"There was a musher had a dog and BINGO was her
name, oh. B-I-N-G-O B-I-N-G-O - and BINGO was her name, oh"
Bingo is the kind of dog that makes a musher's life easier. She
is easy to live with, does her job every time you put her in
harness, eats well and is always happy. However, because she is
never causing trouble or being loud or obnoxious - she is easy
to overlook.
I frequently find myself talking about my outstanding rookies -
and then saying "Oh yeah - and Bingo".
Yesterday, right before I was heading out the door to run I was
on the phone with Mike Carmichael talking about some stuff for
my trip to Montana next month. Of course, I was asking how his
training was going and how his NorthWapiti kids were doing. In
telling a story about Lexx, Mike mentioned having Bang - Bingo's
sister - in lead. That got me thinking about Bingo and why
exactly it was I hadn't tried this solid little gal in lead.
When I headed out the door a bit later, Bingo's name was at the
top of the list of dogs running that day.
Giving her a solid support system, I had Hilda running next to
her and Jinx and Holly behind her.
Hook up went pretty well, with Hilda making sure everyone stayed
lined out while I tried to explain to Bingo that she needed to
stay up front. The first few miles went very smooth, I even took
time to arrange my iPod and get some tunes rolling. When we got
close to the highway, a big tractor trailer with a giant piece
of oilfield equipment roared by, spewing highway junk and wet
snow behind it. That made my little rookie leader a bit unsure
and she backed off, but recovered well.
As it had been storming the previous day, I knew the field we
cut through to avoid our evil nemesis, PorkChop, would be very
drifted in but I thought better to try that with the team rather
then the annoying farm dog and his little American Eskimo Dog
friend, Emma.
Both Hilda and Bingo leapt into the drifted field, even though
there was absolutely no sign of our previous trail. The whole
team looked like little show jumping horses as they jumped
through the snow for a solid ½ mile. Maybe once or twice there
was an indentation in the snow to confirm to them they were on
the right path, but that was it. And never was the snow cover
thin enough that they could plow through it rather then leap.
When we hit the far side of the field, I picked my jaw up off
the ground and went up front to HEAP praise on my leaders.
Little Bingo absolutely wiggled from head to toe at the praise.
She adored being the focus of all that positive attention. Of
course all the dogs get praise during a run, but being a leader
definitely comes with more pressure, and therefore over the top
praise when they get things right - especially when they are
still learning.
The rest of the run Bingo continued to do well. She had another
moment of hesitation crossing a secondary highway at another
semi, but recovered and later in the run passed the idling
County of Athabasca grader, after we caught up with it. She
ignored loose dogs, passed a neighbor on horseback, and
continued to simply vibrate at the praise heaped on her.
Thirty seven miles later when we pulled back into the yard -
Bingo was still in lead. She has now officially given up her
'wallflower' status in the kennel.
".and BINGO was her name - OH!".
Karen