Contributor: Melissa Kowalski. Lesson ID: 12424
How do you react to pressure, especially that of competition, when things get tough? What would you do to survive? Is mere survival enough? Learn the lessons of raw ambition in both man and beast!
If you were a sled dog, who would you want driving the team? We can drive a 300-horsepower car; is it just as easy to drive a dozen-dogpower sled?
If you missed or want a refresher on the previous Related Lessons on Chapters One to Three, you can find them in the right-hand sidebar.
The ratio of supplies, people, and dogs, is critical for successful sled dog driving. Today, this tradition is kept alive most famously in the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race from Anchorage to Nome, Alaska — a distance of nearly 1100 miles. To learn more about the Iditarod and the event that inspired the modern race, read the following article and answer the questions in the journal or notebook that you have been keeping for this series:
Read The Sled Dog Relay That Inspired the Iditarod, by Christopher Klein (A&E Television Networks, LLC.), and watch D.T. Slouffman's The Last Great Race:
Once you've answered the questions in your notebook or journal, you are ready to read Chapters Four and Five of The Call of the Wild. You can use the digital copy of The Call of the Wild, from Project Gutenberg, or you can use a print copy if you have been reading one during this series. As you read, take notes on the manner in which the inexperienced drivers handle the sled dog team. You will need these notes for the Go! activity later in the lesson.
When you have finished reading Chapters Four and Five, move on to the Got It? section to explore the text in more detail.