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Sorry link to dog pic did not get pasted on my last post -- KENNETH MCCLELLAND "Kenneth McClelland" wrote in message ... Went out sea kayaking with a group on one of the local rivers and was surprised to see our leader with a very large dog sitting in the rear hatch area. I had seen dogs in canoes over the years but to have a dog on board mostly out of reach requires a very calm dog. here is a link to the club page with a picture of him and his dog. -- KENNETH MCCLELLAND "Fred Klingener" wrote in message ... "CG" wrote in message om... Hello. I'm new to canoeing and would like to train my dog to come along. ... Keno was a malamute who came along on all my trips for years. Main problem was that he HATED to get wet. I had to lure him into the boat with dog biscuits, and the timing had to be perfect. If I gave the biscuit to him before we were well clear of shore, he would grab the biscuit and leap out without getting his paws wet. The second problem was his 90 or 100 pound mass. I couldn't force him to do anything he didn't want to do. We did a couple of trips that had whitewater in them, and it took some doing to keep him quiet. Most of the time the water was set-up-early-and-then-spectate, so I could hold him down with one hand through the whoop-de-doos, uttering usually soothing but sometimes threatening words. In the presence of wildlife, many malamutes and huskies are untrainable, and Keno was worse than the worst. If I saw the moose first, I could get a fistfull of withers skin, squeeze hard enough to get his attention and convince him that I was serious and hold him down. If he spotted it fir st (the usual condition), it was a real circus. And the funny thing was - the response was unmeasured. A moose or a squirrel got the same explosive reaction. It was barely possible to get him back on board after a swim, but a 90 pound double-coated dog brings in so much water with him that I would have to beach to bail anyway. On the upriver sections, Keno preferred to make his own way along the shore, agreeing to get ferried across when we got to a barrier or cutbank. Some people have dogs that'll line a boat in harness. *sigh* It's hardly worth boating without a dog. Hth, Fred Klingener |
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