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dogsled Minnesota Katie Heaney Ely Iditarod Wintergreen Dogsled Lodge
That is your author, directing a dogsled. (Photo: Courtesy of Katie Heaney)

Living the Dream: We Went Dogsledding

Did Katie Heaney actually go dogsledding? It seems like it鈥攐r this whole thing is just an extremely detailed fever dream.

Published: 
dogsled Minnesota Katie Heaney Ely Iditarod Wintergreen Dogsled Lodge
(Photo: Courtesy of Katie Heaney)

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It鈥檚 weird to make actual plans for something that sounds more like a dream鈥攖o just pick a day and book it. But way up north in Minnesota, up at the , a person really can go dogsledding. It鈥檚 even a website: .

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All you need to know about going wild with man's best friend.
dogsled Minnesota Katie Heaney Ely Iditarod Wintergreen Dogsled Lodge Superior Forest Dogsledding through Superior National Forest.
dogsled Minnesota Katie Heaney Ely Iditarod Wintergreen Dogsled Lodge Oh hey, dog. Wanna bring me somewhere?

Before it became something that most people do for sport鈥攂efore it became associated with , the Alaskan, 1,049-mile, dog-driven trek (either northward or southward, depending on the year), and one of the three or four races everyone knows by name even if they鈥檝e never watched it鈥攄ogsledding served a more pragmatic purpose. Sled dogs originally pulled loads (and people) across North America and Siberia. Today, they are still used among the Inuit peoples in the Arctic Circle, but snowmobiles have made them functionally unnecessary almost everywhere else. But as with every other animal humans have made our own in some way, it was probably never just about function.

Our day trip runs 9-5 and the Wintergreen Lodge is over four hours north of where we live in the Twin Cities, so my friend Rylee and I arrive in the night before. The tiny, Boundary Waters-adjacent town (3,460 residents as of the 2010 census) is not unfamiliar to us鈥攚e鈥檝e stayed in a cabin up there two summers in a row鈥攂ut coming here in the dead of winter is different. Nobody is outside, and several of the souvenir/outdoor-supply stores appear shuttered for the season. When we pull up to (which offers a discount for guests with dogsledding reservations) around sunset, the snowy parking lot is nearly empty. It doesn鈥檛 take many steps for me to arrive at melodramatic comparisons to The Shining, but being reminded of it in this case鈥攖he frozen hotel exterior not unlike the one Danny Torrance runs out into that night鈥攕eems more appropriate than ever.

After a night of very little sleep (due in no part to the lodge, which is cozy and ultimately not likely a place where someone might stick his head through your wall, but to dual senses of foreboding and excitement about the next day), we eat breakfast, put on as much of our cold-weather gear as we can stand, and pack the rest in the car. , and offers extras in its store, but what dogsledders like us wear also depends on the weather. I wore: two long-sleeve thermal tops, a hooded sweatshirt, and an impossibly warm fleece-lined Columbia jacket on top; long-johns, jeans, snow pants, and two thick pairs of socks on bottom; a knit hat (under my hood) and a neck warmer on my head, and thick mittens on my hands. I was lent two neck warmers by my REI-aficionado mother, one of which I wore, and the other of which looked exactly like a black neoprene Hannibal Lecter mask, holes over the mouth and all. (There may be no such thing as a non-terrifying face mask, but this one seemed egregiously so.) When I realize I won鈥檛 need it, I am grateful.

AT FIRST, THE DRIVE over to Wintergreen seems simple鈥攖he map puts it about 10 miles away, but it soon becomes clear we didn鈥檛 leave ourselves enough time for four of them to be winding, unpaved dirt roads covered in slick snow and ice. The route is treacherous, even if only in a familiar-to-Minnesotans sort of way, and when we finally see the signpost for a right-hand turn into the lodge, it鈥檚 a little too late: we slide past it for a while before being able to turn back in.

The relief at arriving very nearly on time and un-crushed by trees plus the lack of sleep from the night prior makes us giddy. 鈥淲hat if the lodge were, like, run by dogs?鈥 I ask Rylee, half-deliriously, imagining a whole staff of sled dogs dressed in matching polos and slacks. 鈥淗aha, what if one greets us on his hind legs and is like, 鈥榃elcome,鈥欌 she says, and it鈥檚 all very funny until we both notice a large dog up the wooded hill from the road, who seems to notice our car and proceeds to head down the path (on all fours, but still), following us into the parking lot. I really thought he might say something. For the first (but not the last) time that day, I feel like I am in the North Pole.

It turns out to be a human woman who greets us when we finally shuffle our way into the lodge. Sue Schurke, co-owner of the Wintergreen Dogsled Lodge with her husband Paul, is tiny and immediately lively and charming. She welcomes us into the lodge鈥檚 homey living room鈥攕ectional leather couches, a standing fireplace, a long dining table鈥攁nd invites us to sit anywhere and throw our bags wherever. While we wait for everyone to arrive鈥攚ith us that day are two young couples and a grandfather with his two grandkids鈥攚e learn a little about the dogs: Canadian Inuits.

There are 65 of them at Wintergreen Lodge, each one pure-bred. The family鈥檚 first dogs were obtained from an Inuit hunter; others were given to them by the Australian government, which was looking to give a good home to the last team of working dogs in Antarctica. Others were gifts from families in Canada and Greenland. Canadian Inuits are ideal for life at Wintergreen: they aren鈥檛 as big as Malamute dogs (another of the four main breeds of working dogs, along with Huskies and Samoyeds), which makes them easier to manage for beginners, but they鈥檙e bigger and stronger than Huskies, allowing them to pull sleds in the uneven Superior Forest backwoods. In the lodge鈥檚 owners鈥 terms, .

Dogsledding is criticized by certain animal rights activists for being inhumane, pointing especially to vicious dog abuse in the Iditarod鈥攊n 2007, Ramy Brooks received a two-year suspension for having kicked and punched his dogs when they wouldn鈥檛 move forward from a race checkpoint. Critics say he鈥檚 just one of many, and I don鈥檛 know what reasonable person would doubt there鈥檚 some truth to that. For trophies and medals and money, there are people鈥攁nd a never-ending fountain of supporting evidence鈥攚ho would do anything.

After being at Wintergreen Lodge for 15 minutes, it seems clear this place and those concerns have nothing to do with each other. The dogs here 鈥渞etire鈥 after 10 or 12 years, and from there they have the run of the lodge. The family, wandering in and out of the main room, talk to the dogs, who are also wandering in and out of the room, like people. They talk to them like people they鈥檝e known and loved鈥攁nd worked with鈥攆or years.

I ALWAYS EXPECT LENGTHIER training processes than most outdoors organizations give, mostly because I鈥檓 never sure why anyone trusts me with myself, but after signing our waivers and receiving a 20-minute lesson on how to use the sled brakes, we鈥檙e ready to mush. Here, especially, I have little reason to think more background would help: it really is the dogs who run this operation, and they鈥檒l do it, generally speaking, with very little of my input. We do, however, learn a few very important commands: 鈥淩eady hike鈥 means go; 鈥淲hoa鈥 means stop. Sue tells us, and she鈥檚 not kidding, that we don鈥檛 need to remember 鈥渨hoa.鈥 鈥淲hoa鈥 will come to us automatically.

While we were getting our lesson, Wintergreen staff members were preparing the dogs, and when we exit the lodge we hear them down on the lake right away. I know what dogs sound like. What these dogs sound like isn鈥檛 what dogs sound like. Their whining whistles, warbly and high-pitched, sometimes sound more mechanical than canine. They sound the way pinching feels. Our group descends toward them, trudging a steep decline along a guide rope, and as soon as we can see them, I start saying 鈥渙h my God鈥 and don鈥檛 really stop for the rest of the day. The dogs are unbelievable.

They鈥檙e lined up in a row, in groups of five or six per two-person sled. Every last one is beautiful. Most are quite big but some are small, in relative terms, nearer to the size of the typical canine pet. They are black and white and beige and red and brown. Rylee and I approach a group that looks especially calm, avoiding the wilder-sounding, tough-looking group behind them until, as our luck would have it, the staff shifts us back there anyway. Every few minutes, as everyone gets situated in a sled and the dogs beg to get started, one of the staff will yell, scolding, 鈥淗EINSY!鈥 and they鈥檒l be referring to our sled鈥檚 front dog, who is a crotchety troublemaker but also very sweet. Somehow they are all like this: tough, teeth baring viciously if another dog gets too close, and simultaneously the gentlest, most emotionally needy creatures I鈥檝e met. Their faces burrow into your palms like rabbits. They grin.

Rylee will be in charge of braking, and I鈥檒l be 鈥渓ead musher,鈥 which means that it鈥檚 my job to, whenever we鈥檙e stopped, jump off the sled and run to the front of our pack to calm, pet, and praise the dogs. If I don鈥檛, they will find something else to do. On our first practice stop, just 50 yards from our starting point on the lake, I forget to do my job. In moments, Heinsy veers left, leading the team to run in a circle back around the left side of our sled, so that we are trapped by our dogs. The guides, who travel alongside us on cross-country skis, get us re-organized, scolding the dogs just a bit and Rylee and I a little more so. It takes a while to get a hang of this: not just the calming, but the braking, too. The dogs desperately want to run.

We get to know our dogs when we really get started, sailing across the snowy lake. In front are Heinsy and Millie; behind them, Isis and Jupiter, and in back, the strongest, Bones and Ramona. (A female dog is set alongside each male, because two males alongside each other will fight. In truth, so will a female and a male, but it won鈥檛 be as vicious. In our group at least, the girls start the brawls each time we stop.) Isis and Millie are our black sheep鈥擨sis is especially restless and takes it out on Jupiter. Millie does the same with Heinsy, and when I鈥檓 in front calming them down, she also enjoys chomping on my mittens and scarf. Ramona, the Real Housewife of the group, likes to fling herself dramatically to the ground and flop her paws in the air. Bones is our favorite; he is stately and gentlemanly, dark gray fur with a gorgeous white face and the highest, weirdest howl we hear among them all.

What I鈥檓 doing when I鈥檓 dogsledding looks an awful lot like standing, so I find myself struggling to explain to you how it is so very different. At times I forget it myself, and find myself thinking about other things I have to get done for a few minutes before remembering, with a shock, where I am. On the lake it鈥檚 easier to forget: it is flat, easy, vast open space, with little need to adjust our speed or direction. But soon we come to the edges, where we will head into the , with narrower, icier paths and dense tree grove barriers on either side. Here is where we will need the brake.

We鈥檙e never going so fast that it feels dangerous, but it does feel like flying. It does feel like Santa鈥檚 sleigh. It鈥檚 especially true given our sunny, stunning, frozen surroundings, which shift back and forth from forest so thick you can only see ahead or behind, to more open, swampier areas, from which petrified spruce rise up like twisted statues. There are a few points when the trees are so tall and thick that I look straight up and see them still, and it felt very movie-ish to stare heavenward like that, but it鈥檚 the best air I鈥檝e ever smelled. Breathing in the cold often makes me feel at least theoretically immortal, and up here it feels certain.

I should say that it is important, as much as possible, to not look away from the path ahead. I feel strongly that the trees that jutted off the edges and into our space were heavily biased toward hitting me and not Rylee鈥擨 have to jump backwards off the sled at least four times to keep from slamming into trunks and branches. When this happens, I jog to catch up and jump back on the sled. It鈥檚 easy enough to handle, but one time I do swerve my body in an attempt to stay on the sled, and push my hipbone hard into the handle bar instead. The bruise I take home is my fault, no question, but it doesn鈥檛 mean I won鈥檛 hold it against my mushing partner for choosing the safer side of our sled.

IT鈥橲 ONLY TOWARD THE end of our day鈥攕plit into morning and afternoon sessions, with an impressive hour-long lunch of wild-rice soup, egg-and-cheese souffl茅, pasta salad, fruit, apple pie鈥攖hat I start to feel cold or anything less than invigorated. It鈥檚 past 4 p.m. now, and I start wondering if we鈥檒l make it back by sunset. The thought of being in this perfect place once it is dark is unimaginably spooky. (We do make it back by dark, but just barely.) You wouldn鈥檛 see a thing.

We reach the lodge and the dogs get put away in their large, wooden, open-air stalls. I tell each of them goodbye, but with my darling Bones I attempt an entire parting conversation. He is stolid, reserved with his feelings, but I know he cares. We spent the whole day together. Anyway, I love him.

After taking off a few layers and settling our checks in the lodge, it鈥檚 time to head back to the city. For the first half of the drive, I can see every star. Later, too soon afterward, the trip will feel like something I didn鈥檛 really do. Which means, I think, that I鈥檒l have to go back.

听is a writer based in Minneapolis. She has a memoir coming out in early 2014.

Lead Photo: Courtesy of Katie Heaney

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