Musher threatens legal action over Sled Dogs documentary

Wolf Photos Copyright Jim Robertson

‘I have euthanized dogs of my own and I would again if I needed to,’ says one operator

By Yvette Brend, CBC News <http://www.cbc.ca/news/cbc-news-online-news-staff-list-1.1294364> Posted: Nov 27, 2016 7:00 AM PT Last Updated: Nov 27, 2016 10:53 AM PT

Hans Gatt’s lead dogs head into a turn just after leaving the official restart of the Iditarod dog sled race in Willow, Alaska, in March 2014. (Reuters)

B.C. and Alberta sled dog handlers say a soon-to-air film, billed as an exposé <http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/sled-dog-alaska-documenary-canada-whistler-film-festival-mushers-huskies-iditarod-1.3845732> of the northern dogsled industry, is misleading, and they want it pulled from a film festival.

Sled Dogs <http://festival.tsharp.xyz/en/whistlerfilmfestival/film/242/sled-dogs> has been touted as the Blackfish <http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/sled-dog-alaska-documenary-canada-whistler-film-festival-mushers-huskies-iditarod-1.3845732> — a documentary film that exposed the cruel treatment of an orca at San Diego’s SeaWorld — of the dogsled industry.

The film documents the lives of racing dogs behind the scenes on the 1,600-kilometre Iditarod. Over the years, at least 140 dogs have died in the race.

* A scathing indictment of industry <http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/sled-dog-alaska-documenary-canada-whistler-film-festival-mushers-huskies-iditarod-1.3845732>

But dog handlers say Sled Dogs paints an unfair picture of the industry. They want it pulled from the Whistler Film Festival lineup before the Dec. 3 <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CC0PxBfeas8> premiere.

“I threatened legal action because no one from the film had talked with me, seen my kennel or met my dogs,” said Megan Routley of Kingmik Dogled Tours, based near Banff National Park.

Routley was furious about the film’s trailers, which she said linked to an activist site calling for a “boycott of all things sled dog.”

She argues the film depicts the industry as cruel and inhumane, showing misleading scenes of dead dogs piled in an Alaskan kennel run by a hoarder, who mushers say actually sold pets and had no links to the dog racing world.

The film also shows dogs chained and isolated for months in the off-season.

But dog handlers defend some of the practices, arguing that chaining, or even euthanizing, a dog is not as cruel as it appears.

Chains aren’t torture, say mushers

There are very few statistics on the sled dog industry, but at least 100 kennels operate between Alaska, B.C, Alberta and northern U.S. states.

Tim Tedford operates a kennel and recreational dogsled touring business near Kelowna, B.C. He also speaks for the Professional Mushers Association of B.C., which represents about 10 kennels.

He agrees with Routley that the film is one-sided.

Director Fran Levitt’s documentary Sled Dogs premieres at the Whistler Film Festival Dec. 3. (Sled Dogs/Fran Levitt)

The association formed in 2011 after news of a sled dog cull in Whistler B.C <http://www.cbc.ca/beta/news/canada/british-columbia/sled-dog-slaughter-prompts-b-c-task-force-1.977101> . sparked widespread anger.

That cull inspired Toronto director Fern Levitt to make her film.

But Tedford said Levitt got it wrong.

He said B.C.’s sled dog care <http://www.gov.bc.ca/agri/down/sled_dog_standards_care.pdf> standards are the highest in the world, but the film ignored that.

Yukon musher Michelle Phillips with one of partner Ed Hopkins’ dogs at the 2016 Yukon Quest. (Julien Schroder/Yukon Quest)

“It’s in your best interest to have happy, well-socialized sled dogs that love you. They are not little machines,” he said.

Dogs must be released daily, but also chained up close enough to each other so they can interact, he said.

He said dog abuse horrifies him, but said he has found no scientific evidence to prove that chaining a dog causes harm.

A Cornell University study <http://www.naiaonline.org/uploads/WhitePapers/Cornell_study_on_tethering_and_pen.pdf> suggested that keeping dogs penned together is not necessarily better than tying them up solo.

‘You have to do right by them’

For her part, Levitt believes that many dog mushers, like Tedford, are devoted to their animals. But she argued some lose sight of the dogs’ true needs.

“I feel that the mushers are missing the point: is the commercial dog sledding industry humane?” she asked.

While Tedford has always decried the controversial cull of the 48 dogs later exhumed in Whistler in 2011, he said sometimes shooting an animal is the most humane thing to do.

Fort McMurray sled dogs train on a dog run in Alberta in April. (Mush McMurray)

“It’s not acceptable to shoot or kill healthy dogs in any way,” he said.

But if a dog gets sick, old or wounded and there is no veterinarian, he believes it’s an appropriate action.

“What if you don’t have a needle or a pill? What if you have a dog who has been healthy for 12 years and has never set foot inside a veterinary , a sterile, beeping, stainless steel and tile, sort of scary place. Is that really where you want to take him?” said Tedford.

“I have euthanized dogs of my own and I would again if I needed to.

“It’s a very difficult thing to do. You love those dogs. They’re your family. But you have to do right by them. They’ve given you their whole life. They’ve given you their whole being and they do it willingly,” he said.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/sled-dogs-mushers-reaction-bc-culling-euthanizing-1.3867429

Sled Dogs Film

An Animal Rights Article from All-Creatures.org

FROM

SledDogsFilm.com
November 2016

Sled Dogs is the first documentary to look at what happens at sled dog operations and the Iditarod once the tourists go home. This film weaves together various characters and narratives to explore a truth about the dog sledding industry while posing the question: “Is the abuse seen against “man’s best friend” disguised as entertainment?

sled dogs film

Watch the trailer and learn more at Sled Dogs Film

World Premiere at the Whistler Film Festival November 30 – December 4

Picture yourself flying along a frozen, winding trail surrounded by wild boreal forests with only the whisper of sled runners beneath you and a howling pack of dogs to break the solitude. With this in mind, it’s easy to understand why year after year thousands of tourists flock to experience one of the most quintessentially Northern pastimes: dog sledding. This idyllic portrait has been promoted by both the tourism industry and the dog sledding world for decades in an attempt to maximize profits while concealing a sometimes gruesome reality.

Dogs in many commercial dog sled companies are continually tethered to a chain and euthanized when they’re deemed no longer useful. In 2011, the public finally learned the truth after an incident in Whistler, B.C. made international headlines: One hundred dogs were brutally murdered and thrown into a mass grave by a tourism company after an unprofitable season. Sled dog companies along with the B.C. government decried the practice, claiming it to be an isolated occurrence; but animal rights activists maintain that this practice is pervasive throughout the entire industry. As seen in the film, the trial of Dan MacEachen in Colorado will once again bring the sled dog industry into the public eye. Dan, who was the owner of one of the largest dog sledding companies in North America, was charged with eight counts of animal cruelty.

If he was found guilty, the case would spark a much-needed debate about animal rights laws in North America. This is not the first time concerns were raised against MacEachen. In 1988, he was charged with animal cruelty, but the charge was dropped and Dan continued to run his sledding operations until 2013.

“The Last Great Race”, Alaska’s Iditarod, is one of the largest financial pillars in the northern community and is a tradition well loved by mushers and spectators alike. Thousands of tourists flock each year to watch as teams of sled dogs run over a thousand miles across Mother Nature’s harshest landscape.

Some of the Iditarod supporters claim that sled dogs are “canine athletes” and love the challenge of the sport. They claim that sled dogs are born and bred to race and are “different” from other dogs. Animal rights critics along with some former mushers fervently disagree and claim that these statements are used to justify animal abuse and keep a misinformed public in the dark. Sled Dogs is the first documentary to explore both sides of the dog sledding industry. This film weaves together various characters and narratives to explore a truth about the dog sledding industry while posing the question: “Is the abuse seen against “man’s best friend” disguised as entertainment?