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Our Life

How Summer Dog Sled Tours Help Us As A Competitive Racing Kennel

Sarah · May 20, 2015 ·

Racing season may be over but it doesn’t mean we stop training. For an athlete, the journey to better yourself and your team is never ending. How can we improve? What can we build upon? What do we need to do to continue our success? These are the questions that pour into our conversation at morning coffee.

Most importantly, what can we be doing right now to help us later on in the season?

Even though the snow has melted, our dogs still need to exercise. Exercise is a crucial part of any healthy lifestyle. When your job is to compete in 1,000 mile races staying in shape is a critical job requirement. Although the length of our sled dog runs may shorten due to the warming temperatures, it is important that our dogs still have an outlet for their endless energy. Running is required!

 

Lots Of Visitors Means Lots of Opportunity for Dog Sled Tours

During the summer, Alaska comes to life as visitors from all over the world flock to see our state’s majestic scenery and experience our unique Alaskan culture. Dogsledding is such a unique part of Alaskan culture that people can’t help but be interested. Before we started doing dog sled tours, curious visitors would pull in to our driveway at all hours of the day.

We’d happily great them, thinking they were lost, but they weren’t lost.

“Can we check out your sled dogs?” People would stop in asking, again and again.

Eventually our need to run our dogs, our passion for sharing our sport, and the curiosity of people passing by our kennel made doing dog sled tours an easy choice for us.

On a daily basis, we get to share our passion.

“I had no idea how much they loved to run!”

“I am amazed at how smart your dogs are.”

“They are so excited.”

Guests on our summer dog sled tour help us socialize our young puppies
Guests on our summer dog sled tour help us socialize our young puppies

We get so much positive feedback from people who are curious because dogsledding is something so foreign to them. By the end of our tour, many of our guests are hooked and continue to follow us along throughout the racing season – some of you may even be reading this blog post!

Time and again people are amazed at how much our dogs love their job. To a sled dog running isn’t work — it is a way of life. For a musher, running dogs isn’t work either. It’s a way to decompress and get away from the hectic chaos that defines most modern lives. When we are out on the trail, we must be one hundred percent focus on our dogs.

Our tours have now evolved into a crucial part of our training program. Just as collegiate and professional athletes train during the “off season” so do our sled dogs. When you go on one of our dog sled tours, you are not simply going for a dog sled ride. Our tour is about experiencing training in action. It’s about sharing not only what we love but about educating people on how sled dogs our trained.

The summer dog sled ride we give at our kennel incorporates two crucial components to help us maintain a competitive edge throughout the racing season. First, instead of simply running our dogs we are actually putting them through a strength training program. Second, we use each tour as an opportunity to work on training a new lead dog.

 

Dog Sled Tours As Strength Training

Running dogs in the warm summer months is inherently different than running in the winter. Careful considerations have to be made about how to best run the dogs and how to accommodate them to the warmer temperatures that summer brings. We are particularly lucky because our kennel is situated in a glacier valley and we often have cold wind that blows down off the Harding Icefield that helps keep our dogs cool. Additionally, we take precautions by resting our dogs frequently and giving them plenty of access to fresh water before, after, and even during our tours.

Because of the warm conditions, we generally run the dogs between 1 and 2 miles. We are fortunate that our trail system allows us to customize the length of our runs based on the weather so we can adjust how far we run them based on what is best for the dogs. On warm days, we run shorter than on cool rainy days.

Alaska Dog Sledding -- Summer Style -- with Turning Heads Kennel

We use an aluminum cart that weighs about 800 lbs without passengers and can seat 8 for our summer time mushing. Unlike some of the bigger dog sledding operations, we generally have between 4 and 8 guests per tour. This roughly equates to an additional weight of 600 to 1200 pounds that the dogs are pulling. So on average when we go out with our team they are pulling anywhere from 1200 to 2400 pounds.

We use this information to build a great strength work out for our dogs. At the start of the summer our dogs have generally had close to a month and a half of very light easy runs. They are no longer on the aggressive training schedule required for racing because that is over so we carefully work them into their new routine.

When the summer season begins, we generally hook up 14 to 16 dogs based on the size of the tour and rotate our dogs out after every run. That means the dogs run once and, if we have another tour, a completely different team is then hooked up. As the summer progresses however, we begin making changes so that the work outs continue to challenge our dogs.

Generally speaking, the weather in Seward caters to us strengthening our team. We generally see more temperate weather in the early part of the summer and we see more rain in the latter half. The latter part of July and August can bring wet, cool, and damp weather – which allows us to run our dogs longer and harder. As we enter the cooler and rainier stretch of summer, we take advantage of it.

During the middle of the summer, our will adjust to pulling heavy loads. We can’t up the weight but we can increase the number of reps our dogs do so when the weather is sufficiently cool we may “camp” our dogs in between tours. Camping refers to the practice of leaving the dogs hooked up but resting on the line so that they are ready to run again. This is commonly done in checkpoints and during races.

Young dogs learn to camp inbetween dog sled tours
Young dogs, Wrangler and Carhartt, learn to camp inbetween dog sled tours. Wrangler finished 11th and Carhartt 10th in the 2015 Iditarod.

Camping the dogs allows us to spend less time hooking dogs up and more time interacting with our guests. It also starts teaching our dogs the basics of racing: first you run, then you rest, then you run some more.

Finally, towards the end of the season we may even start to use fewer dogs. The number of tours we do each day significantly decreases towards the end of August and at this point our dogs are officially body builders so instead of hooking up 14 dogs we may only hook up 10 or 12, depending on the number of guests we have.

This great strength training program helps our dogs stay in shape throughout the summer and ensures that every dog is ready to begin working on building their endurance come the fall.

 

Lead Dog Training Is The Best Part Of Our Dog Sled Tour

The tours we do in the summer don’t just serve as weight training. They are a vital component to our lead dog training program. This year, we realized how special our kennel is because of the number of high quality leaders we have. This is a direct result of the emphasis we place on making our tours a training exercise for our guests to be a part of rather than simply a ride.

It is very easy to hook up well-trained leaders to make your runs go smoothly. It’s much more difficult to take dogs who have never run lead and work with them up front while communicating with guests. That, however, is what we have chosen to do. We don’t stick with our go-to race leaders, instead we focus on building new leaders. This gives our kennel tremendous depth.

The first step involves identifying potential leaders. This is generally easy as we already know the dogs. Each spring we identify about a dozen dogs in our kennel that we think could possibly run lead. Then, we make a goal of trying to get those dogs in lead as much as possible. We challenge ourselves, we challenge our dogs, and we keep our guests thoroughly entertained because seeing a lead dog develop is truly exciting.

Every other dog sled tour we have ever seen in the summer time has a set course that they operate on. The dogs (and even sometimes the musher) eventually go into “autopilot.” The dogs aren’t taking commands, they are simply going through the motions. This is not good training and, in our mind, is actually un-training the dogs.

So we don’t have a set course.

We have a system of trails and each time we go out for a tour we never know exactly where we will go. Sometimes commands are called at the very last second and guests are awed by how our leaders quickly take the command or sometimes they watch as we patiently work with our dogs until they correctly figure out what we are asking.

To effectively train lead dogs over a short 1 or 2 mile run requires having multiple intersections so that the dogs can constantly be tested with their commands. Throughout our tours the lead dog or pair of lead dogs need to take, on average, about a dozen different commands. The commands we use are “gee” for right, “haw” for left and, occasionally, we use “straight ahead” to tell the dogs that they are to continue down the trail without turning.

When we start a new dog off in lead, we generally partner it with a more experienced leader. Zema is one of our go to dogs for partnering new potential leaders. She know her commands better, I think, than most people know their right and left. She turns on a dime and having her up front means you can go anywhere you want. She is the ideal tutor for our younger dogs.

When we start training a new young dog up front we hook them up with Zema and Zema (or another well-trained lead dog) shows them the ropes. This usually lasts 1 or 2 weeks. After that, we start hooking up the young dog on their own in single-lead or with another young leader who has been running up front but still hasn’t “mastered” the commands.

That’s when the magic happens.

We start giving commands and we can see how much our dogs have or haven’t absorbed from their previous times up front. Instead of relying on the wisdom of the older dog, the new young pup must now rely on their own intelligence. Sometimes, the new leader gets the commands right from the beginning but that is very rare.

Instead, they make mistakes. We stop. We work with them. Honestly, after doing this for three years, I think our visitors actually enjoy seeing the dogs mess up because they then get to see how we work with the dog to get it to make the correct decision.

Training a lead dog is actually a very simply process if you own high caliber dogs and know what you are doing. A sled dog wants to run. To train a lead dog we simply must channel this desire.

When we approach an intersection we will call a command such as “Gee!” to that the leader will go to the right. If the leader goes to the right nothing happens; the dogs got the command right and the reward is that they get to keep running. If, however, we call out “gee” and the dogs get the command wrong, we suddenly stop the team.

A good sled dog does not like being stopped. If we are giving a command, our leader knows it is supposed to be doing something but perhaps it does not know what. The connection between the word and action has not yet solidified so the dog will make guesses. We repeat the command “gee” and when the dog tries to go to the right we say “yes! Gee! Gee! Gee!” release the brake, and the team can continue to go.

It’s really magical watching this process happen and some very lucky guests got to be part of this last year as we worked and refined many leaders. Last year, we made Fidget a leader through our summer tours. This year, we reaped the reward from that effort in Iditarod. When several of our leaders became injured right before the race, Fidget really had to step up her A-game. She led 700 miles of Iditarod either in single lead or with a partner. She was able to do this because we invested time in training her to run up front during our summer tours.

Fidget running single lead during Iditarod 2015
Fidget running single lead during Iditarod 2015

Running sled dog tours during the summer has helped us build a competitive kennel with a tremendous amount of depth. After the summer season is over the new leaders we have built spent much of fall training running up front on the open river bed in front of our house as a kind of “final” exam. Out on the river bed, there is no trail to follow and the wind can often reach 30 or 40mph. Amazingly, our dogs seem to have no trouble.

We love getting to share our passion with guests and inviting them to be with us as we train future champions.

Dog Of The Week: Tamere

Sarah · May 18, 2015 ·

Whenever I picture Tamere, I picture here in a ballerina costume. She’s a tough feisty female. She’s a very girly dog and she owns every bit of it. Tamere is a female in charge and she is 100% ok with letting you know that.

I should know. You see,  Tamere and I have a very long drawn out and overly dramatic history together. For a long time, I was the other-woman to Tamere. Travis was her man.  Travis got Tamere when she was young from another musher — “too young,” he’ll say sometimes looking back now — and so he raised her inside and took her everywhere with him. As a puppy she spent many nights curled up next to him in bed (I am sure she loved every minute of it) and bonded fiercely with him.

Then, of course, one day  I entered the picture and everything changed.

Tamere tolerated me — at first. You see, she’s the type of dog that can’t help but be friendly. But, like a  teenage girl, she soon came to see me as an enemy. As the other woman. As the thing she had to fight for Travis’ attention.

Of course, she utterly despised me.

She was very subtle and sometimes not-so-subtle in how she showed it. One one particularly memorable occasion in the fall of 2012 when Travis started training for Iditarod, he choose to camp the team right outside our house. He came inside and got a sleeping bag and curled up with the dogs. It was a beautiful night so I followed suit. I went to lay my sleeping bag down next to Travis who was curled up with Tamere, but she would have none of it. She put her hackles up started barking at me.

This is my turf. She said.

Travis laughed. “Well, the lead dog has spoken. Sorry, inside for you tonight honey!”

You can imagine how put out I was by that.

Exit-Glacier-Dog-Sled-Tours-08

She would often act friendly to me when Travis was around but as soon as he’d leave she would bark at me as if to say go away you’re not welcome here.

And once, by my own ignorance and sheer stupidity, Tamere got me completely tangled in the gangline. I was the evil-step-mother and it seemed like she would do anything to chase me off.

It didn’t work.

And then, with time, she softened.

Tamere is one of the spunkiest dogs in our kennel and has one of the biggest personalities. When I think of Tamere, I always think of her in a ballerina costume. How this idea first sprang into my head I could not tell you, but I can tell you that I think it is fitting. She is a very graceful and determined dog. Although she doesn’t always believe in herself, with encouragement she has done some pretty amazing things. She is another small dog with a big heart.

Travis-Beals-Restart-Iditarod-2013
Zema and Tamere at the start of the 2013 Iditarod.

 

We love you Tamere! Thank you for all your hard work over the last few years. Tamere has two young pups in our kennel, Coda and Bensen. They share their mom’s incredible zest for life and over-the-top personalities.

2015 Paint-A-Pooloza Was a Blast!

Sarah · May 17, 2015 ·

Look at the beautiful dog sled houses
A mountain scene and some creative squiggles

Wow! We woke up Saturday morning to the sound of rain. “Oh no!” I couldn’t believe that after all our hard and careful planning, mother nature once again decided to deal us a bad hand. Fortunately, we had faith in the weather forecast and right around our 11:00am kick off mother nature parted the clouds and left us with brilliant sunshine. Thank you to all our local artists who came out to help us paint dog houses. Check out some of the beautiful works of are below.

 

One of the houses Sarah Stokey decorated for during the dogsledding event in Seward, Alaska
One of the houses Sarah Stokey decorated for during the dogsledding event in Seward, Alaska

The even was so much fun. We grilled hot dogs and offered Glacier Brewhouse Rootbeer. Kids were also able to make rootbeer floats with vanilla icecream.

Beautiful Seward Dog Houses
A rainbow gets added to one of our beautiful new houses

We witnesses lots of creativity and passion. Everyone was excited to help us jazz up our dog yard.

beautiful-dog-yard-seward-houses
Poke-a-Dog Paradise

Everyone was full of smiles and enjoyed mixing paint and coming up with their own unique creations.

fun-painting-seward-doghouses
A beautiful sunset complete with jumping dolphin

Some houses got painted with several colors whereas other houses were simply back drops for other creations.

 

paining-dog-houses-seward-alaska
Look at all that color! Gorgeous!

There were even some creative uses of painters tape.

sled-dogs-fishing-house
Good Friend Jamie helps create an ocean themed dog house

Our friends created a nautical themed dog house because they come from family of fishmen.

sled-dog-housing
There’s always time for splatter paint!

We had several beautiful splatter paint houses.

turnin-heads-kennel-paint-a-pooloza-seward-alaska
The Tranquillity of the Ocean

 

painting-dog=houses-seward
All in all, I’d say the day was a great success. We gave several dog sled rides with both the kids and dogs equally enthusiastic.

Dog sled rides were lots of fun
Dog sled rides were lots of fun

Thank you to everyone who made us a part of their day!

Dog Of The Week: Krum

Sarah · May 11, 2015 ·

If you asked us after the ceremonial start of Iditarod who was going to be on our team, Krum wouldn’t have been on the list. Krum had been suffering from chronic wrist problems since mid-February and despite our best efforts, we just couldn’t seem to get Krum back to 100%.

Travis fretted. “I need her,” he said to me — hoping I could work some magic that would put her back on the team even though the official start was now two days away. I couldn’t, but fortunately for Travis, our good friend Patty Chase could.

Patty specializes in myofascial trigger point release therapy in humans and came to the ceremonial start of the race with her my cousin Andy. When she saw Travis fretting about his dog after the ceremonial start, she decided to lend a hand.

“I’ve never worked on dogs,” she told us, “But let me see what I can do.”

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Krum always wants attention!

That night, although we were supposed to drive to Fairbanks, Patty generously offered to let us stay with her so she could help Krum. Using gentle touch and her knowledge, Patty was able to achieve impressive results with Krum. For someone who had never worked with sled dogs, she sure gave Travis and I an excellent education! Her results were beyond impressive. We watched Krum’s wrist which had had about 70% mobility up until that point, fully recover.

After two short sessions with Patty on Saturday and then again on Sunday morning before we drove north, Krum was spry, chipper, and she was walking on air.

“I’m going to take her,” Travis said.

Krum made it to the starting line and, more importantly, she made it to the finish line in Nome.

Krum is a small, nimble dog with a lot of heart. She is a sweet dog who we’ve enjoyed having as part of our kennel.

Spring Cleaning 2015: Getting The Kennel Ready

Sarah · May 10, 2015 ·

We’ve been busy!

April was such a tease. After a snowless winter, mother nature decided that it would snow just a little bit in April almost every day. In the mornings, we would see up to two inches of snow. We’d cross our fingers hoping it would stick and continue to accumulate but by the time the afternoon rolled around, it inevitably either melted or turned to rain.

What a bummer!

turning-heads-kennel-revamp

So we’ve been hard at work. Travis rented a mini-excavator recently and did undertook some significant landscaping projects at the house and kennel. It’s always so much fun watching him run heavy equipment because he is so talented at it. He even found a way to move my greenhouse!

travis-beals-seward-alaska-heavy-equipmentWe’ve been enjoying our time getting ready for the upcoming season. Our glacier dog sledding tours have already started. This is a big change for us as we usually don’t begin our operation until late May. So far, so good. We’ve had a few weather days but our guides and our dogs are enjoying seeing fresh snow on the glacier — they’ve had over a foot since getting up there!

For fun, we’ve been barbecuing, hanging out with friends, and enjoying our time together. We’ve gone on some fantastic dog walks, when our energy has allowed it. We exploring-seward-with-sled-dogsare really looking forward to our Paint-a-Pooloza event next weekend.

If you haven’t already, RSVP on our facebook event by clicking here. We hope a lot of you who are nearby can come help us revamp the dog yard. We are excited to see everyone’s creativity and are looking forward to another brightly painted dog yard.

We hope you are enjoying your spring as much as we are enjoying ours.

 

 

 

 

 

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