
history
Receive action alerts or contact SDAC: SledDogAC@aol.com
PO Box 562061
Miami,
FL 33256
The SDAC does not raise money and does not accept funds. Its efforts
are completely volunteer-based.
© 2005 SDAC
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