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Taking the Kids: Dogsledding above the Arctic Circle

Eileen Ogintz, Tribune Content Agency on

What’s the hurry? It is freezing with temperatures near zero Fahrenheit and a biting wind. But that’s not what’s causing the commotion. It’s the excited yapping of 100 sled dogs who are in a hurry to get moving.

We’re in the village of Breivekeidt, about 45 miles west of Tromso, the major Norwegian city above the Arctic Circle with about 75,000 people happily living here, though in the heart of winter there is no sunrise or sunset and it’s completely dark before 3 p.m. On our dogsledding expedition, the light is winter polar gloaming – kind of blue and beautiful.

The city is a popular hub for viewing the Northern Lights and in summer for cycling, camping and hiking. We are sailing on Hurtigruten’s MS Trollfjord (yes, we did see plenty of Northern Lights) and are taking the opportunity to try out some other popular winter sports.

The dogs are a mixture of Alaskan and Siberian Huskies and Malamutes. They are plenty happy with a pet, but even happier to get moving. Our three-mile ride is nothing for them, explains our guide, Kira Caurp. “They don’t like rest days,” she said.

We race through the snow-covered track, past trees, around curves, taking in the views of the Lyngen Alp Range, the wind in our faces. Nala, 8, is our lead dog and Mai Tai, 5, is the youngest. So what if we can’t feel our fingers? It’s over too soon. “Our dogs need to be intelligent, friendly and strong,” Caurp told us. She added that from the time they are pups, the guides can tell if they are destined to lead, to be the swing dogs behind the leader or bring up the rear. Often, female dogs become leaders.

And just like people, some will work harder than others. The experience is a highlight of our two-week trip, along with seeing the Northern Lights, of course. There are other dogsledding adventures in Norway, of course, including at Sorrisniva, the world’s Northernmost Igloo Hotel complete with huge ice sculptures inside.

We learn that the upcoming Finnmark sled race (the second week in March) is Europe’s longest – almost 746 miles over six to seven days with 160 teams and more than 1, 500 dogs. The winner takes around five days and 10 hours to complete the race in good weather conditions, while the last teams cross the finishing line after seven days. There is also a junior class for teens between 15 and 18, a little more than 124 miles with the mushers driving six dogs as opposed to 14 dogs for the adults. The race started in 1981 with three contestants. Now while there are fewer than 200 mushers, thousands are engaged, a symbol that unites everyone in the region with daily bulletins of the race.

Closer to home in Alaska is the upcoming Iditarod that is dubbed “The Last Great Race on Earth” with an expected 24 mushers. The ceremonial start (weather permitting) is scheduled for Saturday, March 1 in downtown Anchorage and will end in Nome – a roughly 1,000- mile journey through Alaska over some of the roughest and most beautiful terrain anywhere.

The race commemorates the importance dog teams have played in Alaska, especially in Native villages. Remember Balto? He was the Alaskan husky and sled dog famous for leading a team of dogs to Nome with diphtheria antitoxin in 1925 to combat a potentially deadly diphtheria epidemic there. You can see his statue in Central Park in New York City.

Last year, Veteran musher Dallas Seavey of Talkeetna, Alaska, claimed his sixth Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race® championship. With that win, Seavey became the most celebrated musher in the 52 years of the race. It took him nine days, two hours, 16 minutes, and eight seconds.

 

It's no easy task to train and race these dogs. You can learn a lot more about them even in summer in Alaska when many teams make camp atop glaciers. You might meet some future Iditarod pups and mushers and their dogs who have run the brutal race. No wonder dogsledding is such a popular excursion for those cruising Alaska. In some cases, you fly to a glacier (typically costing $250 and up). In winter, you might even have the chance to drive the sled. There are tours everywhere from near Anchorage to Seward to Denali.

If you are heading to snow country, there are many options as well. Go dogsledding in Colorado at Alpine Adventures in Leadville, or Good Times Adventures in Breckenridge. There are other options around Lake Tahoe and at Big Sky, Montana.

In Minnesota, there are multi-day trips where you stay in the back country. Ely, Minnesota, calls itself the “Dog Sled Capital of the world.” Paul Schurke, one of Minnesota’s best- known mushers, who drove a dogsled team to the North Pole, owns and operates Wintergreen Dogsled Lodge in Ely, which offers multi-day winter trips, and is co-founder of the not-for-profit Wilderness Inquiry out of Minneapolis, which offers challenging wilderness trips accessible to people with a wide variety of disabilities, along with anyone else who wants to participate.

“Dogsledding is also easier for people who are more fitness-challenged, because the dogs are doing most of the work,” Schurke was quoted as saying, adding that exploring the Boundary Waters in winter (as opposed to a summer canoes trip) means you won’t be battling bugs, the rain or portaging a canoe across the mud. (Check out special family trips.)

In Norway, despite the cold, we hated to say goodbye to the pups. But they were more focused on how soon they could get out and run again.

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(For more Taking the Kids, visit www.takingthekids.com and also follow TakingTheKids on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram where Eileen Ogintz welcomes your questions and comments. The fourth edition of The Kid’s Guide to New York City and the third edition of The Kid’s Guide to Washington D.C. are the latest in a series of 14 books for kid travelers published by Eileen.)

©2025 Eileen Ogintz. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


(c) 2025 DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

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