Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Don't Forget Where You Heard About This When You Accept The Position!


Help wanted: a government dog-sledder


The federal government has an opening for a one-of-a-kind job running kennels and mushing into the wilderness in Denali National Park in Alaska.


Anchorage - In the world of dog mushing, there aren't many jobs with a steady paycheck. Professional mushers live off the bounty of their race earnings, dog-breeding skills and marketing savvy. Within a federal government that employs 19.7 million people, there is one -- exactly one -- dog-mushing job. And it's open.The National Park Service is looking for a new kennels manager at Denali National Park and Preserve, a job that in addition to running Denali's 31-animal dog kennel includes mushing into one of America's great swaths of wilderness. The pay range -- between $33,477 and $66,542 a year, plus a generous cost-of-living adjustment -- is more than many mushers earn in a race season. As part of the federal bureaucracy, though, there's more to it than mushing and caring for dogs."Our candidate must be a strong leader with supervisory skills and will be relied upon to provide all manner of services as a park ranger -- from rescuing visitors and patrolling the park wilderness to presenting educational programs and community outreach," Philip Hooge, Denali's deputy superintendent, said in a news release.

Karen Fortier, a Connecticut native who held the post for nearly 10 years, calls it "a great job." It changes markedly depending on the season. As much as 70% of the winter is spent mushing thousands of miles in the Denali backcountry -- ferrying supplies, taking researchers to various parts of the park, hauling firewood and patrolling. Those trips can last weeks. "There's really nothing that quite compares to being out on the trail in the middle of winter," Fortier said. "It's beautiful, it's completely silent, and by March you have the long daylight too. "But it's physically demanding. We're breaking our own trail, and we end up doing a lot of snowshoeing in front of the team at times."

Summer is tourist season, which means three daily hourlong interpretive programs for hundreds of visitors a day. This summer, more than 50,000 tourists stopped by. But in every season, the kennel must be managed. Dogs must be fed, bred and trained; poop must be scooped; vaccinations must be administered."And just like with any federal or government job, there's that whole level of paperwork," Fortier said. "You think it's going to be this glory job, but so much is managing the operation behind the scenes."Fortier had a second daughter a year ago, and the time away from her family became too great. Despite the sacrifices, the successful applicant to replace her can rest assured that nobody else in the country has the same job. "It's a lot more than a mushing job, for sure," Fortier said. "A real mixed bag."
Don't forget me- I'll be your snow bunny!

6 comments:

MarmiteToasty said...

I DONT do dog poo, so I will pass on the job :)

x

Gia's Spot said...

I would sign on the dotted line in an instant if I could have an assistant go with me!! I could do the poo with gloves................

el chupacabra said...

marms- I'd grin and bear it. That came out bare first!

gia pet- EXACTLY what I was thinking! Maybe we should both apply and if one gets it- don't forget the other!

MarmiteToasty said...

I can do baby poo, rabbit poo, goat poo, cow poo, chicken poo, Ive even nibble on a moose poo thinking it was a chocolate truffle LOL and any other poo in the world I can deal with, but dog poo......*gagging*

Ive even been know to through a pair of one of my sons shoes in the bin when he trod it a pile of it.......

But, if push came to shove I could freeze and Bare it in Alaska, and anyways, the poo would be frozen, right? :)

x

MarmiteToasty said...

'through' is obviously 'knackered from 2 hours of intense physio in the hospial gym talk for 'throw' :)

x

Gia's Spot said...

Chup - where's that paperwork!!