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Sled-dog mushing

Chasing the Beargrease

On the North Shore, the grueling sled-dog race enthralls onlookers.

Long before reality shows turned survival into a stunt, there was John Beargrease.

With no fanfare and no road, the Ojibwe man delivered the weekly mail between Two Harbors and Grand Marais until 1899, using a dog team in winter. Using only four dogs to pull packs of up to 700 pounds, Beargrease could make the round-trip in a few days.

His stamina spawned a legend. For 25 years, mushers from around the nation have come to trace his path, racing each other from Duluth to the Gunflint Trail in the John Beargrease Sled Dog Marathon.

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Dog days of winter

Deep in a forest, novice mushers tag along with some huskies.

In the north woods, it's easy to fall in love with sled dogs.

They're exuberant and adorable but also focused, intense and explosive — sort of like kindergartners crossed with Olympic athletes.

For huskies, life is simple: They live to run. Anyone who has watched the start of the John Beargrease Sled Dog Marathon has witnessed the drive of a husky, a four-legged Ferrari that snaps into warp speed at the rustle of a harness. And anyone who has seen the dogs along the trail will be struck by their apparent deep satisfaction at spending hour after hour running and pulling.

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