AR-News: (AL) USA Today -- Iditarod

MEATSTINKS at aol.com MEATSTINKS at aol.com
Sat Mar 27 06:51:53 EST 2004


 
  

 
  SAVE THIS | EMAIL THIS | Close  



 


As death toll of dogs rises, so does Iditarod's insanity 
I'm all for mutiny. Dog mutiny, that is.
When it comes to the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog race, how do we get more of our 
furry friends to lie down on the job? If they belonged to a union, there would 
be a strike every March when the 1,100-mile marathon of dog misery is 
propelled by more than 1,000 members through the treacherous Alaskan wilderness.
In that labor dispute, I would be all for the stressed-to-the-max dogs. They 
are overworked and underpaid. The money and the glory go to management — in 
this case, mushers and their sponsors.
Why does Alaska permit the "Ihurtadog?"
Easy. Commerce — shameless, bloody business carried out on the backs of man's 
best friends.
Sunday was the scene of more death and despair. A dog belonging to race 
leader Kjetil Backen of Norway suddenly sat down and died. "It is a real tragedy 
for him and dog mushing as a whole," race marshal Mark Nordman said at a news 
conference.
Imagine how the dog felt.
Last week, a 5-year-old dog named Wolf died.
Apologists contend that dogs cannot be made to run, which is true. But many 
of them sure can be coerced and trained. In the sledders' parlance, mutiny 
comes when dogs refuse to budge. It already has happened in this year's race, 
which has featured a fast, grueling pace during unusually warm weather.
More than an estimated 120 dogs have perished during the history of the race, 
which gives a Humanitarian Award. The number of dog deaths does not include 
animals that perished afterward — or the thousands that have been injured. 
Death is merely an occupational hazard — for the dogs. In 1973, the race's first 
year, the Iditarod took more than 20 days to complete. Two years ago, a speed 
record was set when Martin Buser finished the race in less than nine days.
Many dogs are dropped during the race because they are unable to continue, 
but many others continue to trudge on with various injuries.
A couple of years ago, a study in the American Journal of Respiratory and 
Critical CareMedicine reported that 81% of the 59 dogs they examined after one 
Iditarod had "abnormal accumulations" of mucus or cellular debris in their lower 
airways. In addition to fluid in the lungs, bleeding stomach ulcers occur, as 
does general cramping, dislocations, fractures, muscle and tendon tears, 
tendinitis, dehydration, hypothermia, raw paws, penile frostbite and viruses.
Not that it's easy on the mushers, either. But, hey, they choose to 
participate in this frozen insanity. Doug Swingley, who won the race from 1999-2001, 
was forced to quit from frostbitten corneas last week.
But back to the dogs. Last week, one musher needed an hour to separate three 
female dogs in heat from their amorous male teammates, according to the 
Anchorage Daily News —a newspaper no self-respecting salmon would permit itself to 
be wrapped in.
First, the Daily News is a sponsor. According to the Alaska Journal of 
Commerce, the newspaper shelled out a minimum of $50,000. The newspaper also is an 
investor because it reaps advertising dollars.
Invariably, photographs depict warm and fuzzy images of dogs designed to lull 
readers and placate critics. Imagine the horrors we don't see. Mushers and 
their teams are not monitored by the media — or anyone else. Likewise, many of 
the newspaper's syrupy stories seem almost fantasy-like in nature. According to 
one, four-time Iditarod champion Martin Buser discussed how dogs seem to get 
into "the zone," as humans report doing during endurance events.
"In the zone, one can smell the sweet scent of success," the Daily News 
happily wrote.
Think that's what the dogs are sniffing? I smell something else. Money.
The Daily News is not alone among mercenaries in local media. Alaska 
Newspapers, Alaska Public Radio and an ABC-TV affiliate that bills itself the 
"Official Television Station of Iditarod 2004" also are sponsors, joining Chevron, 
ExxonMobil, Coors Brewing and Wells Fargo.
The economic impact to Anchorage, site of the ceremonial start, is estimated 
at more than $5 million. Organizers increased the size of this year's purse by 
more than $100,000. The winner gets $69,000 plus a new Dodge pickup. It 
doesn't require much to buy some folks, even at the expense of living creatures who 
cannot defend themselves, like poor, old Wolf.
The dogs, of course, get their usual take.
More suffering.
***
E-mail Jon Saraceno at jons at usatoday.com


 

 


 
Find this article at: 
http://www.usatoday.com/sports/columnist/saraceno/2004-03-14-saraceno_x.htm 
 






 
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://lists.envirolink.org/pipermail/ar-news/attachments/20040327/795ec014/attachment.html


More information about the AR-News mailing list