Monday, 26 March 2012

A Greenlander and her dogs 2




 Here Mia describes more of her dogs and their relations with each other. Feel free to leave and comment or ask Mia and question and she'll try to get back to you.





I took all but one dog out sledding. No bigger problems. Really nice.


Aaju. He is very very scared of the other dogs and insteed of being submissive he bites the others, and I don't know what to do right now. Very fond of people though. He would do anything to be petted.

Going home in the sunset. From the left: Milo the old top dog, Pedro the big young one, and Louie, Pedro's brother.


Out of nowhere old Mika jumped Milo, the old top dog, and kind of won, and is triumphing with his companion Hannibal. But it only lasted this one day.

Milo and Pedro jumped Mika before start the next tour, and Mika is out. I was told that size doesn't matter... Milo can still be top dog although he isn't the biggest and strongest. It's his attitude. Interesting. And I try to support Milo because he is such a good dog. It's working. I don't know if it will work completely yet. Mika is on a break because he got a wound. The only female, the alpha female dog, is very fond of the big Pedro, and somehow has pronounced Pedro as the alpha dog, but he is her puppy, and he is not as good a sleddog as Milo.
 
The female dog, Zenta/Lillepigen, is in heat and is left at home. It would ruin the sled tour completely. Mika is still on a break. I don't want to bring Aaju when there are unsolved problems between the top dogs. So I went with only 4 dogs. They run and run happily and don't get tired. Hannibal the big puppy is not completely used to the sledding concept yet, and doesn't look very elegant running at the left. Two sleds are in front and a third sled passing them and us. We go in the left side of the track, because of the 'steering whip' in the right hand I think.


A Greenlander and her dogs

We asked our friend Mia Lindenhann, a resident of Ilulissat to contribute to this blog. In our exhibition we present some aspects of traditional and contemporary life with dogs in Greenland. Like many northern Greenlanders, Mia keeps a group of dogs and goes dog sledding with them in the winter. Here, Mia introduces her own dogs and shows some photos.


The Greenland Dog is a hard core dog. I read that they made the best Greenland dog by keeping a female dog in a wolf area and waiting for her to get pregnant. The first puppies are too wild. The puppies' puppies are the very best sleddogs.

The Greenland dog has much of its natural instincts left, which is good but can also be unfortunate. The dog can be very, very harmless and a good pet. Like my Milo, who wouldn't hurt a fly, just wants to be petted and behave to please its owner.

Lillepigen and Mia
Milo
Lillepigen was originally called Zenta, then the name changed to Lillepigen which means the little girl in Danish. When she is bad she is still sometimes called Zenta. She loves to smell my and others' breath, never licks, and then press her head under my arms, and just standing still, she smells my breath again and goes under the other arm. Not like her boyfriend, Milo, who wants to be petted way too much. If it was up to him he would be petted non-stop all day long. He will go far for petting and attention. And I have to ignore him and say 'no, bad boy' and it's sometimes hard when he looks like that, and presses himself up against me like on the photo. He's a sleddog, a teamdog, and has to respect my space when I'm doing something else, where it's necessary not to have him lying there on top of what I'm fixing and I have to put him in place. 

Lillipigen lost her puppy
Lillepigen lost her puppy at birth, it wasn't breathing. I don't know why, and how, she usually waits to give birth until I am there, and maybe she waited too long. She had some difficulty before, where I had to help getting the puppie out, which is rare for the Greenland dog. She is a very small dog, and looks a little different, maybe she has some foreign genes in her. The Greenland dog is very much protected from other breeds for good reasons. South west Greenlanders are not allowed to bring in their dogs to the north, and northern dogs should not get some different genes and come back to Greenland dog area in the north of Greenland. The puppy wasn't breathing. I tried mouth to mouth and stimulate it by rubbing him and warm him up, but I couldn't safe him. I have had bad experiences before taking the dead puppy away from its mom, when no puppy survives, so I let her keep the puppy for almost 2 days. She wouldn't let me take it either. But after the waiting she understood why I took the puppy. And I gave her some treats and biting toys, and she was almost okay.



Pedro, the black one. Louie, the white one with black head.

After the summer Milo suddenly had a competitor, Pedro. Pedro has become an adult and is much bigger than Milo, and Milo knows this. But he won't give up his position as top dog. And the other dog will not accept Pedro as top dog. And in nature Pedro would leave the pack and start his own pack or be killed. I hope to try different things to keep him, but I still don't know. The dogs were so eager to go dogsledding, that I took the chance and went with Milo and Pedro and first one other and then two, and I had no trouble. But I'm still worried that one of them should jump on him and fight.  

The second dogsledding of the season. From left: Hannibal the big puppy, Milo, Pedro and Louie. Not much snow. The climate change/global warming is a big problem. Some towns and villages are on islands and have no more sea ice and can't really go dogsledding.

Sunday, 25 March 2012

Photos from the exhibition

Here are some photos of the exhibition itself.



Jenny Littlejohn

Mark Eischeid

Malize McBride

Jo Vergunst

Malize McBride

Malize McBride

The introduction panel

Fieldwork in the museum stores






As well as our two fieldtrips to Greenland, we spent some time looking through the University of Aberdeen museum collections for items related to Greenland and the North. The University has a range of different collections and while we started in the Marischal Museum ethnographic collections, we also visited the Herbarium, the Geology Museum and the Natural History Museum. In the exhibition itself we reflect on what happens to things when they are displayed in museum cabinets, which both open them to observation and close them off from touch and movement.