How to Go Dog Sledding in Minnesota
How to Go Dog Sledding in Minnesota
By James Riemermann
There are many ways to experience dog sledding during the off season in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. Whether you are seeking a simple ride of a few hours or less, a multi-day trip complete with camping or a stay in a lodge at the edge of the wilderness, you can enjoy a once-in-a-lifetime experience without going to Alaska.
What breeds are used for dog sledding?
Canadian Inuit dogs are popular for dog sledding, but many other breeds known for strength, endurance and love of cold weather do just fine as sled dogs, and are used by many outfitters.
From the moment you meet the dogs, it’s clear how much they love their work. When any sled dogs are left behind, they howl with envy.
Where can you go dog sledding?
While a large majority of Minnesota’s dog sled outfitters serve the Boundary Waters — mostly out of Ely and on the Gunflint Trail to the east — there are also outfitters along the North Shore of Lake Superior and other locations.
A special case is 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. They offer trips to wilderness areas around the world, but they started in the Boundary Waters and still offer trips there, including winter trips by ski, snowshoe and dog sled.
Paul Schurke’s love of dog sledding grew from the co-founding of Wilderness Inquiry with his college classmate, Greg Lais. Schurke now owns and operates Wintergreen Dogsled Lodge — one of the state's best known outfitters — with his wife Susan in Ely.
“Our first program, a Boundary Waters canoe trip, went so well, we thought, ‘Could we do this year-round?’" says Schurke. "Given the sign at the entry to Ely, ’Dog Sled Capital of the World,’ we thought, ‘That’s it.’ I connected with Will Steger in his Pickets Lake homestead with a sod roof out in the woods, we became fast friends, and in the winter of ’79 we did our first Wilderness Inquiry dog sled program. It’s been dogs and winter for me ever since.”
That meeting also led to Schurke and Steger’s co-leadership of their historic 1986 North Pole expedition on ski and dog sled, the first such trek to be made without resupply.
Schurke is a great storyteller with many tales to share, which is part of the appeal of Wintergreen’s treks. He personally guides the advanced dog sled and ski camping trips, and makes a point of at least one lunchtime storytelling session with nearly every group coming through.
Why should I consider a Boundary Waters trip during the winter?
Are there advantages of exploring the Boundary Waters in the winter, compared with a canoe trip? No question, says Schurke: “There’s no battling bugs, no heavy rain, no slogging down muddy portages. The Boundary Waters is the most beloved and popular wilderness area in the world. A quarter million people visit every year. But in the winter, it’s just a few thousand.
“And in the winter, the wildlife is much more apparent. The foliage is down, there are long vistas into the woods to catch a glimpse of wolves, fox or moose. You can often see tracks in the snow, fresh and new every day. Dog sledding is also easier for people who are more fitness-challenged, because the dogs are doing most of the work.”
Look for special trips from Wintergreen, including a parent (or grandparent) and child trip, and extended adventures with accomplished locals like photographer Layne Kennedy.
Does Minnesota host any dog sledding marathons?
If you'd prefer to watch the pros do the sledding, plan a trip around the annual John Beargrease Sled Dog Marathon. The longest dog sled race this side of Canada, the marathon starts in Duluth and travels 293 miles up the North Shore of Lake Superior to Grand Portage. There are also shorter 40- and 120-mile races, a juniors race, plus other festivities leading up to the main event.
More than 60 world-class mushers are set to compete, with cash prizes and a chance to qualify for the famous Iditarod on the line.
Find other things to do in Minnesota this winter.