Barry

Barry by Kate Klimo Page A

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Authors: Kate Klimo
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above sea level. During your time, people have learned to master the snow. They plow through it in vehicles with special wheels and shovels. They fly over it in silver birds called airplanes. They even play in it, sliding down it on sleds and on skinny sticks called skis. In my lifetime, before special vehicles or skis, snow was a very serious matter. In fact, where I came from, people called snow the White Death.
    Today, there is a tunnel bored through solid rock that is a shortcut from one side of the Alps to the other. But in my day, there was no tunnel. People who needed to get from Switzerland toItaly had to climb over the Alps on foot or ride on mules. When the steep mountains got buried in snow, the going became difficult—and sometimes impossible. Almost as bad as the snow were the swirling banks of fog. People froze. They got lost. They got buried alive in avalanches.
    What is an avalanche? An avalanche is a great big spill of snow, rocks, and ice that comes thundering down a mountainside as if some giant has sent it tumbling. Avalanches are unpredictable things and have many causes. Sometimes when the temperature rises there is a sudden thaw, causing wet, heavy snow to slide. Other times, a new layer of fresh snow slips down the face of an older layer of snow. However it comes about, if you happen to be standing in the way of an avalanche, you are out of luck. There is no time to escape.
    That is where we baris came in. Our job wasto guide the lost, to warm up the frozen, and to find those buried alive. In my lifetime, they say I rescued over forty travelers from the White Death. They say I was a hero. But I say I simply loved the snow. I loved to walk in it. I loved to roll in it. I loved to search for people buried under it. If it is heroic to do what you love—and to do it well—then I guess I was a hero. But I prefer to think of myself as a Dog at Home in the Snow.
    Let me tell you a bit about my home. It was a big, plain stone building called the Great Saint Bernard Hospice. In those days, a hospice was a place where weary travelers could stop and rest before moving on. My particular hospice was named after Bernard de Menthon, the cleric who founded it almost one thousand years before I was born. A cleric is a man of the church who has taken a vow to help people. Bernard’s special missionwas to help travelers in their trek along the steep mountain paths—to guide them when they were lost and to feed them and warm them when they were hungry and cold.
    In those days long ago when Bernard was still alive, people who crossed the mountains had to deal not just with snow, but with robbers, too. Bernard believed travelers should have shelter from the weather and protection from robbers. For hundreds of years, the clerics of the Great Saint Bernard Hospice carried out the wishes of their founder. But it was only in the 1700s that we baris arrived at the mountain.
    Baris came to live at the hospice when some noblemen gave us as gifts to the clerics. It was lonely and desolate up there. Not many people wanted to live in such a high, windblown, snowy place. The noblemen thought the clerics coulduse the company. One of the things we baris are very good at is snuggling. We are big dogs with big hearts. We also make very good guard dogs, not because we are vicious, but because we are big and discouraging to robbers.
    But the clerics soon discovered that we dogs are also very good workers. Hitch a bari to a sled and he or she could haul a load of firewood much more easily than a cleric could. A bari could go from the town of Bourg-Saint-Pierre up to the hospice with as much as thirty pounds of supplies strapped on to its back. The clerics and their worldly helpers, the marronniers (mah-ron-ee-AY), began to take us out with them on their twice-daily patrol of the paths in search of people lost in the snow. They soon discovered that the travelers were much less likely to lose their way in heavy snow, sleet, or fog with a

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