Sunday, March 27, 2011

The History of the Canadian Eskimo Dog





The Canadian Eskimo Dog is one of the five indigenous dogs that Canada is proud to call their own. About 2000 years ago, the Arctic regions of Canada became home to the Thule culture of Inuit people. The first Canadian Eskimo Dogs were called “Qimmiq” (which simply means dog) by the Inuit.

The land was cohabited by the Inuit and their dogs. The dogs were an important and vital part of life. These dogs were extremely versatile, used for transportation, hauling sleds and packing. They also assist in hunting. They were capable of locating seal breathing holes. They served as a protector by attacking and holding musk ox and polar bears at bay. The dogs were a vital part in everyday survival of the Inuit people and their families. 

This breed has survived in the harshest terrain in the world. A Canadian Eskimo Dog can pull twice its weight through the harshest weather and terrain with very little nourishment. This is why this dog was in high demand in the early 1900’s as the dog of choice for expedition use. These dutiful dogs have stood at both north and south poles, serving nearly all the famous explorers of the Arctic and Antarctic regions. With such a rich and proud history, they have been commemorated by appearing on postage stamps and coins.

In the 1950’s it was estimated that 20,000 Canadian Eskimo Dogs lived in Canada’s North. Later, the introduction of new inventions like the snowmobile gained popularity, Canadian Eskimo Dogs quickly started to vanish. Other breeds of dogs came to Canada’s north, carrying many diseases and illnesses.  The Canadian Eskimo Dog had never been exposed to these diseases. Many died and many crossbred with other breeds.
 

In 1970, the Canadian Eskimo Dog was on the verge of extinction with an estimated 200 pure dogs left in the North. In 1972, a project was initiated to try to save the breed and re-establish its numbers. William Carpenter and John McGrath with assistance from the Canadian Kennel Club and the Canadian Government began the Canadian Eskimo Dog Research Foundation Kennel Club. In 1986, the first dogs from this project were registered with the Canadian Kennel Club. The collaborated efforts were instrumental in creating the foundation stock of the registered breed. Unfortunately, the number of pure Canadian Eskimo Dogs in existence is still dangerously low. There are only 279 registered Canadian Eskimo Dogs in existence today.




Information courtesy of http://www.canadianeskimodog.com/history.htm

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Native Americans: The Inuit of the Artic

   

The indigenous peoples of the Americas are the pre-Columbian inhabitants of North and South America, their descendants, and many ethnic groups who identify with those peoples. In North American, they are often also referred to as Native Americans, Aboriginals,  First Nations, and (by Christopher Columbus' geographic mistake) Indians, later called Red Indians and by unique tribal identifications (Algonquin, Sioux, Cherokee, Navajo, etc.). Native American peoples are located throughout the United States.

Hawaiian and Alaskan indigenous peoples are also considered Native Americans. Native Americans are a diverse and culturally rich. There are 562 tribes officially recognized by the federal government. With about 4.5 million individuals who self-identify as having American Indian, Alaskan Native or Native Hawaiian ancestry. Each group has its own language and social customs.

The Inuit (The People) 
One of these Native American groups is called The Inuit. The Inuit are a group of culturally similar indigenous peoples inhabiting the Artic regions of Canada, Greenland, Siberia and Alaska. Inuit means “the people” in the Inuktitut language. An Inuk is an Inuit person. The Inuit language is grouped under Eskimo-Aleut languages.

The Land of the Inuits
The Inuit have lived in the Arctic for thousands of years. Some areas formerly occupied by the Inuit are no longer inhabited. The lands where the Inuit live is cold and harsh.  They have long cold winters and short, cool summers. There is a lot of snow.  On the average there are between 15 and 90 inches of snow each year.  The snow doesn't melt until spring, and winter storms can force people to remain inside for days at a time. 

Inuit Territory
Inuit Travel
For transportation Inuits use kayaks, umiaks, snowshoes and dogsleds.
The kayak is a boat that can carry only one person. It is quiet for hunting. It is small and covered in seal skins. Around the edge it was slightly raised so the passenger could fasten his coat to the rim. This way the man and the boat could be one water proof unit. The kayak’s paddle is a long stick which has a paddle on each side. 

The umiak is a larger and more open boat.  It is covered with animal skins. It was made to carry large loads: an entire family or a two-ton load of blubber. The normal length of a amok was 35-40 feet. But for its size it was quite light, light enough for two men to carry.  

The best known transportation was the komatik or dogsled. The komatik has a light but sturdy frame on runners with reins. The reins are hitched up to six or so huskies.
Snowshoes are racket-shaped platforms which have leather straps across the frame which tie on your feet.
Kayak

Dogsled / Komatik
                                       
Umiak






































Inuit Houses
The word igloo actually means any type of house, not just a snow house. The snow-block house that we usually think of when we hear igloo was not used by all Inuits.  There were no snow-block houses in Alaska.  The Alaskan Inuits lived cabins made from driftwood and covered with soil.

To make an igloo, hard-packed snow was cut into blocks with a long knife made of bone, ivory, or metal. A man could build an  igloo in an hour. In the igloo, Inuit slept on a low snow platform covered with twigs and caribou furs. Each igloo had a skylight made of freshwater ice. When summer arrived the igloo melted, and the family had to move into tents made of animal skins.







 

Inuit Food
The Inuit people hunt for their food.  They eat primarily fish, sea mammals and a few land mammals. They hunt seals, especially, the ring seal.  Inuit know a great deal about how seals live.  They also know about ice that covers the sea in the winter.  They know where to go on that ice to find the seals.

 

The Inuit people hunt seals during winter through the frozen ocean ice. Seals are mammals and must breathe. Seals scratch a holes through the ice as it begins to freeze.  Seals come back to these holes for air. The Inuit hunter stood with a poised harpoon over these breathing holes, waiting for the seal to surface. Often the hunter had to stand this way for several hours in the bitter cold.  Harpoons are still used, though rifles are also used..

In the spring and summer, when the ices melts, seals are hunted from boats called kayaks.  The kayak holds only one hunter.  It  is covered all over with sealskin or caribou skin. The hunter sits in it, dressed in tight-fitting waterproof clothing made from seal or walrus intestine. The kayak moves silently through the water.  The hunter can get very close to seals without being heard. 

Hunter in kayak 
with harpoon
Caribou



Caribou are also hunted for food, as well as for their skins for clothing and antlers for tools. 
Inuit Clothing
Only fur clothing was warm enough in such a cold place.  The Inuit preferred the fur of the caribou, though they sometimes used fur of other animals such as seals and polar bear.

Clothing consisted of coat, trousers, stockings, shoes or boots.  In very cold weather two of each garment were worn.  The inner one had the fur against the skin, the outer one had the fur outside.  

One Inuit garment, the hooded coat called the parka, has been adopted by skiers and others who spend time in the cold. An atiqik is a Inuit parka made with goose down. 

 
Boots are called kamiks.  They are made from sealskin because it lasts long, is warm,  and isn't hurt when it gets wet. 

Kamiks
FAMILY & WORK
Men and women do different things.  Men are the hunters and home builders, while women preparethe food, work on skins and make the clothing.  Men and women need each other.  Every Inuit gets married.  Inuit are fond of children and orphans live with relatives and are well treated.  In a land where there were no vegetable foods or roads, a mother nurses her children and carries them everywhere on her back until they are 3 years old.


Information courtesy of http://www.ih.k12.oh.us/ps/Inuit/Maininuit.htm



 

Saturday, March 5, 2011

This week, I'd like to blog about the eleven companions I have living with me at my house. They came from many different places. I rescued my two dogs from high-kill animal shelters and my cats came from many different litters and feral cat colonies. Below you will find their pictures. I have listed them from the oldest to the youngest in the chronological order they entered my life along with a brief bio about each of them.

 
Stinker
is the feline friend that I have had the longest. She is a twelve-year old black Manx Cat. A Manx is a tailless cat that originated on the Isle of Man off the coast of England. I rescued her from a garbage pile in 1998. She had lost almost all her hair because she was allergic to fleas; but after a visit to the vet and a thorough flea treatment, she became a friend for life.

Cleo
is an American Bobtail
cat. She is seventeen years old and weighs about 15 pounds. She is a regal looking cat with long hair. She came to me in 2001 from a rescue group that kept rescued cats in foster homes until the right family was found to adopt them. Both Cleo and Stinks sleep with me at night.
 
Sweet Pea is a three year old mixed-breed dog. I adopted her in 2008 from a high-kill shelter in another state. She is part Rat Terrier and part Chihuahua so she is a small dog. She is very energetic! She grew up with cats, so she is very friendly and gentle with them.

Tubbs taking a nap!
In the summer of 2009, I found a little 6-week old, long-haired, white and gray kitten in my yard. The little thing had no hair on his tail. He looked like a fuzzy little rat! He came from a litter of kittens in the feral cat colony that live in the house next door. He was fat and happy so I named him Tubbs
 


 
Not long after, I decided that Tubbs needed a playmate. The two older cats, Stinks and Cleo, were too old to play with him. I didn't think that a kitten should be alone. That summer was the summer of kittens because Tubbs got three more playmates:


Houdini  - Jumping Jack Flash - Baby Girl

Houdini (my little escape artist!)


Having four kittens all under the age of 6-months really kept my house in chaos! Cats, especially young ones, are very curious creatures and get into EVERYTHING!

Sweetie loved playing with them, but as she got bigger, she was too rough when she played with them. She really needed a canine companion to play with.
Another dog of her size and with lots of energy is what we needed. I began looking for another dog that would be a good match for her. It also had to be a dog that was OK around cats. It wouldn't be a good idea to have a dog that didn't like cats join the menagerie! I looked and looked for a small dog with the right personality. Finally, last year at the end of the summer, I found one. His name is Beauregard. Beauregard is a two year old, wire-haired Jack Russell Terrier.



Beauregard  
(My bouncing Bo-Bo!)

This past summer, I got the urge to add one last kitten to my menagerie. I specifically wanted another Manx cat. I looked and looked and finally found two sisters that were litter-mates.

One sister is a short-haired, black and white, tuxedo rumpy named Rumpy, and the other sister is very different. She is a long-haired, solid black (except for a small white dot on her chest), stumpy named Stumpy!
Stumpy
Rumpy