chickadee, on Sep 29 2009, 01:52 AM, said:
I've always wanted to do some dogsledding - I had the chance when I was in Scouts when I was younger, but monetary wise wasn't able. I really want to get back outside something fierce (was a woodsy, outdoorsy woman pre-SCI), and as winter is coming I'd like to do something I've never ever done before. So...
MUSH!
Has anyone had experience doing dogsledding? There's a few great outfitters/programs up here in Minnesota (especially going along the North Shore, BWCA, Voyagers, and the Iron Range), but I'd like to hear of anyone's firsthand experiences, or if there's even interest? Wilderness Inquiry has a trip (with a steep pricetag, unfortunately for me right now), and I stumbled across their outfitter:
http://www.dogsledding.com
I mean, who could resist faces like these?!

I guess if you get out there and spend enough money.
Then take the time, countless days and hours designing and then building some ridiculous contraption.
Then finding the right dogs. Training them. Training yourself.
Spending years in preparation. Adjusting mental attitude. Psyching yourself up to the task.
Eventually yes, you may very well possibly be able to maneuver a dogsled for a foot or two before falling over and landing flat on your face making you look like a complete, (or maybe incomplete, as the case may be) idiot.
I'm wondering though. Is the need to cling desperately to what you once may have had so important?
I understand I'm being a big fat stick in the mud, but gee whiz, watching all these paralyzed people work so hard at trying to do what once came so naturally. It's gotta be a bit anti-climatic to put so much effort into an endeavor only to find it just isn't quite like what it used to be.
Is it really worth it?
I suppose if I had the money I could have the hydraulic robotic legs designed and then fitted to my body. Then spend years practicing.
Learning, being coached, trained and so forth to become a ballet dancer. But in the end what would we have?
A big fat goofy, waterbed looking fool with robotic leg thingies attempting to ballet dance.
I'm not saying "it can't be done."
Spend enough money, use shear force of will, put virtually every thing you have into it, and yes, most things are possible.
For most anyone.
But in the end when all is said and done, will it have been worth all that effort?
I am now a paraplegic. Like it or not. And I am now better suited to activities of a more sedentary nature. Doesn't mean I gotta stop living.
It's just more practical to live a life that befits my physical limitations.
Just my dos centavos,
E-dog
when it absolutely, positively, has to be destroyed overnight, call the Marines.
I will nevah, EVAH take a pinch from a greasy muddahf*@kah like you!
How 'bout if I spell it out for ya. D-I-L-L-I-G-A-F