top
US
US
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Regions
Indybay Regions North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area California United States International Americas Haiti Iraq Palestine Afghanistan
Topics
Newswire
Features
From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature

ALERT: Mitch Albom hyping cruel Iditarod again

by Sled Dog Action Coalition
Mitch Albom (author "Tuesdays with Morrie") hyped the Iditarod before. And he's doing it again now. Please educate him and the Detroit Free press about the cruelties of the Iditarod.
From the Sled Dog Action Coalition, http://www.helpsleddogs.org

In this article, Albom has only good things to say about Susan Butcher. He wrote in the next to last paragraph, "She honed a legacy of caring for the dogs above all else. And she died too soon." But one of the dogs used by Butcher in the 1994 Iditarod died from "sudden death syndrome." Another dog dropped dead in 1987 from internal hemorrhaging, and, in 1985, two were killed and several were injured by a moose.

Letter to editor: letters [at] freepress.com

Letter to Albom: malbom [at] freepress.com

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060813/SPORTS18/608130626/1066/SPORTS

MITCH ALBOM: Giving the dogsled champion her due

August 13, 2006

BY MITCH ALBOM

FREE PRESS COLUMNIST

Once again, I am late getting around to Susan Butcher. It has happened before. The first time was 15 years ago in Alaska. I was there to cover the Iditarod dogsled race, the only reporter from the continental states to do so. Butcher was about the only name anyone had ever heard of, mostly because 1) she was a woman, 2) she had won the Iditarod four of the previous five years, and 3) who knows anything about dogsled racing?

But I delayed getting to her because, frankly, I was intimidated. I had heard she did not suffer fools well, and I felt like a fool among all the dogs and snow. I also heard that she did not suffer humans well. She prefers "dogs to people," one musher said. Another local told me, "You don't have enough fur."

When I finally did meet Susan Butcher, it was just before the race began, at a veterinarian's office on the edge of Anchorage. I was introducing myself to her husband, Dave Monson, and she pushed through the door and asked him to "braid my hair." It wasn't the opening line I expected from a woman rumored to be tougher than leather, a woman who had once held an angry moose at bay with a stick for half an hour, until another musher came along and shot it.

That kind of stuff happens in the Iditarod. You get used to it.

An embarrassing moment on the trail

Anyhow, when she finally did speak to me, she talked about ... basketball. She talked about maybe naming one of her dogs "Isiah" after Isiah Thomas. She talked about wanting children. She talked about taking the phone out of her cabin in the tiny town of Eureka -- which at the time had 11 people -- because her life was getting too hectic.

Mostly she spoke with her dogs. They seemed to have a private communication. Her voice went soft and girlish with them, she nuzzled them, she caressed them. There were more dogs there than I could count, yet she knew every name. She spoke of their strength and heroism on the trail. Unlike most sports, where the athlete pounds his chest, dog mushers realize that their two feet are useless if the four-feeters aren't getting it done.

I left Butcher that day feeling I had met a tough, unique, passionate individual. I wrote a column about her strange ways. I figured it would run in Detroit and that was that.

More than a week later, deep into the 1,150-mile race, I came upon her late at night, around a campfire. She was tending to her team, feeding the dogs tiny chunks of meat. It was cold beyond freezing. Smoke came from our breath.

"So," she said, spotting me, "I like dogs better than humans?"

I gulped. She grinned and walked away. It was only then I found out that my columns had been picked off a wire service and were running daily in the Anchorage newspaper. She'd read everything.

Dominating the men of the wilderness

It was in another newspaper last week that I read Susan Butcher had died.

She was only 51. Leukemia. People who knew her seemed stunned, as if they expected her to beat the disease the way she beat blinding snowstorms, dangerous moose and the husky men who raced against her. True enough, she tried a risky move against her illness, a stem-cell transplant.

But the cancer won. She left behind her husband and the children she told me she planned to have -- two daughters, 11 and 6. And, of course, all those dogs.

I never went back to the Iditarod. I never got to tell her, or the readers of this column, that she was more historic than we ever acknowledged. Long before attractive young golfers such as Annika Sorenstam and Michelle Wie made news playing against men, Susan Butcher was beating men regularly. She outlasted and outsmarted them in the toughest of competitions. She even inspired a T-shirt I still own: "Alaska -- Where Men Are Men And Women Win The Iditarod."

She revolutionized her sport. She honed a legacy of caring for the dogs above all else. And she died too soon.

Obituaries are supposed to come quickly after death. So once again, I'm behind on this amazing woman. Then again, Susan Butcher was a few steps ahead of all of us.

Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or malbom [at] freepress.com.


Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by Elizabeth W.
What a wonderful column by Mitch Albom. It is a shame that those who know very little about sled dogs and sled dog racing are condemning a musher who truly loved her dogs.

Do they not know that Susan Butcher once slept on the floor of a veterinary clinic for ten nights when one of her dogs was ill?

Did they not read in 'Alaska' magazine that Susan Butcher was opposed to killing unwanted sled dogs? She and a number of other mushers worked hard to make dog mushing more humane.

Even the Humane Society's extremely anti-Iditarod vice president, David Wills, admitted that Susan loved her dogs. After one of Susan's dogs died in the 1994 Iditarod, Wills spoke out against the Iditarod on 'Good Morning America' yet admitted that "Susan Butcher's concern for her dogs is genuine and heartfelt."

How sad that some people put dog mushing under the category of abuse. People who have never seen the look of delight on a sled dog's face as she runs through the snow.
by Anonymusher
I could rant on about this for a long time but I think Elizabeth W. says it pretty well.
I will add, though, that Susan Butcher named one of her kids after one of her dogs. Those who think the Iditarod (and dogsledding in general) is dog abuse have no idea of the unbreakable bond that exists between mushers and their dogs.
by haw
Yes, there are those who took up mushing to make a buck and iams or other cooperadoes push that crap. However, as having had two siberian huskies growing up and been around some dog sledding, those dogs want to run, it's in their instinct. You say, well then free them and don't force them to run for humans. I'd say, if the owner is respectful of the dog, and there's not the sole objective of using the dogs to make money, so be it. Susan sounds like she respected her dogs more than a good portion of other humans. Shit, my current pooch(mutt) got loose in Berkley once a time ago and someone took him in for the night, but i was waiting at the pound the next morning to see if pooch was there, mine wasn't, but it was a full house and 90% of those dogs were the same kind. There's other breeds that suffer horrible care by humans, generally speaking. Attacking a writing about a deceased human who cared deeply for her animals is just something that feels wrong.
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!

Donate

$210.00 donated
in the past month

Get Involved

If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.

Publish

Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.

IMC Network