Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

NorthVideo

Working vacation: Yukon vet follows passion to European dog sled race

Jessica Heath has been a veterinarian for the Yukon Quest for years. Now she's bringing her skills to a new race, in a very different environment - la Grande Odysse Savoie Mont Blanc, in the French Alps.

'I sort of jumped on the opportunity to see a different style of mushing,' says Jessica Heath

Jessica Heath is in France this week at la Grande Odysse Savoie Mount Blanc, to serve as a vet for the dog sled race. (Submitted by Jessica Heath)

Jessica Heath is no stranger to dog sled races the Yukon veterinarian has tended the needs of dogs running the Yukon Quest, for several years.

"I'm pretty crazy about dogs. I've had people un-friend me on Instagram because they've said they can't handle the volume of dog pictures!" Heath said.

Now she's bringingher professional skills to a new race, in a very different environment la Grande Odysse Savoie Mont Blanc, in the French Alps. The 11-day, 670 kilometrerace beganSaturday.

Heath admits she's 'pretty crazy about dogs.' (Submitted by Jessica Heath)

"I sort of jumped on the opportunity to see a different style of mushing and a different way of taking care of dogs," she said.

"Most of the vets in the Yukon Questare from North America this will be really neat, to be working with a bunch of European veterinarians."

Unlike the YukonQuest, with its single starting time for all teams, la GrandeOdysseis a staged race with mushers starting and finishing different legs of the race on different days ("sort of like the Tour de France of mushing").

Italso travels through more mountainous terrain, with mushers carrying mandatory avalanche transceivers along the way.

Challenging European dogsled race begins in French Alps

8 years ago
Duration 1:04
11-day event sees mushers and dogs travelling 1,000 km

She expects to deal with some typical sled dog ailments, such as diarrhea, stomach ulcers, lameness or pneumonia.

But Heath says being a vet for a dog sled race is usually "an opportunity to be around dogs that are feeling pretty good," compared to her clinical work, where she's more likely to see sick or seriously injured animals.

"This is kind of like a vacation, where you're hanging out with a bunch of dogs that are having a good time ... I wouldn't want to do this if I felt like the dogs weren't happy."

French dog sled race (Vincent Piccerelle/la Grande Odysse Savoie Mount Blanc)