Mythos Malamutes

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Mythos Malamutes Breeding AKC registered Alaskan Malamute puppies from our beautiful mals with Champion bloodlines. Icewinds Zeus Fire and Ice is our gorgeous red stud.

29/06/2022

In 1925, diphtheria affected an isolated village in Alaska. Due to the severe cold, it was not possible to transport the medicines by plane and ship, so the transport of the medicines to the town of Noma was organized with the help of mushers (guides or drivers of a dog sled team).

About 1800 kilometers had to be covered in five days. There were several teams and they took turns on different sections. The Norwegian Gunnar Kasen and his main dog Balto were the first to bring the serum to the village.

It turned out that Kasen had not made a mistake in choosing the main dog, because when the team had an accident, Balto helped his musher, saving him from certain death.

When the storm reached its peak and visibility became low they crossed 85 km. Balto is considered a hero, and in 1925 a monument was erected to him in Central Park in New York.

He was truly a hero, like all the other dogs during this mission. However, the dog that did the most difficult part of the work was Togo who crossed the longest distance (418 kilometers). He was part of Leonardo Seppala team of dogs. Togo is the husky, in the photo.

Togo was already known for his incredible leadership qualities, which he demonstrated again in this race.

The mission was successfully completed and these brave dogs saved numerous lives.

22/04/2022
11/11/2021

Thank you for your service...❤
When Pearl Harbor was attacked on December 7, 1941, America’s inventory of military working dogs consisted of only 90 Siberian Huskies and Malamutes. That two Nordic breeds were the entire “stable” was not a surprise, and certainly not the inclusion of the fastest of the purebred Arctic sled-pulling breeds, the Siberian Husky. The U.S. Army recruited these dogs during World War II to serve in the Arctic Search and Rescue Unit to go where motorized equipment couldn’t go. With the help of Canadians, they also trained the Sibes to jump from planes and bring supplies to downed airmen who’d fallen in isolated locations. These days, tradition holds that every military working dog is a noncommissioned officer, and always one rank higher than its handler. This is a wonderful reversal of sentiment from when Russian fur trader William Goosak entered a team of Siberians in the 1909 All Alaska Sweepstakes race and the people of Nome called his smaller, lighter dogs, “Siberian Rats.” We prefer the sound of, “Sir. Yes, Sir.”

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