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Posts Tagged ‘nome’

Iditarod 2020

Monday, March 23rd, 2020

March 23, 2020

Last week, on March 18, the Norwegian musher (sled driver) Thomas Waerner won the annual Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in Alaska. The Iditarod is the world’s most famous sled dog race. The roughly 1,000-mile (1,600-kilometer) race starts on the first Saturday of March in Anchorage and ends in Nome. Waerner won his first Iditarod in just his second try. His only previous race had been a 17th place finish in 2015. The Iditarod, which began this year on March 7, was one of the few sporting events not cancelled or otherwise effected by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

The Iditarod is a famous sled dog race held every March in Alaska. Teams of sled dogs race between Anchorage and Nome. Credit: © Shutterstock

The Iditarod is a famous sled dog race held every March in Alaska. Teams of sled dogs race between Anchorage and Nome. Credit: © Shutterstock

Waerner’s winning race time was 9 days, 10 hours, 37 minutes, and 47 seconds—nearly 6 hours ahead of the second-place finisher, Alaska’s Mitch Seavey, a three-time Iditarod champion (2004, 2013, and 2017). Jessie Royer of Fairbanks, Alaska, finished third for the second-straight year, bringing her dog team in an hour and half after Seavey. Of the 57 mushers who began the race, 40 were able to complete the grueling course.

The Iditarod crosses the Alaska and Kuskokwim mountain ranges, heading northwest across the state and then north along the Bering Sea coast to Nome. The race follows a northern route in even years and a southern route in odd-numbered years. The Iditarod requires enormous endurance, both from the musher and the dogs. The race follows icy, snowy trails and typically takes about 10 to 17 days. Mushers and their dogs may train all year for the race.

Click to view larger image The Iditarod is a famous sled dog race held every March in Alaska. Teams of sled dogs race between Anchorage and Nome on the Iditarod Trail, a dog sled mail route first used in 1910. The race begins in Anchorage. It crosses the Alaska and Kuskowim mountain ranges, heading northwest across the state and then north along the Bering Sea coast to the finish line in Nome. The race follows a northern route in even years and a southern route in odd-numbered years. Credit: WORLD BOOK map

Click to view larger image
The Iditarod race begins in Anchorage, Alaska. It crosses the Alaska and Kuskowim mountain ranges, heading northwest across the state and then north along the Bering Sea coast to the finish line in Nome. The race follows a northern route in even years and a southern route in odd-numbered years. Credit: WORLD BOOK map

Each musher begins the race with between 12 and 16 dogs. At least 5 dogs must finish. (Waerner and Seavey both finished with 10 dogs running, and Royer finished with 12.) The dogs, usually Siberian or Alaskan huskies, are selected for speed, endurance, and courage. The sled is extremely light, but it must be strong enough to carry the weight of the musher, equipment and provisions for the race, and sick or exhausted dogs.

The current Iditarod format originated in 1973, developing from shorter sled dog races first held in 1967 and 1969. It is held on the Iditarod Trail, a dog sled mail route first used in 1910. The race also commemorates an emergency rescue mission by dog sled to get medical supplies to Nome during a diphtheria outbreak in 1925. Balto, the lead sled dog in the final leg of that mission, became a popular canine celebrity.

Tags: alaska, anchorage, dogs, husky, iditarod, jessie royer, mitch seavey, nome, race, sled, thomas waerner
Posted in Animals, Arts & Entertainment, Current Events, History, People, Recreation & Sports, Weather | Comments Off

Iditarod 2019

Monday, March 18th, 2019

March 18, 2019

Last week, on March 13, the American musher (sled driver) Peter Kaiser won the annual Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in Alaska. The Iditarod is the world’s most famous sled dog race. The 1,100-mile (1,770-kilometer) race starts on the first Saturday of March in Anchorage and ends in Nome. Kaiser, who is from Alaska, is the first musher of Yup’ik descent to win the race. The Yup’ik are an Inuit people native to the region.

The Iditarod is a famous sled dog race held every March in Alaska. Teams of sled dogs race between Anchorage and Nome. Credit: © Shutterstock

The Iditarod is a famous sled dog race held every March in Alaska. Teams of sled dogs race from Anchorage to Nome. Credit: © Shutterstock

Kaiser’s winning race time was 9 days, 12 hours, 39 minutes, and 6 seconds—just 12 minutes ahead of the defending champion, Joar Leifseth Ulsom of Norway. (The third-place musher, Jessie Royer of Fairbanks, Alaska, brought her dog team in nearly six hours after Leifseth Ulsom, a more common time differential for such a long endurance race.) It was the first Iditarod win for Kaiser, who has raced every year since 2010.

The Iditarod crosses the Alaska and Kuskokwim mountain ranges, heading northwest across the state and then north along the Bering Sea coast to Nome. The race follows a northern route in even years and a southern route in odd-numbered years. The Iditarod requires enormous endurance, both from the musher and the dogs. The race follows icy, snowy trails and typically takes about 10 to 17 days. Mushers and their dogs may train all year for the race. Both men and women compete.

Click to view larger image The Iditarod is a famous sled dog race held every March in Alaska. Teams of sled dogs race between Anchorage and Nome on the Iditarod Trail, a dog sled mail route first used in 1910. The race begins in Anchorage. It crosses the Alaska and Kuskowim mountain ranges, heading northwest across the state and then north along the Bering Sea coast to the finish line in Nome. The race follows a northern route in even years and a southern route in odd-numbered years. Credit: WORLD BOOK map

Click to view larger image
The Iditarod is a famous sled dog race held every March in Alaska. Teams of sled dogs race from Anchorage to Nome on the Iditarod Trail, a dog sled mail route first used in 1910. Credit: WORLD BOOK map

At least 12 dogs and no more than 16 dogs must start the race. At least 5 dogs must finish. The dogs, usually Siberian or Alaskan huskies, are selected for speed, endurance, and courage. The sled is extremely light, but it must be strong enough to carry the weight of the musher, equipment and provisions for the race, and sick or exhausted dogs.

The current Iditarod format originated in 1973, developing from shorter sled dog races first held in 1967 and 1969. It is held on the Iditarod Trail, a dog sled mail route first used in 1910. The race also commemorates an emergency rescue mission by dog sled to get medical supplies to Nome during a diphtheria outbreak in 1925. Balto, the lead sled dog in the final leg of that mission, became a popular canine celebrity.

Tags: alaska, anchorage, dogs, husky, iditarod, inuit, nome, peter kaiser, race, sled
Posted in Animals, Arts & Entertainment, Current Events, History, People, Recreation & Sports | Comments Off

Iditarod Champion Breaks Record

Wednesday, March 12th, 2014

March 12, 2014

Dallas Seavey won Alaska’s famous sled dog race, the Iditarod, yesterday, finishing the 1,000-mile (1,609-kilometer) trek from Anchorage to Nome in a record-breaking 8 days, 13 hours, 4 minutes, and 19 seconds. Rival Aliy Zirkle finished in second place, 2 minutes and 22 seconds behind Seavey. Two-time champion Mitch Seavey, Dallas’s father, came in third. This year’s championship is Dallas Seavey’s second; he was the youngest champion in Iditarod history when he won the race for the first time in 2012.

“This year’s race has been dominated by rough trail, dramatic injuries, and tough weather. There are still more than 50 dog teams spread out along the west coast of Alaska,” reported Emily Schwing of NPR member station KUAC.

The Iditarod is a famous sled dog race held every March in Alaska. Teams of sled dogs race between Anchorage and Nome. (AP/Wide World)

The current Iditarod race, which originated in 1973, is held on the Iditarod Trail, a dog sled mail route first used in 1910. The race commemorates an emergency rescue mission by dog sled to get medical supplies to Nome during a diphtheria outbreak in 1925.

Additional World Book articles:

  • Sled
  • Iditarod: Celebrating the Dog Days of Winter (a special report)

Tags: alaska, aliy zirkle, anchorage, dallas seavey, dan seavy, dog sled, iditarod, nome, race
Posted in Animals, Current Events, Environment, History, Holidays/Celebrations, Medicine, People, Recreation & Sports, Weather | Comments Off

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