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idenow
NAMAS Systems
Space
Time
Space
I was with my great-grandmother in a grocery store selling materials and stuff to buy him a small house.
My mother gave me a little harness and I fell in front of a Husky.
So I told my mother that when I was older, I would have dogs like that.
I was 6 or 7 years old at that time.
So at 9 years old, my parents fell on a Husky.
He escaped from his house.
After 4 months, we found the owner.
He told me that he would offer me a dog when I would make a door.
And that's what he did.
At 11, I really started to be a little musher.
My mother was breeding the dogs.
So the first thing in my life I saw, it was a dog.
But she's a Polish side-hound breeder.
So it was mainly side-hounds.
But my mother's dream was to have the Malamute and she bought the Malamute from the United States.
And this is why I became interested in the sport.
I discovered the 14-year-old dog.
My cousin had a dog.
He asked me for a Husky.
He asked me to take care of it.
And I said to him, you have a dog, you're going to pull me.
So I cleared my bike.
And one day, someone stopped on the road.
He saw me on the road with the dog pulling the bike.
He told me that there was a five-kilometer-long train club.
So I said, well, I'm going to go see them.
And since then, the virus has taken me.
So we're all independent farmers.
And so we group to work together for a little bit of security reasons.
Sometimes to be able to take a little more groups.
So now we're three.
We're all put in this job to be able to have a lot of dogs.
So it's a way of living his passion that becomes viable.
It's my friend.
Yeah, no, it's not colleagues. No, it's not possible.
It's part of the job.
We don't have much choice to be a bit nomadic.
Well, first of all, it's also quite complicated to find a girlfriend
who loves dogs and who loves dogs.
It makes two points.
So it's not necessarily obvious.
So for the moment, I prefer to be with dogs
than with a girl who doesn't correspond to me.
It's the one who's the closest to me, the most attached to me, I think.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
I want to say sometimes that animals are more human than humans.
They are always fair, they are always happy.
That's what makes them passionate.
We have a very close relationship with them.
Their love is unconditional.
And that's great.
What keeps me going?
The contact with the animals,
which is usually more sympathetic than the contact with the humans,
they don't lie.
Sometimes they lie, but it's not this kind of lies,
what the people can do.
Their feelings are pure,
so they never lie with the feelings and that's sign joy.
They are always good-natured.
So the fact of being always with good-natured animals,
it makes us good-natured.
So when we have a little bit of blues,
we'll have the dogs and we'll always be happy.
And also the contact with nature,
spending the time outside,
I wouldn't be able to work in the office, I think.
It's the animals,
the nature that made man evolve.
It's just now that we've been able to observe and respect nature.
That's just it.
That's why it might be important for people to wake up.
If nature, the earth, is no longer there, we are no longer there.
That's why it might be important for people to wake up.
