At the age of two months, the baby will be placed with adult dogs. Probably extinct if not for the Eskimo Dog Research Foundation (EDRF) and Ladoon Brian
(Canadian Eskimo Dog Foundation). EDRF purchased dogs of the population (200 dogs) remains small in the remote Canadian Arctic Inuit camps on Baffin Island, Boothia Peninsula and Melville Peninsula. EDRF dog then began to increase the number. Brian Ladoon also bought the dog for 70 years from the communities north of Canada and began to play after being given a mission to save them by Bishop North (Bishop Robideaux).
The documentary
"The Last Dog Winter" Brian Ladoons history. The Canadian Eskimo dog is still very rare, however, become increasingly popular in Arctic tourism, a growing number of dog sled teams to entertain tourists. In addition, commercial hunting of polar bears should be done by means of "traditional" in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, which is by dog team. This is necessary, partly for reasons of safety, the dog can work to better understand when a polar bear mask is the sound of a Skidoo motor signs of a polar bear. May 1, 2000, the
Canadian territory of Nunavut officially adopted
"Canadian Inuit Dog" is a symbol of animal territory, the signature of the traditional qimmiq your dog in the Inuktitut language.