From National Geographic (January 2012):
Puppies pull a play sledge for the amusement of supply officer George Black during Richard E. Byrd’s first Antarctic expedition. They were the offspring of the 94 dogs originally brought along for transport on the journey—and would soon be the youngest residents of a part of the camp called Dog Town. “Oh Lord, all the perfumes in France couldn’t have rid Dog Town of its gamy aroma,” wrote Byrd in a book about his travels, Exploring With Byrd. (This photograph ran in his August 1930 account of the 1928-30 Antarctic trip for National Geographic.) “The air in the tunnels was thick enough not only to be cut with a knife; spiced with a dash of garlic from the bulbs that hung over Noville’s door, it could have been served as pemmican.”
—Margaret G. Zackowitz
Cute !
Have you seen “Snow Buddies” ? Some Alaskan Huskies teach the lost Golden pups to pull dogs. In this section, they participate to a competion, save their enemies from the lake and win in the end.
Quite a gang of pup, ain’t it ?
It’s even funnier in Spanish.
I remember that picture in a documentary. I forgot which ones.
The puppies froze to death if I recall correctly.