Home
Giant Alaskan Malamute
Giant Alaskan Malamute MalAMail
|
What is a Pure M'Loot?
There are no pure M'Loot's anymore. To answer what they are we have to go back to the 1930s.
During the 1930s there were two major Alaskan Malamute Kennels in the United States.
One, was Kotzebue owned by Eva B Seeley and her husband. They inherited some dogs when they took over Arthur Walden's Chinook Kennels while he was in Antarctica. They bought some from Frank Gough and Lester Corliss, Alaskan Malamute breeders in Alaska and they inherited some of the Labrador Huskies (including Rowdy - the first dog AKC registered as an Alaskan Malamute) from Admiral Byrd's first Antarctica Expedition (BAE I). Labrador Huskies were Canadian Eskimo Dogs from the Labrador region of Canada - similar to Alaskan Malamutes, but smaller. They also bought some malamutes from Leonhard Seppala when he decided to strictly race Siberian Huskies. Seeley bred to a standard she admired, smaller and gray/white. She got the breed recognized by the AKC. Over the years, the standard was revised upwards from the 23" dogs she preferred.
The other major kennel was M'Loot, owned by Paul Voelker. Voelker acquired Malamutes for his M'Loot Kennels from many sources. He traveled to Alaska and brought dogs back; traveled coast-to-coast acquiring Malamutes he liked; acquired dogs from teams sold to Hollywood for use in movies; acquired dogs from the army at Camp Rimini, Montana (including Dude's Wolf and Dodge's Lou found at the back of many malamute pedigrees). He accepted a wide range of breeding dogs and with saavy marketing put them in homes across the U.S. and Canada. The M'Loot dogs worked on sled teams and served with distinction in the military. A driver on the second Serum Run, used four M'Loot dogs on his team.
Many of those breeding M'Loots did not register them in the early days of AKC registration.
Fast forward to the 1950s.
The base stock of Malamutes dropped to 30 registered dogs (many lost to WWII and some in the Military Antarctic Expeditions), and the AKC reopened the stud books. The AMCA, headed by Seeley, was resentful of this as they did not consider other Malamutes "representative of the breed". However, M'Loot and Hinman-Irwin owners were very happy. To be registered the dogs had to be shown and gain points, with multiple view photos accompanying their registration application.
Still in the 1950s:
Robert Zoller - Husky-Pak Kennels
After the 1950s, the Alaskan Malamute became is mixture of Kotzebue, M'Loot and to a lesser extent Hinman-Irwin, which strengthened and improved the breed.
Are there any pure M'Loots left?
No, there are no pure M'Loots left. There appear to be only a handful of pure Kotzebue left.
Breeders over the years have mixed the lines to create the dogs they feel best represent the breed.
If you go way back in a pedigree of a show dog, you'll find heavy Kotzebue concentration, but more than likely will find the M'Loot presence from Ch. Mulpus Brook's Master Otter and the first female champion of the breed, the great Ch. Ooloo M'Loot.
Conversely, if you go way back in the pedigree of any of the giant or larger than standard lines, you will find a concentration of M'Loots including Dude's Wolf and Dodge's Lou, as well as Gentleman Jim. However, you'll also find that the last pure M'Loots (from Ro-Ala-Ken) in the 1970s were bred to Wakon dogs that did have Kotzebue in the back of their pedigrees. So you will find Kotzebue in the back of these pedigrees.
The modern Alaskan Malamute contains lines from both of those early major kennels (M'Loot and Kotzebue), and thanks to Robert Zoller the Hinman-Irwin dogs. Different breeders may concentrate their lines toward one or the other, but pure M'Loots are unfortunately a thing of the past, not seen since the 1970s.
For more indepth information on the history of Alaskan Malamutes, please go to our About Alaskan Malamutes page.
|
|
|
Hudsons Huskies and Malamutes P.O. Box 241 Baxter, TN 38544 (931) 432-0955 jhoughtaling@charter.net |