Denmark's Navy Dogsled Team Is Serious
National Geographic by Claire O'Neill
January 17, 2012
And they're called Sirius — as in "the Dog Star," the brightest one in the night sky.
To shoot a story in National Geographic's January issue, Fritz Hoffmann took a Danish military cargo flight to Station Nord, in the far northeast corner of Greenland; he camped in a tent overnight at about 25 degrees below zero; worst of all, he had to wear wool underwear. And he had about two days to get what he needed.
PHOTOS: Credit: Fritz Hoffmann/National Geographic
http://www.npr.org/blogs/pictureshow/2012/01/17/145336157/denmarks-navy-dogsled-team-is-serious
It's just about the most intense-sounding photo assignment, but it still pales in comparison with what the Danish military dogsled patrol goes through.
Sirius is an elite navy unit — perhaps comparable to our Navy SEALs — the only military dogsled unit of its kind in the world. It's been around since World War II, and to this day remains one of the most competitive military positions: For each rotation, there are only six two-man units, with about a dozen dogs to each unit. And it really is just men. According to National Geographic, no women have applied yet.
Over the phone, Hoffmann explains that he was interested in the relationship between man and animal — how they seem to have a rhythm and understanding with survival at the core. But capturing that is no easy feat.
To get some of the action shots, he dangled his camera from a long pole in front of the dogs. In other cases, he whizzed around on the back seat of a snowmobile. Throughout it all, he writes on his website, a big struggle was simply preventing his nose from sticking to the camera screen.
"It was cold," Hoffmann sums up with a chuckle. For this kind of work — both on photo assignment or on patrol — you just can't complain much more than that. Learn more about Sirius in the article. Or check out the diary of Jesper Olsen, one of the two men featured in the article.