The image of a sled dog being trained and playing in the Arctic makes people extremely happy and has more hope.!!

   

BOLTERDALEN, Norway (AP) — Out of the dark, frozen vastness in this Arctic valley, a chorus of barks and howls trumpeted the return of Green Dog’s oldest puppies from a dogsledding training run through the polar night on Tuesday afternoon.

Karina Bernlow and her husband, Martin Munck, run the outfit Green Dog, which has nearly 300 dogs in three yards. It’s located half a dozen miles from the main village in Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago so close to the North Pole that winter is shrouded in uninterrupted darkness.

The working dogs, younger puppies and new litters played in the lashing winds that shifted thigh-high snowdrifts. This mix of husky and Greenland dog — a breed known for taller legs, big paws and thick fur — is especially social and thrives in the cold, Bernlow said. They don’t even fear the rare occasion when a polar bear ambles past the yards.

 
Puppies surround their mother at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) 

 

Puppies surround their mother at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway
Karina Bernlow pets a Greenland puppy at her dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. Her and husband, Martin Munck, run Green Dog. It's located half a dozen miles from the main village in Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago so close to the North Pole that winter is shrouded in uninterrupted darkness. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) 

 

Karina Bernlow pets a Greenland puppy at her dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway
 
Karina Bernlow greets Taiga and her puppies at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. Her and husband, Martin Munck, run Green Dog. It's located half a dozen miles from the main village in Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago so close to the North Pole that winter is shrouded in uninterrupted darkness. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) 

 

 
Karina Bernlow greets Taiga and her puppies at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway

What hurts them is when this lunar landscape turns unusually warm, which is happening more often as much of the Arctic heats up several times faster than the rest of the world.

Last summer, a few dogsledding tours had to be canceled so the dogs wouldn’t overheat. One of the tours leads to an ice cave and Bernlow, who’s been here for more than a decade, said they’re watching it disappear year after year.

READ MORE:
  • – In polar night, Norway-Russia kids event lights up Christmas
  • – Church helps mining community evolve in dark, warming Arctic
  • – Norway’s last Arctic miners struggle with coal mine’s end
  • – Spellbinding polar night gets darker in warming Arctic

“What we can do is teach our children to take care of the planet,” said Bernlow, the mother of four children.

 

As she walked by them, the newly returned dogs strained their chains to reach out to be petted and puppies rushed to watch from their enclosure.

A dog sledding trip returns to a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. The yard is located half a dozen miles from the main village in Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago so close to the North Pole that winter is shrouded in uninterrupted darkness. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) 

 

A dog sledding trip returns to a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway
A dog named Cake sits at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. The yard is located half a dozen miles from the main village in Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago so close to the North Pole that winter is shrouded in uninterrupted darkness. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) 

 

 
A dog named Cake sits at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway
Dogs are visible in their enclosures at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) 

 

Dogs are visible in their enclosures at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway
Puppies look out from their enclosure in Bolterdalen, Norway, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) 

 

Puppies look out from their enclosure in Bolterdalen, Norway
The last remaining coal mine of Longyearbyen shines on the horizon of a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. The yard is located half a dozen miles from the main village in Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago so close to the North Pole that winter is shrouded in uninterrupted darkness. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) 

 

 
The last remaining coal mine of Longyearbyen shines on the horizon of a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway
A dog rests in front of its hut at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. The yard is located half a dozen miles from the main village in Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago so close to the North Pole that winter is shrouded in uninterrupted darkness. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) 

 

A dog rests in front of its hut at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway
Dogs sit next to their huts at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. The yard is located half a dozen miles from the main village in Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago so close to the North Pole that winter is shrouded in uninterrupted darkness. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) 

 

Dogs sit next to their huts at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway
A dog is harnessed to its hut at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. The yard is located half a dozen miles from the main village in Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago so close to the North Pole that winter is shrouded in uninterrupted darkness. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) 

 

 
A dog is harnessed to its hut at a dog yard in Bolterdalen, Norway
A dog sledder returns to a dog yard after training puppies to sled in Bolterdalen, Norway, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2023. The yard is located half a dozen miles from the main village in Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago so close to the North Pole that winter is shrouded in uninterrupted darkness. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole) 

 

A dog sledder returns to a dog yard after training puppies to sled in Bolterdalen, Norway