The End of Fall Colors

 

This Fall the colors have been phenomenal. The reds are now gone but the yellows are lingering longer than usual.

The trees are getting ready for winter… are you?

Izzy Pups are born!

OMG! More puppies. It is puppy breath heaven here at SP Kennel. We better enjoy it while it last because most of these little ones will be going to new homes once they are weaned. The biggest question is:

How will we possibly choose who will stay at SPK? 

Izzy and Supai are the parents of the litter born this week. Izzy is related to nearly every dog in our kennel so we needed to bred “out”. Izzy has raced the YQ and ID back to back for four years. She is clearly one of our best dogs. Supai was born @ our kennel but is Ryne Olson’s dog and has raced everything with her. Izzy’s parents, Quito (2X YQ Golden Harness winner and our best dog ever) and Biscuit are both YQ champs. Supai’s parentage is: mom is Scooter who is a YQ champ and dad is Solomon who was originally a John Little dog that was sold to Jake Berkowitz. He was a foundation main stud for many kennels in Alaska and Canada several years ago.

Team Matson

Aliy and Team Matson are preparing for the Anchorage Heart Walk on September 22nd.

Come join us for a pre Walk Celebration and Fundraiser at the 49th State Brewing Company on September 11th in downtown Anchorage from 5 to 7 PM. Good times and a GREAT CAUSE! 

If you can’t make it Tuesday evening then put Saturday morning on your calendar… Anchorage HEART WALK!

Go TEAM!!

Here is a Puppy Fix!

Junior has been the perfect mother – very patient and attentive. She nurses them often although they are now eating commercial dog food as well.

The eight little ones are still a bit small for their 4 week birthday in two days, so they are indoors where they can play and then cuddle in cedar shavings. Momma dog can use the doggie door to come and go as she pleases. They certainly are spunky one minute and sound asleep the next.

Here is a video from today:

 

 

Photos from the day

Despite the drizzle and a foggy lens, we were able to capture a few photos from the training runs this morning. The best three are:

  • Mismo saying: “Do I have to do this all by myself?”
  • Five is incredibly sweet and helpful while harnessing
  • While Perky feels the need to wrestle Allen for the harness (note: Perky is also 100% successful thus far of tearing apart harnesses every hook up so far and running around lose… but at least he’s happy!)

We captured another interesting dog team phenomenon that fans might not think about: a 14 dog team mainline stretches a LONG way. When the team curves around a bend and especially a 90º turn in the trail, the musher can’t always see the lead dogs, much less a lot of the team.

Now you see them – now you don’t – there they are again! 

And here are some individual shots:

  • Decaf and his tongue
  • Razz and Clyde cool off in the puddle
  • Barista and QT wait to depart while Perky got “Ape Crazy” behind them

Fall Training and Conditioning Begins

The dogs are certainly ready for running in harness. The main issue is making sure that our very excited, furry Alaskan huskys do not overheat. The current weather forecast is in our favor with the early morning temperatures predicted in the low 40’s. There has also been quite a bit of rain the last two weeks. So here we go… tromping dog teams through the puddles in Two Rivers.

This past week, we harnessed and ran several small dog teams. The purpose was two-fold.  

First, we wanted our youngest dogs: Cloud, Razz and Peach to begin their first Mushing Season on a happy, positive note. We did this by hooking up small teams (only 6 or 7 dogs) and focusing primarily on these youngsters. They, in turn, got accustomed to running in harness without all the hook up excitement that a larger dog team produces. We’d like these three girls to feel confident in themselves before they start running next to a potentially intimidating dog like Kodiak, Champ or Mismo. All three youngsters did well and Cloud barked for the duration of the training run.

Secondly, we needed to get the ATV four wheelers and mushing gear set up and ready. These are endless tasks that seem a lot more fun when you get to run a dog team. Such as:

  • The ATVs need oil changes, tires checked, brakes cleaned and packed with essentials we might need while training: spare harnesses, leashes, bungees, extra rope, etc. 
  • The Howling Dog Alaska harnesses have been sorted and now hang outdoors. The covered harness rack is positioned in the center of the yard and easily accessible. We keep the harnesses organized by size: S (Lydia, Prata, etc), M (Chevie, Spark, etc), L (Five, Commando, etc) and XL (Driver, Mismo, etc). We use training harnesses throughout the mud and muck season. There is a lot of wear and tear to harnesses during Fall training. Once the freeze/thaw period is over and we have 100% snow cover we will graduate to race harnesses. 
  • We also use training mainlines now. This mainline is securely attached to the ATV by a locking carabiner. Pairs of leashes (tug lines) are permanently attached to the mainline. Each leash then attaches to a dog’s harness with a snap. If you only want to attach a single dog in one spot then both leashes attach to that one dog. 
  • We cleaned and greased all the snaps. They are high quality “Swedish Snaps” (FYI they don’t call them that in Sweden.) 
  • We looked through all the leashes for wear and tear. Over time, they do wear out. The first set of leashes are attached approximately four feet from the ATV. After this first set, additional leashes are attached in pairs every seven foot. Depending on the number of dogs on your team: 8, 10, 12 or 14…. the lead dogs’ leashes are 25 ft, 32 ft, 39 ft, or 46 ft in front of your ATV. 

In our mushing harness / mainline system, each dog has only one leash. You might notice that ther mushers sometimes use two leashes – one to their harness and one to their collar. We prefer our dogs to have only one point of attachment to the mainline. This gives them more freedom to skirt around trail obstacles or avoid hazards or holes. But this also creates the potential for more unstructured team chaos. In photos you might see that our dogs can turn around and visit their team mates or go off to the side of the trail. Each dog has a lot of freedom to do as they choose. This is where you need to understand the difference between training dogs versus conditioning dogs. We must train our dogs to listen to our commands, get along with each other and act as a team. Only then will we reduce that chaos and they run as a team. Conditioning dogs to be physically able to run miles upon miles upon miles is the easy part.

Let it all begin!

Junior’s Pups are 2 Weeks today

We don’t seem t be very successful with the Live Cam. So sorry but the upload speed seems to be a big challenge.

Here is a short video just showing the pups and where they are living at SP Kennel:

 

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