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Thread: Companies sponsoring Iditarod dog sled race brutalities

  1. #16
    [http://www.isdra.org/Beginners/Intro..._the_trail.htm]Here's a link to one of the pages at ISDRA.org[http://www.isdra.org/Beginners/Intro..._the_trail.htm]

    [http://www.isdra.org/Beginners/Intro...d_dogs_run.htm]Here's something else from ISDRA[http://www.isdra.org/Beginners/Intro...d_dogs_run.htm]

    this may not convince you but any mushers who knows dogs, or any person with an open mind, can tell you that you're posting BS.

    [http://www.iditarod.com/behind_race.html]here's a link to a page in Iditarod.com[http://www.iditarod.com/behind_race.html]
    Ichiro - Not your Average Suzuki

  2. #17
    I'm sure they didn't mean anything to offend you. Maybe it was just the place they were at..that they were talking about (sry i didnt read the before posts..)



    My babies: Josie, Zeke, Kiba, Shadow (AKA Butter)

  3. #18
    obviously u haven't.
    Ichiro - Not your Average Suzuki

  4. #19
    Im sorry but your statement has done nothing to change my mind. In fact it has fueled it.


    dogs can trip. people can trip. if the dogs didn't like it, they would've stopped
    come on like you get up ever race and say "hey do you want to run today" and the dog says "yes I sure do" . When a dog trips do you stop and say "hey do you wanna get up or do you wanna be dragged through the rest of the race"?

    Sure dogs love to race and pull, let them race around a big pen, let them pull you around an a nice cushy trail.

    My dogs LOVE to run you don't see me making them run 1,150 miles in harsh terrain.

    You can't tell me that if I showed you that picture of dogs tied on short leashes in the open with rusted water dishes and by the looks of it , it gets muddy around the dogs and told you it was a puppy mill it wouldn't make you mad ???

    AND ITS NOT ALRIGHT FOR ANYONE TO CULL THEIR DOG STOCK I DON"T CARE THAT YOU DON"T DO IT I CARE THAT IT IS DONE !

    This is not BS this is not some rantings from animal activists these are real news paper articles, real research.
    ~~ My House Is Not A Home Without A Hound ~~


  5. #20
    Join Date
    Feb 2001
    Location
    Greenville, SC, USA
    Posts
    17,925
    Sorry, moderators, but I think this is getting out of hand. Just my 2 cents worth. I'm sorry to see it head this way.

  6. #21
    Posting for Bonnie, she can stay a little more calm then I can ...lol..


    The campaign to help the Iditarod dogs is not a campaign against recreational mushing. Recreational mushing can be fun for both canines and humans. There may be Mushers that do take care of their dogs, but the
    ones who don't out number the few that do. If you feel that the statements are not true. I suggest you
    write to Jon Saraceno USA Today and Jim Rome at Fox they can be reached at the link below, since they
    are the news reporters, that reported on the Iditarod race.

    http://www.helpsleddogs.org/remarks.htm
    If you feel the Humane Society facts are untrue contact them. You are right every one has a right to their opionion we
    are voicing ours.

    I was told Labs like to swim but would you have them swim across the lake from the U.S. To Canada...lets be realistic
    no dog wants to run 1,150 miles in nine days.

    No matter what to many dogs are being abused, the many out number the few. That's all I'm saying
    argue with yourself.






    How do mushers benefit from running their dogs in the Iditarod?

    Many thousands of dollars in prizes are awarded to the winning mushers. The largest prize is given to the musher whose team crosses the finish line first. However, prize money is also given to teams who first reach certain points along the trail. Mushers who are hired to be in corporate advertisements receive substantial financial benefits, as do mushers who reap royalties from the sales of books they write or the speeches they give. These corporations turn their face away from the cruelties the dogs are forced to endure.

    More mushers will receive prize money than ever before:

    'This year (2000), the Iditarod Trail Committee plans to hand out a record purse of more than $525,000 divided among the top 30 finishers - not just the top 20, as in years past."

    - Staff and wire reports, Anchorage Daily News, March 13, 2000


    Do many native Alaskans participate in the race?

    The Humane Society of the United States says, "With the annual cost of putting together a competitive Iditarod team estimated at up to $60,000, very few native Alaskans are able to participate."



    Are Iditarod dogs kept permanently tethered on short chains?
    In many kennels, dogs spend their entire lives outside chained up to their dog house. In these musher's kennels, a dog can have a chain as short as four feet long. In 1997, the United States Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) determined that the permanent tethering of dogs, as the primary means of enclosure, was inhumane and not in the animals' best interests. The permanent chaining of dogs is prohibited in all cases where federal law applies.



    Some reasons why permanent tethering is cruel are as follows:
    1) A dog who is permanently tethered is forced to urinate and defecate where he sleeps, which conflicts with his natural instinct to eliminate away from his living area.

    2) Because the chained dog is always close to his own fecal material, he can easily catch deadly parasitical diseases by stepping in or sniffing his own waste. The ground within the dog's chained area may have a high concentration of parasite larvae.

    3) Even if the fecal matter is picked up, the area where the dog can move about becomes hard-packed dirt that carries the stench of animal waste. The odor and the waste attract flies which bite the dog's ears, often causing serious bloody wounds and permanent tissue damage.

    4) Continuous chaining psychologically damages dogs and makes many of them aggressive animals.



    At least 117 dogs have been run to death or have died from other causes in the Iditarod. There is no official count of dog deaths available for the race's early years. "

    --The Humane Society of the United States
    ~~ My House Is Not A Home Without A Hound ~~


  7. #22
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
    Location
    Massachusetts, USA
    Posts
    622
       I just found this topic. This is very interesting. I would love to know the truth. However, the kindness that is typical of Pet Talk is missing from this topic. I would like to restart this topic once Karen gets back and all of us involved have a chance to discuss the ground rules.

          Paul

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