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The
Siberian
Husky
was
developed
over
a
period
of
around
3,000
years
by
the
Chukchi
and
related
peoples
of
Siberia,
the
breed
was
developed
to
fulfill
a
particular
need
of
the
Chukchi
life
and
culture.
In
one
of
the
most
inhospitable
climates
in
the
world,
with
temperatures
plummeting
to
(-1000F)C
in
winter
and
with
winds
up
to
100
mph,
the
Chukchi
relied
on
there
dogs
for
survival,
as
they
were
a
remarkable
tool
of
ingenuity.
In
teams
as
large
as
twenty
or
more
they
could
travel
out
over
the
ice
sometimes
covering
as
much
as
100
miles
in
a
single
day
to
allow
a
single
man
to
ice-fish
and
return
with
his
catch,
by
sled
dog
standards
they
were
small
the
large
size
of
the
teams
minimized
per-dog
pulling
power,
while
smaller
frames
maximized
endurance
and
low
energy
consumption.
(Even
today,
in
long
races,
Alaskan
Huskies
the
Siberians
cousins
require
twice
the
amount
of
food
the
Siberians
consume)
The
Chukchi
economy
and
religious
life
was
centered
around
the
Huskies.
The
best
dogs
were
owned
by
the
richest
members
of
the
community,
and
this
is
precisely
why
they
were
richest
members
of
the
community.
Many
religious
ceremonies
and
iconography
was
centered
around
the
huskies,
according
to
Chukchi
belief
two
huskies
guard
the
gates
of
heaven
turning
away
anybody
that
has
shown
cruelty
to
a
dog
in
there
life
time.
A
Chukchi
legend
tells
of
a
time
of
famine
both
human
and
dog
populations
were
decimated,
the
last
two
remaining
pups
were
nursed
at
a
woman's
breast
to
insure
the
survival
of
the
breed.
Tribe
life
revolved
around
the
dogs
The
women
of
the
tribe
reared
the
pups
and
chose
what
pups
to
keep,
discarding
all
but
the
most
promising
bitches
and
neutering
all
but
the
most
promising
males.
The
men's
responsibility
was
sled
training,
mostly
geldings
were
used.
huskies
also
would
act
as
companions
for
the
children
and
families
dogs
slept
inside
the
temperatures
at
night
were
even
measured
in
terms
of
the
number
of
dogs
necessary
to
keep
a
body
warm
eg.
"two
dog
night,
Three
dognight
Etc."
The
legendary
sweetness
of
temperament
was
no
accident.100
miles
out
on
the
ice,
a
single
man
with
twenty
dogs,
if
there's
a
dog
fight
,
he
simply
does
not
get
home
(this
is
also
one
of
the
reasons
for
using
geldings;
the
other
being
food
consumption
is
lowered
).
When
winter
came,
all
dogs
were
tied
up
when
not
working,
but
the
elite
unneutered
dogs
were
allowed
to
roam
and
breed
at
will,
this
insured
that
only
the
very
best
would
breed.
In
summer,
all
dogs
were
releasesed
and
allowed
to
hunt
in
packs,
they
would
only
return
to
the
villages
when
the
snow
returned
and
food
grew
scarce.
The
primitive
hunting
instincts
can
still
be
found
in
the
breed
today.
A
story
documented
a
number
of
years
ago
testifies
to
this
Siberian
bitch
a
family's
pet
was
lost
during
an
autumn
hik.
In
the
nineteenth
century,
when
Czarist
troops
were
sent
on
a
mission
to
open
the
area
to
the
fur
trade
the
Chukchi
faced
a
peril
even
deadlier
than
the
Siberian
winters
Czarist
troops
attempted
an
all
-out
genocide
of
the
Chukchi
people.
Again,
the
dogs
would
be
the
key
to
there
survival.
The
Chukchi
were
able
to
outrun
the
Russian
reindeer
cavalry
on
their
sleds,
the
Chukchi
to
evaded
the
invading
armies
for
some
time.
The
invasion
culminating
in
a
final
battle
were
the
Chukchi
armed
only
with
spears
overwhelmingly
outnumbered
trapped
and
routed
a
heavily
armed
Russian
Troops.
This
victory
led
to
Czarist
Russia
signing
a
treaty
with
the
Chukchi
giving
them
independence
the
first
tribe
to
do
so
.
Unfortunately
in
the
twentieth
century,
the
Soviets
opened
free
trade
with
the
Chukchi,
then
known
as
the
"Apaches
of
the
North,"
these
invaders
had
a
far
more
effective
weapon
smallpox!
Small
pox
decimated
the
tribe.
Then
with
a
diabolical
understanding
of
the
importance
of
the
dogs
in
Chukchi
cultural
coherence,
the
Soviets
then
executed
the
village
leaders,
who
were
of
course
the
dog
breeders,
They
then
set
up
their
own
dog
breeding
programs
these
were
designed
to
obliterate
the
native
gene
pool
the
soviets
wanted
replace
it
with
a
gene
pool
that
would
produce
a
much
larger
freighting
dog
thought
to
be
more
effective
for
their
own
proposed
fur-trading
practices
in
the
region.
The
Soviets
even
went
so
far,
in
1952,
as
issuing
an
official
proclamation
that
the
breed
we
now
call
the
Siberian
Husky
never
really
existed.
Some
remnant
of
the
breed
still
survives
in
its
native
territory
today.
The
painter
Jon
Van
Zyle
has
managed
to
bring
back
several
from
the
region.
If
you
have
seen
the
old
National
Geographic
Special
on
the
Siberian
tiger
will
have
noticed
that
one
of
the
two
dogs
used
in
the
tracking
and
pursuit
of
one
of
these
animals
was
the
Siberian
Husky
undoubtedly.
Long
before
the
Soviets
managed
to
relegate
them
to
the
category
of
"those
who
officially
never
existed."
The
reputation
of
the
little
Chukchi
dogs
had
already
spread
throughout
the
world
around
the
turn
of
the
twentieth
century,
polar
exploration
was
capturing
the
worlds
attention
and
adventurers
came
to
the
yearly
Markova
Fair
on
the
Siberian
peninsula
where
tribes
of
the
area
came
to
trade.
This
gathering
included
the
Chukchi
and
other
dog-breeding
tribes,
such
as
the
Koryak
(all
of
whom
probably
had
some
part
in
the
pool
of
animals
that
eventually
became
the
Siberian
Husky).
Gdosak,
a
Russian
fur
trader
acquired
a
team
there
in
1908
and,
in
1909,
took
them
across
the
Bering
Strait
to
race
in
the
All
Alaska
Sweepstakes,
a
408-mile,
grueling
race
first
run
in
1908.The
Alaskan
Gold
Rush
had
established
the
sled
dog
as
an
invaluable
commodity,
and
the
race
had
been
instituted
to
add
excitement
to
an
otherwise
pretty
grim
world,
to
give
bragging
rights
to
the
eventual
winner,
and
to
give
vent
to
that
favorite
frontier
boomtown
passion,
gambling.Nome
to
Candle
and
back,was
the
route
of
the
race
crossing
every
conceivable
terrain,
including
a
valley
almost
always
engulfed
in
a
blizzard.
Caches
of
food
were
strategically
stashed
along
the
route
by
drivers.
Regular
checkpoints
were
established,
but
rest
was
at
each
driver's
discretion.
The
Trade
Saloon
in
Nome,was
the
betting
office
bets
were
placed
on
a
board
and
betting
was
open
until
the
first
team
crossed
the
finish
line.
School
children
had
a
holidays
the
four
days
of
the
race
and
at
the
start
of
the
race
in
1909
event,
there
was
already
more
than
$100,000
bet
on
the
race.The
siberians
were
about
half
the
weight
of
the
local
sled
dogs,
and
much
smaller
in
stature.
They
were
given
little
chance
by
the
bookies
,
referred
to
then
as
Siberian
Wolf
Dogs.
They
were
dubbed
"Siberian
Rats,"because
of
their
small
stature.
But
Thurstrup
was
convinced
by
Goosak
to
take
on
the
team.in
April
1909,
the
first
team
of
Siberian
Huskies
to
be
seen
on
the
North
American
continent
trotted
out
of
the
town
of
Nome
and
into
the
annals
of
history.
Unfortunetly,
Thurstrup
was
not
a
wise
or
judicious
driver.
At
the
halfway
point
in
the
race,
he
took
a
short
rest
period
in
Candle,he
was
overtaken
by
two
more
rested
teams
in
the
last
stretch
of
the
race.
and
finished
in
third
place.The
little
dogs
suprised
everyone.
This
Inspired
a
young
Scot
named
Fox
Maule
Ramsey
to
spend
$25,000
on
a
freighter
to
transport
seventy
new
Siberians
across
the
Bering
Sea,.
He
split
these
into
three
teams
for
the
1910
race,
the
results
were
first,
second,
and
fourth
place
places.
The
legendary
John
"Iron
Man"
Johnson
team
finished
first
in
this
1910
race
was
driven
by
,
who
completed
the
race
in
74
hours,
14
minutes,
37
seconds.
This
time
was
never
equaled,
even
when
the
race
was
rerun
within
the
last
decade
with
the
benefit
of
modern
equipment,
better
nutrition,
and
supposedly
more
specialized
hybrid
"race
dogs:'
Next
few
years,
of
the
race
were
plagued
with
scandal
with
rumors
that
Johnson's
dogs
had
been
drugged
near
the
end
of
the
race
or
that
the
moneyed
interests
had
actually
convinced
him
to
throw
the
race,
and
it
was
not
until
1914
that
Johnson
again
won
the
event.
"The
Little
Man
with
His
Little
Dogs"
Daring
his
first
trip
east,
the
redoubtable
Leonhard
Seppala
and
his
celebrated
"Serum
Run"
team
posed
for
this
photo
on
the
roof
of
a
department
store
in
Providence,
Rhode
Island.
One
of
these
dogs
actually
leaped
over
the
roof
s
guard
wall
of
this
very
tall
building
that
dci).
Fortunatel);
he
was
saved
whe.n
his
fall
was
broken
by
a
projecting
awning.
Born
in
Skjervoy,
Norway,
inside
the
Arctic
Circle
Leonhard
Seppala
came
to
Alaska
as
a
young
man
around
1900
seeking
fortune
and
adventure.
A
short
man
at
only
about
5
feet
tall,
Seppala
had
been
an
Arctic
fisherman
since
he
was
11years
old,
an
apprentice
blacksmith
to
his
father,
and
was
an
accomplished
wrestler
and
skier.
Seppalla
worked
at
various
jobs
in
the
mining
camps.
In
1914,
Jafet
Lindeberg,
his
employer,
acquired
what
was
left
of
the
first
Siberian
imports
and
their
offspring,
around
fifteen
animals
in
all.
They
were
to
be
a
gift
to
the
explorer
Captain
Roald
Amundsen,
who
was
planning
a
expedition
to
the
North
Pole.
Seppala
was
given
the
job
of
the
care
and
training
of
the
dogs,
and
he
loved
it.
When
World
War
I
broke
out
it
changed
Amundsen's
plans,
and
Seppala
ended
up
in
possession
of
the
dogs.
He
entered
the
1914
All
Alaska
Sweepstakes,
but
with
disastrous
results
he
had
to
drop
out
early
when
he
lost
the
trail,
and
his
dogs'
feet
got
badly
cut.
He
trained
hard
in
secret,
far
from
town,Blitzing
the
field
in
the
1915
Sweepstakes
by
over
and
hour
.
He
repeated
this
victory
in
1916
and
1917,
at
which
time
the
increased
war
effort
and
the
lack
of
any
real
competition
for
him
caused
the
race
to
be
discontinued.
"The
little
man
with
his
little
dogs,"as
he
came
to
be
known,
became
a
legend
in
Alaska,
remaining
devoted
to
his
Siberians
hauling
freight
and
supplies,
setting
many
new
records
in
mid-distance
races,
and
on
several
occasions
being
involved
in
truly
heroic
exploits
he
once,
unarmed,
chasing
down
an
armed
kidnapper,
and
on
another
occasion
transporting
a
man
mangled
in
a
sawmill
accident
oVer
a
long
distance
at
a
speed
no
one
thought
possible.
In
1925,
Seppala
and
his
Siberians
came
to
national
prominence,
with
the
famous
"Serum
Run"
that
saved
the
city
of
Nome
from
a
diphtheria
epidemic.
Seppala
and
his
Siberians,
with
his
famous
lead
dog
Togo,
covered
340
miles
in
that
race
against
death,
with
no
other
team
traveling
more
than
53
miles.
Togo
became
permanently
lame
from
that
marathon
run.
Seppala
credited
Togo
with
over
5,000
miles
in
his
running
career.
The
teams
had
covered
a
distance
of
650
miles
that
normally
took
the
mail
teams
twenty-five
days,
and
they
did
it
in
just
five
and
a
half
days.
Senator
Dill
of
Washington
state
had
the
story
written
into
the
Congressional
Record,
one
sentence
of
which
reads,
"Men
had
thought
the
limit
of
speed
and
endurance
had
been
reached
in
the
grueling
races
of
Alaska,
but
a
race
for
sport
and
money
proved
to
have
far
less
stimulus
than
this
contest
in
which
humanity
was
the
urge
and
life
was
the
prize.
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