Happy tails on
arctic trails

an experience of a lifetime

Trips with dog summer & winter
Trips from 3 hours to 3 days
Tours in the arctic wilderness

Happy tails on
arctic trails

an experience of a lifetime

Our most popular trips

This dogsledgetrip goes through beautiful Bolterdalen, which offers unique arctic scenery and good chances of observing artic wildlife, such as reindeer and ptarmigan.
Travel with your own dogsled to a magnificent ice cave, accessible only by dogsled. Within the ice cave, the lights from our headlamps let us experience ice as few people have seen it.
NOK 18.900
Experience the best of the Arctic on this 3-day adventure with dog sledding and accommodation at Juva cabin.
When the snow starts melting at the middle of June, we start using dogcarts instead of sledges. On this trip you can drive your own cart!
Enjoy the beautiful coastal landscape with sled dogs along “Vestpynten”, in a wagon with a 12-team, driven by the guide.
NOK 1.490
Join us on a hike across the Breinosa mountain, with breath-taking views of over Adventdalen and Isfjorden!
A REWARDING WORK

Working as a handler or guide for Green Dog Svalbard is rewarding work, but can be physically exhausting, especially in the beginning. If you have worked as a dog sled guide before, you will know roughly what you can expect. If you are new to it all, you are either fit or will get fit within the next couple of weeks.

Depending if you start as a handler and maybe later on become a guide or as guide from the beginning (who might also occasionally handle), the job will be quite different. Handlers take care of a lot of the daily hard work in the kennel. They have to do a lot of shit-picking, feeding, and preparing food as well as lots of other maintenance work. They are invaluable for keeping a kennel with ~300 dogs running, and they can make a guide’s life easier if one shows them the respect they deserve for their hard work.

As a guide one is in charge of 30 dogs, ranging from 20 kg Alaskan huskies to 40 kg Greenland dogs and mixes between the two. This involves shitpicking, providing them with heavy buckets/cans of breakfast, snacks and dinner (and water in the summer), taking care of wounds and medications and everything in between. A guide takes care of up to 8 guests and goes out with 4 sleds on their own for trips ranging from a couple of hours to 3 days. The guide takes care of the guests from pick-up in town to drop-off and is in charge of getting them dressed in warm suits/hats/gloves, briefed, and on the sleds. She/he provides them with food/ coffee/ cookies at stops, guides them through the ice cave or over a glacier and drops them back to town in one piece.

Although the dogs are as friendly as can be, they can be a handful when they get excited and one sometimes has to step in if they start a fight. Thus, it can sometimes be a bit of a struggle to get two at a time to the sleds without faceplanting in the snow. But finding your favourite clever/cuddly/silly/chill dog and sledding in the stunning landscape in Bolterdalen and beyond is well worth it.

On Svalbard it is essential that one carries a rifle (and a signal pistol) for polar bear protection when sledding or hiking but hopefully you will never have to use it. There is a shooting range in Longyearbyen, and one is shown how to use the rifle (and keep it in good working order). Going to the range with colleagues for practice is good after-work fun.

Another essential tool is a GPS to navigate in bad visibility (snowstorms or fog) and to help find your way in the polar night (hard to navigate when one can’t make out landmarks).

Accommodation is provided mostly on-site at the kennel (10km outside of Longyearbyen) and can range from basic but cosy cabins (single or shared, with electricity and a kitchen but no running water) to shared cabins with running water. One picks up water for cooking at the kennel, does laundry there, and catches a ride with colleagues to town for a shower at the gym. Longyearbyen provides everything one needs and more, and the community is immensely welcoming. Additionally, there seems to be a different festival/event happening every month.

Karina and Martin are awesome bosses who take good care of their handlers and guides and Svalbard is a stunningly beautiful place. The wildlife is amazing and there is nothing better than to see your first polar bear, Arctic fox, or walrus, and the comically short-legged Svalbard reindeer is both amusing to watch and delicious.

Carina Gsottbauer
TWO CONSTRUCTIVE YEARS AT GREEN DOG SVALBARD

I had the pleasure of working at Green Dog Svalbard for Martin and Karina for just over two years. This is a great place to work. From the first to the last day, I enjoyed it. Each day is different, and usually very different, even though the day is structured and planned. Through the work, you get many memories and experiences that will last a long time. The tasks are meaningful, interesting and developing. One’s two-legged colleagues are from all over the world and the community at work is very helpful and supportive. One’s four-legged colleagues have different personalities and individual needs must be addressed for each of them. No matter if it is minus 20 or 10 m / s, they are always ready and the mood is high, which makes it all worth all the hassle.

Lasse Djærnæs
A WELL ORGANIZED FAMILY BUSINESS

For 3.5 years I lived and worked at Green Dog. Becoming the foreman for the last year or so. I had never intended to stay so long… But I sort of slipped into the big Green Dog family – Martin, Karina, Freja, Storm, Saga and little Styrk… and of course not forgetting the dogs…

Green Dog is a well-organized family business. It’s progressive in improving its facilities, accommodations, equipment, tours and the well-being of the dogs and its employees. During my time, the structure of the tours changed… Guides had their own teams, equipment and ran their own tours… Allowing for more personal time with guests and a stronger connection with your own dogs…

And of course, it goes without saying my teams were the best!!! Don’t believe what the other guides tell you!

I left the world of dog sledding and Green Dog to pursue other personal interests. Green Dog Svalbard has been by far the best kennel that I have worked for… I wish them all the success in future endeavors.

Just booking a flight tonight to go and visit my old dogs… and I guess I will bump into “the old bosses”.

Lara Hudson

The combination of professionalism, their will to always deliver 100%, and the great atmosphere around the Green Dog Team is what really makes them stand out from everything else I have experienced when travelling around the world as a wildlife photographer.

Morten Hilmer
Nature Photographer

I know Martin, Karina and the kids from their time in Northeast Greenland. The many years of experience they have gained by living in the Arctic means that, regardless if they are taking a bunch of kids on a one-hour trip or planning all logistics for a television project, they always deliver.

Morten Hilmer
Nature Photographer

Magnificent adventures, breathtaking nature, outstanding service and wonderful people are the things that first comes to my mind when I recall my various trips to Svalbard. I have been visiting Svalbard both for holiday and for my job as a freelance wildlife photographer. Every time I visit, I have depended on the team from Green Dog and they have always been extraordinarily helpful and kind to me.

Morten Hilmer
Nature Photographer

Latest news from the blog

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Blog post
Blog post
My daughter Victoria and I traveled to Svalbard in the fall of 2019 with a few friends. It’s a place I have dreamed of going to for a long time and I don’t regret a second of it. It’s the place where your pulse immediately goes in resting mode, when the mighty mountains approaches the flights – the air so fresh that it freezes in the cheeks. I was overwhelmed.
Blog post
It all started with a call of the Arctic: it sent me to East Greenland as a 15-year-old teenager and at the same time, Martin started his dog sledding career on Svalbard, which then led him to become a member of the Sirius Dog Sled Patrol in Greenland.
Blog post
She is a fantastic, loving lady and I have yet not met anyone she couldn’t completely charm.

The Arctic Experience​

At Svalbard 78° North​

”Something hidden, go and find it.
Go and look behind the ranges.
Something lost behind the ranges.
Lost and waiting for you. Go!”

Rudyard Kipling »The Explorer« (1898)

Svalbard

Just imagine it … and suddenly you are there!

Welcome to the Arctic, welcome to the wilderness and welcome to the trip of a lifetime!

Whether your path leads our way in summer or winter, during the polar night or under the midnight sun, we will do our utmost to give you an extraordinary experience and share our arctic passion with you. For us it is not just a job, it is a lifestyle and pure passion to create experiences that will stay with our visitors for a lifetime. Imagine that you are pulled by mighty dogs through the stunning scenery of the high Arctic. The moon is guiding your path and the bright northern lights are flickering in the sky. It is just as if we are flying! Discover yourself on a dog-pulled sled, soundlessly sliding over the new fallen snow; the ringing from the dog collars, while the dogs’ paws are hitting the track. And all that is left is the sound of silence.

Kontakt

… What is it about Svalbard and the raw nature that makes us almost obsessed and makes us want to return again and again? A longing. A mood. The light. The cold. The silence. The colors. When we are out in this nature, the wilderness, it is as if our senses come alive again. As if something clicks into place and we become whole individuals again. We use the senses in a completely different way here in the ice. We are present. Keeping up. We are alive.

Guro & Monings
Writers, photographers and friends of Green Dog

And the summers! When the valleys blossom with arctic flowers, the whistle of migrating birds fills the air and the midnight sun patrols the sky in almost identical circles. Imagine a dog pulled wagon along the stunning coast of Bjørndalen, seal heads curiously looking at you from the sea, while numerous numbers of little auks are filling up the bird cliff and the blue sky above it. We hike over glacier, down the mountainside and across the Adventvalley, always in the company of a happy four-legged companion. At the end of August, the sun goes below the horizon for the first time and after this, we move quickly into the polar night.

… We climb down into a small opening in the glacier. Down there, the ice glows blue in the light from the headlamp. A pure blue color. Some people have this color of eyes. Otherwise, it is rarely this ten-thousand-year-old color from the ice. We reach the end of the cave. Deep under the ice we stand, 30 meters below the ground. Shall we turn off the headlamps and see how dark it really is in here? Marcel asks. We do. Then we stand there with our eyes open and see nothing. We are just taking it all in. It’s as if the old ice is sharing all its wisdom with us there in the dark. We switch the headlamps back on and climb up and out into the daylight and the young snow. The dogs welcome us back.

Guro & Monings

This website is nothing else than an introduction to the adventure of your lifetime.

We know!

Green Dog Svalbard A/S

Karina & Martin

As a sleigh traveler, you encounter the truth of an era of life itself. You embark on a part of your life’s journey as the loner who has burned all bridges to society, and along the way feel both the coldness of life, its restless quest, its beauty and joys in a stronger/more powerful form. And like a dying person, you also dream on the sleigh journey about what will come when the trip is over. Constantly it is with you in the long track – this feeling of correspondence between the sleigh journey and life, and therefore the sleigh journey becomes something quite different from other journeys: a clarification, a calm by – perhaps for the first time – having full and direct contact with it the true function of living, and only that/nothing else. A joy at how beautiful and easy it is to travel on this exciting journey of life, where you are constantly drawn towards the unknown by your innate, powerful urge to discover, your desire to experience new things, find riddles and their solution.

Eigil Knuth, Danish polar explorer & anthropologist

Jobs at Green Dog

Guide
Hunder og hav NO
Green Dog Svalbard is continuously looking for guides with a minimum of 1 year’s experience in dog sledding.
Dog handler
Green Dog Svalbard is continuously looking for dog handlers, preferably with experience from agriculture and the like.
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Vanskelighetsgrader

SG1
Passer for alle
SG2
Passer for de fleste
SG3
Passer for de med normalt god form
SG4
Passer for de med over gjennomsnittet god form
SG5
Denne aktivitet krever veldig god fysisk form

Avbestilling

  • Ved avbestilling inntil 22 dager før aktivitet full refusjon.
  • Ved avbestilling 21-8 dager før aktivitet 50 % refusjon.
  • 7 – 0 dager før aktivitet regnes for en ”no show” og berettiger derfor ikke til refusjon.
  • Har man en reiseforsikring kan man søke forsikringsselskapet om refusjon mot legeerklæring.
  • Velger Green Dog å kansellere en tur, får du full refusjon!

Difficulty Levels

SG1

Suitable for everyone

SG2

Suitable for most people

SG3

Suitable for those in normal good shape

SG4

Suitable for those in good shape

SG5

This activity requires very good physical shape

Cancellation

  • If cancelled 22 days or more prior to departure 100 % refund.
  • If cancelled 22-7 days prior to departure 50 % refund.
  • Cancellation less than 7 days prior to departure is a ”no show” and does not qualify for any refund.
  • You may apply to your insurance company for a refund if you provide a medical certificate.
  • If Green Dog Svalbard decides to cancel a trip due to weather conditions or any other reasons, you will receive a full refund!

Gavekort

Fyll ut skjemaet og motta informasjon om betaling og levering av gavekortet

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