The Iditarod is Alaska's annual dogsled race, which is marked by cruelty, injuries, and death. Every year in the 1,150-plus-mile race, dogs die of hypothermia, gastric ulcers, and "sled dog myopathy"—literally being run to death.
Dogs are forced to run for hours at a time, and rest is a limited luxury. They are subjected to subzero temperatures, biting winds, and blinding snowstorms, and they sometimes fall through the ice into frigid water. Their feet become bruised and bloodied, and they are cut by ice and the frozen ground. Along the seemingly endless stretch, dogs pull muscles, incur stress fractures, or become sick with diarrhea, dehydration, or intestinal viruses.
In 2008, Zaster, a 7-year-old male, died of pneumonia on March 8, and the next day, a 3-year-old female named Lorne was killed when a snowmachiner ran into a dog team on the Yukon River. In addition, two dogs were abandoned by their musher when they left the team and she was unable to locate them. In 2007, at least three dogs perished, one dog went missing for 11 days, and a musher was disqualified from the race for reportedly kicking his dogs and beating them with ski poles. Four dogs died in 2006, and at least three dogs died in 2005. More than one-third of the dogs who start the Iditarod never finish.
http://getactive.peta.org/campaign/iditarod_09/
Dogs are forced to run for hours at a time, and rest is a limited luxury. They are subjected to subzero temperatures, biting winds, and blinding snowstorms, and they sometimes fall through the ice into frigid water. Their feet become bruised and bloodied, and they are cut by ice and the frozen ground. Along the seemingly endless stretch, dogs pull muscles, incur stress fractures, or become sick with diarrhea, dehydration, or intestinal viruses.
In 2008, Zaster, a 7-year-old male, died of pneumonia on March 8, and the next day, a 3-year-old female named Lorne was killed when a snowmachiner ran into a dog team on the Yukon River. In addition, two dogs were abandoned by their musher when they left the team and she was unable to locate them. In 2007, at least three dogs perished, one dog went missing for 11 days, and a musher was disqualified from the race for reportedly kicking his dogs and beating them with ski poles. Four dogs died in 2006, and at least three dogs died in 2005. More than one-third of the dogs who start the Iditarod never finish.
http://getactive.peta.org/campaign/iditarod_09/