Bringing a puppy home that grows huge comes with precautions. When Kent lived in the Yukon, he adopted tiny Nanook. He knew that the puppy would become a powerful male Alaskan Malamute Husky, so he began training his little fluffiness from the get-go. The first lesson was on eating manners.
“Huskies are derived from wolves,” said Kent. “My wife and I were going to have children, who would be smaller than the dog, so I had to teach Nanook eating safety. While he was eating, I got down on my hands and knees and gently head butted his head away from the food to teach him to share. I would pretend to eat, then back off, giving him his turn at the bowl. He quickly learned not to challenge a hand or person and that there would always be food left in the bowl. I repeated this
action several times until he learned to share and not inhale his food. He never bit or snapped at anyone who reached out while he was eating.”
The first time Mr. Angelscribe and I visited Kent’s growing family of three children, Nanook charged us from inside the fence barking like a fluffy alligator wanting to eat us. The 95-pound dog terrorized us. We were relieved to get in the house!
Kent called Nanook inside. I stood behind my husband planning a getaway.
Kent pointed to us and said, “These are my friends.” With that Nanook trotted over to us like a happy puppy. He was intelligent with a powerful memory. We visited their family once a year, and over the years, each time Nanook saw us, he remembered us. He was beyond happy greeting us through the fence like arriving royalty.
Nanook had a pinch of Labrador in his DNA. Oddly, this dog, covered in long, thick, fur loved swimming. The funny part is his DNA ended at his rear. Malamutes are arctic sled dogs, heavy boned, deep chests, powerful shoulders, with a dense, weatherproof coat. When he swam, he just used his front legs, and drew his back legs up close to his body. While swimming in the lagoon ‘his’ three little humans would grab hold of his tail for a fun ride. Everyone would be grinning ear to
ear.
The family lived behind a store and every week the ‘meat man’ arrived to pick up bones from the butcher. He would always seek out Nanook and give him a bone. The dog knew the sound of the man’s truck and would run from inside the house, or the back of the yard welcome-greeting him with a happy yodel. The two of them were best friends. When Nanook became ill and was released from earth, the meat man came up to the family’s front door and asked about the dog. Once you were
Nanook’s friend, he touched your heart.
Kent was so emotionally connected to his Husky; he knew that these dogs run in packs and howl on full moons. As each child was born, his dog took the little ones on as part of the pack. He became their guardian and nanny.
On full moons, Nanook and Kent would sit on the front stoop. Kent draped his arm over Nanook’s shoulder and the two of them would howl at the moon, like a pack of wolves. The bond between the dog and man was so strong that after Nanook’s passing, Kent was devastated. It is forty years later, and he cried sharing this story. Pets possess an amazing capacity to honor and recognize us. They make us feel loved and important, and they are unforgettable.