The
campaign to help the Iditarod dogs is not a campaign against recreational
mushing. Recreational mushing can be fun for both canines and humans.
Recreational
mushing and the Iditarod are very different:
"As in all sports, there will be the hobbyists, the recreationists, those
who participate or support for the love of the sport - and then you will
have those who will risk everything, including the lives and health of
their dogs, for the sake of winning...spurred on by corporate sponsors
who love the value for advertising dollar of extreme sports. There is
about as much similarity between recreational mushing and the Iditarod
as there is between having a nice gallop with your horse and running the
equivalent of a Kentucky Derby that goes on for days."
- Jim
Willis, Director, The Tiergarten Sanctuary Trust
- Mr. Willis is the author of the acclaimed book Pieces of My Heart
- Writings Inspired by Animals and Nature, http://www.crean.com/jimwillis
Recreational
mushers driven by fun, not competition:
"Unlike
more competitive counterparts in the Iditarod and Yukon Quest races, recreational
mushers like [Zak] Richter are driven by a different purpose than reaching
the finish line as fast as they can.
They simply enjoy traveling through the country with dogs at their own
pace." “'It’s having a mindset of doing what the family can do, not running
at the maximum potential of your youngest dog,' Richter said."
"Few recreational mushers cull or sell dogs, choosing instead to keep
them for the duration of their lives. Doing so inevitably produces a retirement-home-type
situation.
'My yard is really big because I have a lot of old dogs,' [Helyn] Lefgren
said. 'I don’t get rid of them when they get old or can’t run fast enough.
All the recreational mushers I know have the same commitment to the dogs,”
she said."
- Tim Mowry, Fairbanks Daily News-Miner, March 20, 2008
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SDAC does not raise money and does not accept funds. Its efforts are
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©
2005 SDAC
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