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#3 (permalink) |
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Crowned Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: wisconsin
Posts: 4,988
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I want to mush this winter. I figure a turkey neck and he'll do anything! LOL
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Human owner to: Prinz-Gsd Ava-Border Collie-Rescue Travis-Ragamuffin Barnaby-Holland Lop Maureen ![]() White Paws GSD Rescue In-Take Coordinator http://www.whitepawsgsr.com |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Elite Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Germantown, MD
Posts: 1,211
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http://www.dogpoweredscooter.com/
I found this link online... I do have a neighbor that rides his bike regularly with his huskie attached to a spring like line. Looks like both are having fun.
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Holly~ Tessa vom Sonnenaufgang |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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Looks pretty neat. I admit I like the idea. It would bring the fun of skijoring to the non-winter months for me, but $805.00 is alot to have the dual dog system. Even the single dog one at $555.00 seems high for a scooter. If adding the dogs didn't cost $250.00 each it would be more feasible. That and a lower price than $305.00 just for the scooter. I see he'll do your own scooter for $20.00 but you still have to pay for the dog setups.
Skijoring costs me alot less. Too bad it requires snow. |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Crowned Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Valdivia, Chile
Posts: 4,276
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The only thing I would be worried is if the weight is not equally distributed for the dog so it could cause future joint problems or muscular lesions. I don't know if it's that way, nor it seems from this video, but I would investigate more about that.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cb72K...eature=related
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"The dog does not need to be deranked so much as the people need to learn to act like people worth listening to" Suzanne Clothier. Diabla, my Daemon; SchH A, RH-T A Akela, my Direwolf; Work in Progress Bagheera, Long term puppy host |
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#7 (permalink) | |
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Elite Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 1,401
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Quote:
http://www.dogpoweredscooter.com/ http://www.sleddogcentral.com/scootering.htm I do bike with my dog, have a couple of different gizmos so that I am not hanging on to the leash. He loves it. Just wanted to try something new and saw these and was wondering?? |
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#8 (permalink) |
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Master Member
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A friend of mine in Chapin, SC has a dogsled team, and he races rescues. He makes a lot of his stuff and custom makes racing carts and supplies....
Here is the link. He can also advise you. http://www.scdogsled.com/ Powell |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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Well I looked through those other two sites you added to the one already posted. I think if you're going for a scooter the ones at http://www.dogscooter.com/ look best as they have a frame such that your dog is more controlled. Looks like having two dogs works better for that setup though. I'd be worried about having the dogs out in front like the setup at http://www.dogpoweredscooter.com/ shows. Sure, dogs are out front in skijoring but you're also out on packed trails and so the dogs are going to stay on the trails rather than run off into deep snow. That may be the best system if you have only one dog.
For me though if I'm going to shuck out $900.00 either way I'd rather get the sulkie shown at http://www.dogpoweredscooter.com/ so I can ride and have control as well. However that's not something in our budget these days. I like the cost of skijoring much more. A beginner package is just $270.00. http://www.skijornow.com/skijornowhome.html |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Crowned Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 5,485
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We have a Diggler Scooter we bought for somewhere around $350 six years ago. I think it was their top of the line at the time but I'm sure they've made many improvements (and price raises) since then. Seemed like a hefty chunk of change even at the time. Nice product though - it's held up great. And Grace was driving us INSANE, so we really had no choice. There just weren't enough hours in the day to exercise her as much as she wanted and we lived in DC. However, with the scooter and the many greenways, we were able to coexist happily until she chilled out some. Now she's 8 and we just do it for fun. I also use it for ADHD fosters.
The dogs pull it using x back mushing harnesses and they pull from up in front (I didn't like the side mount harness things for the same reason as the above poster). For training them, we had my husband ride his bike in front of us. GSDs are such velcro dogs they went wherever he went and ignored everything else. I would rather skijour too but I've never lived anywhere with enough snow.
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