Posted on May 14, 2011
by Kristi Benson
Scootering with Pawtrekker
The scooter is very easy to balance on. For me – much easier than a bike. Yoenne has more experience biking and is more ambivalent about the scooter. Some of things I was worried about are not problems: I can stand with my feet side by side on the platform. I can easily jump off to one side or another. The hand-brakes are intuitive, and if you’re standing on the scooter they can hold two dogs. After a few runs, it’s easy to pedal on either side. It’s easy to steer, even around sharp corners. The brush bow is great, and useful if you have a dog that is warming up to scootering more slowly (we’ve never tried it without). If you don’t mind a bit of gravel in the face, you can crouch down well below the handlebars if it’s windy (try that on a bike). When skijoring, skiing, running dogs, and erm... walking, I tend to fall a lot more than anyone I know. I haven’t fallen off the scooter yet (give me time) even though I have made some interesting choices (my two most stubborn and fast dogs? Together? Through the Canada goose playground? Sounds Great!).
To rig the scooter, I made a double-loop with a fid, each loop attached separately, through the fender/brushbow. These were made from heavy polyethylene nicely available from a section of chewed gangline. I left the standard-sized loop for attaching to the lines. We use a locking carabiner here after a bad experience with a quick release. The carabiner attaches to a standard skijoring line with a bungee section.
After a few good single dog and double dog runs on gravel, we decided it was time to try the muddy, twisting, deactivated logging road in the forest reserve nearby. Again taking only one dog each, we loaded up the scooters and the dogs and drove to the trailhead. The scooters are light and easy to toss into the truck. The scooters (and the dogs) handled much of the trail well. In deep muddy puddles, Yoenne found she was wishing for the pedalling ability of a bike. I just held on and tried unsuccessfully not to plant my feet in anything over two inches of water, and found that plan worked excellently. However, it seems that the scooters don’t handle mud as well as a bike. I prefer to foot pedal when required, Yoenne more often hopped off the scooter and jogged through technical parts or up slippery hills. All in all, it was a fantastic fun time for us and the dogs. All four of us were covered with mud and out of breath at the end.
We found that the dogs, ours are Alaskan huskies, took to scootering much the way they took to skiing. Several of our dogs do much, much better alone or paired in front of the scooter than they do in team or in front of team. Dogs without much experience skijoring took a few miles to get the hang of it. Several of our dogs started off only pulling on the way home and loping uncertainly beside the scooter on the way out, but with encouragement are starting to do it. If our dogs didn’t have skijoring experience they would probably take to the scooter more slowly. For some of our dogs, their first skijoring experience was a bit scary – the skis, the poles, being alone. But almost all of our dogs will skijor, and only one or two will not work as the frontrunner.
Unless your dogs are more sedate and well trained than ours, scootering isn’t for the faint of heart. On twisty tracks it has all the excitement of skijoring a fast, hard trail. The scooter wheels provide almost no resistance. It is exhilarating and crazy and fun.
A Few Tips!
-Kristi Benson, San Clara, MB