100+ pages d'info à chamonix Updated daily by Chamonix Networks
Over 1000 pages of info on Chamonix chamonix.net french version - home - help
Relax                Hotel Eden
activities in Chamonix activities where to stay in Chamonix where to stay info about Chamonix info where to eat in Chamonix where to eat
entertainment in Chamonix
Google
cham.net
www

Most Popular
Webcam
Weather
Photos
Events
Maps
Currency
Postcards
Alpinism Conditions
Snow Reports
Lift & Run Data

Accommodation
? ?
Availability

On-line Hotel Reservations
2, 3 & 4- star
 
a

On-line car rental


Section Heads
BOOK ON-LINE
CHAMONIX INFO
ACCOMMODATION
TRAVEL
TRANSPORT
PROPERTY
ACTIVITIES
SHOP
SERVICES
NIGHT LIFE
RESTAURANTS
BARS & CAFES
SUMMER SEASON
WINTER SEASON
In Chamonix the time is 2:51 am
Dog Sledding
 

These dogs have been bred and perfected, as all working dogs, over many generations. They want to pull you and they want to go off in a straight line over the far horizon.

It's a sport that's becoming more and more popular and local dog mushers are heavily booked.


If you like dogs even just a little bit, then dog sledding is exciting. Not for the speed - it's just a little more than walking pace - but for the pleasure of being with such animals. They're normally Alaskan Huskies or sometimes the bigger and stronger but much harder to manage Greenland Huskies. Bred from wolf/domestic dog crosses, they are wonderfully affectionate animals and are increasingly popular as pets.
As people moved into the flat northern expanses of the continents of Europe and America they brought with them the dog. They needed new methods for traveling over snow and one part of the solution was the crossing of their domestic dog with the wolves that were plentiful in those regions. Huskies are still kept at about 1/8th wolf cross for stamina and endurance.
The other development was the sled. This works really well and is still regularly used, for example, by climbers traveling along Greenland's huge glaciers to access new mountain routes. There you travel on skis and pull the sled yourself.
Dogs pulling sleds was the breakthrough. Now modern materials, especially plastics and lightweight alloys, allow modern dog sleds to be very light and strong with a low-friction gliding surface.
There are two dog sledging companies operating around the Chamonix valley. They offer everything from the chance to sit in a sled, to learning to mush a team (usually of 3 to 4 dogs to start with), to long distance treks in Norway and Croatia.
Try Huskydalen or Boreal Aventure
Return to Winter Sports Home Page
Chamonix Networks - effective web solutions for Chamonix
 
home - v. française - help - search - tell a friend - comments - rate this page - rate this site