It was a long way to travel
to see sled dogs – well, I admit that it wasn’t the only reason for the trip but
it was one of the more interesting stops along the way.
We left Kodiak Island in a
huge storm with an ocean-going tug escorting us because of jagged rocks so
close to the ship I felt we could have stepped off for a hike if we were feeling foolhardy. By morning the
weather was clear and the Aleutian Islands were off to starboard. Snow-capped
volcanoes were smoking lazily; just an occasional puff from their pipes seemed to content them. The ship turned north to enter the Bering
Sea.
Despite my fears of bad
weather and having visions of a Deadliest Catch experience the sea was like
glass, so smooth that the few clouds were reflected in the water making a
magical scene where sea and sky were one. By afternoon the water was ruffled
with whales blowing and millions of seabirds fluttering and diving. A few
fishing boats were on the horizon, otherwise just a vast emptiness on all
sides.
A few days later we entered
Avacha Bay on the southern end of the Kamchatskya Peninsula in Russia. The bay, overlooked by two towering volcanoes and snow-capped mountains, was still in
dawn shadow. Shortly after a brilliant sun rose to light up the cloudless sky,
the snowy mountains and the bright orange rust on old freighters resting in an
eternal sleep while they rotted at anchor. A layer of fog hugged the ground to
soften the scene.
We docked at Petropavlesk.
The Siberian city is 4200 miles from Moscow on the map but with no roads that
would actually allow you to drive there. It was founded by the Danish explorer,
Vitus Bering in 1740 who named it after his two ships, St. Peter and St. Paul. Despite
its age the city of 180,000 had an element of the Wild West, low on the
traffic-signal quotient and with a ramshackle aspect.
We climbed in a van, passed
the inevitable statue of Lenin, gazing with determination toward who knows what now, and headed
out of town, passing under steam-heating pipes arching the streets. It wasn’t
long before we were in the countryside where birch trees and shrubs wearing
fall bronze and gold leaves covered the hills. Turning off the road we traveled
toward a sled dog training center, our goal for the day. A chorus of frantically barking
dogs announced our arrival at a tiny cluster of buildings – the kennel, lodge
and outbuildings and a few dachas surrounded with gardens of cabbages. Guarding
the sight was one of the snowy volcanoes. The air was so still that its smoke
plume looked like a white feather stuck on top for decoration before it
dissipated.
Each dog was attached to a
long chain next to a small dog house. The chains were arranged so that neither
dog could reach its neighbor. We stood well back as these working dogs didn’t
wag their tails or smile. But the puppies – what a treat to cuddle them even
knowing that they would never be anyone’s pets.
While fresh-caught salmon was
grilling we looked at the native clothing and dog harness displayed in the lodge
and foraged for berries and mushrooms along the paths leading to the wilderness of Siberia.
We could hear the dogs
barking frantically, so agitated that they were jumping straight up until their
chains jerked them back to the ground; they knew what was next on the agenda. Lunchtime over, the trainer brought out
a sled with wheels for off-season use. As he held up the harness each dog
seemed to be yelling “Take me, take me.”
He picked six dogs who rushed to the sled to be set in the traces. The trainer
stepped on the back and off they went, so fast that we could hardly take a photo. The wheels of the sled bounced off the ground threatening to throw the driver into the dirt of the rough track. Back and forth, around and around the track the dogs ran with joy, their
mates still at the kennel barking encouragement and longing for snow, not far
away on this late September day.
Born to run.






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How I chuckled at your Deadliest Catch fears - for I have the same ones when I think of venturing out on the ocean in Alaska. :-) Well done facing those fears. The grilled salmon sounds amazing and those dogs are absolutely gorgeous. :-) PS - I am LOVING your book. :-) PPS - I'm still sick as can be, heading to doctor today, hopefully will be with it enough to send you Rome photos. :-) xo
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