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A Kid's Thoughts
Articles
about the Iditarod
Iditarod
dog deaths unjustifiable (page 2)
The unofficial death count is 114, though the numbers lie because it isn`t
possible to follow all the bloody paw prints of innocent animals that
have died in the name of this barbaric "sport."
They have been strangled in towlines, gouged by sleds, suffered liver
injury, heart failure, pneumonia and "external myopathy," a condition
in which a dog`s muscles and organs deteriorate during extreme or prolonged
exercise.
A previous race winner was banned in 1990 after accusations that he struck
a dog with a snow hook. In 1985, a woman musher (dog sled driver) watched
the race from the sidelines after a moose stomped on her team of dogs.
Although the fluff coverage in The Anchorage Daily News promotes the Iditarod
as "Alaska`s great race," it is nothing more than a barbaric ritual that
gives Alaskan cowboys a license to kill.
After a ceremonial start Saturday, 81 teams began a gruelling stretch
that will last between nine and 14 days. There is no sport in torturing
sled dogs through a race that covers 1,151 miles from Anchorage to Nome.
Imagine racing your dog from Orlando to New York, depriving him of sleep
to complete the course as quickly as possible, mushing though waist-deep
water and ice, with the dog losing about 10 pounds through the ordeal.
Now in its 28th year, the Iditarod presses on, fueled by dollars, though
not much sense. Last year`s purse was $500,000, the largest in race history.
No amount of money could justify this torture.
Dogs are bred in unsupervised kennels to race, and those who don`t meet
the standards are killed, often shot in the head. Musher Lorraine Temple
justified the shootings in an interview last year: "They [the big racing
outfits] can`t keep a dog who`s a mile an hour too slow."
Fortunately,
she was not on the race course when Carl Lewis began to see a drop in
his 100-meter speed, or Carl might have taken a bullet to the head as
well.
I'll confess to being a liberal, tree-hugging animal lover. I reached
for the Kleenex at a recent screening of My Dog Skip, a precious story
about a boy and his dog. Best-selling author John Grisham acknowledged
he shed some tears, too, so I consider myself proud to be in such elite
company.
But one doesn`t have to be smitten by a lick on the face to feel the emotional
tug of animals that are bred for abuse. Idiotrods -- Webster`s defines
them as "clueless supporters of this race" will have you think that there
is a noble purpose in the rugged, adventuresome spirit of competition,
and a loving bond between musher and dog. I am sure they also will try
to convince that you can find true love on a Fox network TV special, as
long as you have annulment papers handy.
In efforts to curb criticism, race officials have made some concessions.
This year, electrocardiograms were done on 1,650 dogs, trying to identify
dogs with heart problems.
Unfortunately, healthy dogs simply don`t have the option of telling their
masters that they`d rather just skip the race altogether and take a leisurely
romp in the park instead.
The Iditarod still amounts to an illegal sweatshop for dogs, with too
many horror stories in the archives to make one think that weeding out
a few bad tickers in the pack will end the cruelty.
This is a bad idea for man and beast. Consider this gruesome snapshot
from the 1999 race, in which a musher was attacked by his pack of dogs.
Dan Dent had picked up a high-performing female on race day, hoping to
strengthen his team. Instead, he messed up the delicate social structure
of the pack of dogs, which turned on the new dog after wallowing in deep
snow along the Susitna River.
"They were all going at [Storm] like a bunch of hyenas," Dent told The
Anchorage Daily News. "They were all going for the kill. It was a pretty
ugly sight. I was just watching the other dogs try to eat Storm alive.
"If
I didn`t get in there, Storm was going to be killed."
After removing his gloves to undo a snap that held Storm to a gangline,
Dent was attacked by the frenzied pack. "My hands were just hamburger,"
said Dent, who was flown to Providence Alaska Medical Center.
At least Dent lived. There are at least 114 innocent animals with more
horrifying stories to tell, if we only could listen to the haunting howls
from their graves.
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
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