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Publié par
Date de parution
12 janvier 2015
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781941821527
Langue
English
Publié par
Date de parution
12 janvier 2015
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781941821527
Langue
English
Iditarod Adventures
TALES FROM MUSHERS ALONG THE TRAIL
By LEW FREEDMAN
Illustrations by JON VAN ZYLE
Text 2015 by Lew Freedman
Illustrations 2015 by Jon Van Zyle
Photographs 2015 by Lew Freedman
except for those on pages 7, 131, 227 2015 by Sebastian Schnuelle
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission of the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Freedman, Lew.
Iditarod adventures : tales from mushers along the trail / by Lew Freedman ; illustrations by Jon Van Zyle.
pages cm
Includes index.
ISBN 978-1-941821-28-2 (pbk.)
ISBN 978-1-941821-53-4 (hardbound)
ISBN 978-1-941821-52-7 (e-book)
1. Iditarod (Race) 2. Sled dog racing-Alaska. 3. Mushers-Alaska-Biography. 4. Women mushers-Alaska-Biography. I. Van Zyle, Jon II. Title.
SF440.15.F735 2015
798.8 309798-dc23
2014025964
Map: Gray Mouse Graphics
Designer: Rudy Ramos
Published by Alaska Northwest Books
An imprint of
P.O. Box 56118
Portland, Oregon 97238-6118
503-254-5591
www.graphicartsbooks.com
Contents
Map of Iditarod
Introduction
Chapter 1 Martin Buser
Chapter 2 Jeff King
Chapter 3 Dan Seavey
Chapter 4 Mitch Seavey
Chapter 5 Dick Mackey
Chapter 6 Jason Mackey
Chapter 7 Lance Mackey
Chapter 8 Joe May
Chapter 9 Jon Van Zyle
Chapter 10 Hobo Jim
Chapter 11 Karen Tallent
Chapter 12 Jake Berkowitz
Chapter 13 Aaron Burmeister
Chapter 14 Cim Smyth
Chapter 15 Michelle Phillips
Chapter 16 Bob Bundtzen
Chapter 17 Joanne Potts
Chapter 18 Mark Nordman
Chapter 19 Stan Hooley
Chapter 20 Sebastian Schnuelle
Chapter 21 Hugh Neff
Chapter 22 Newton Marshall
Chapter 23 Paul Gebhardt
Chapter 24 DeeDee Jonrowe
Chapter 25 Mike Williams Jr.
Chapter 26 Pete Kaiser
Chapter 27 Jim Lanier
Chapter 28 Aliy Zirkle
About the Author
INTRODUCTION
Probably the coldest I ve ever been taking notes was standing at the finish line of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in Nome in 1991 as the clock inched toward 2 A.M. amidst the reports of winner Rick Swenson approaching on Front Street.
The temperature was minus-twenty-five degrees and the windchill made it feel like fifty below. I stood in place, surrounded by the crowd of spectators, for more than an hour. When Swenson crossed the finish line for his record fifth victory-a mark that still stands-my fingers felt as wooden as the pencil they tried to grasp.
Those of us who waited for the arrival of the king were likely equally frozen, despite the warmest of wardrobes hugging our bodies. It was just a fact of life that if you were associating with the 1,049-mile race between Anchorage and Nome on the Bering Sea Coast, that at one time or another during the event that lasted about ten days, you were going to be shivering.
Even if the wind whipped through those of us hanging out at the finish line near the burled arch that marked the end of the trail, we had it easy. It was always colder, snowier, windier, harder going out there for the mushers and their dogs, in the vast expanse of Alaska, the Last Frontier. No one had any illusions about that.
Termed The Last Great Race on Earth, the Iditarod, named for an old gold mining town in the state s Interior, represented the ultimate wilderness challenge. It was man (or woman) against the elements, with only sled dogs for companions, comfort, and transportation. The Iditarod is a throwback race, an event with its origins stemming from a bygone era.
No matter who you are, a nervous novice testing himself on the trail for the first time, or a hardened veteran, each year, each March, when the race leaves the big city of Anchorage, the weather and the trail can play havoc with wise plans, and grand hopes. No one knows whether a sled will encounter ice or snow drifts. No one knows whether a musher will contend with frigid temperatures or warm ones. Will it be sunny? Will it be gloomy? Each musher takes his chances and hopes he is prepared for anything.
Since its founding in 1973, mainly through the efforts of the late Joe Redington Sr. and a team of helpers he organized, the Iditarod has implanted itself in Alaskans minds as the most unifying and popular event that the union s largest state at 586,000 square miles can wrap its arms around.
While ostensibly a sporting event-the one Alaska is most proud of-the Iditarod is more than that. It represents a way of life. It is an event that is very much of a place, its size and scope giving heft to the boast that it is the grandest sled-dog race in the world. Redington s dual dream of ensuring that the husky dog species was perpetuated and the Iditarod Trail preserved has long been achieved.
Beyond that the Iditarod has become a symbol of Alaska, much like Mount McKinley, the 20,320-foot-high mountain that is the tallest in North America, as its reputation has spread and spread, the one recurring event that nearly everyone identifies with the forty-ninth state.
The race has spawned legends and lore, heroes and icons. Rick Swenson of Two Rivers is the only musher with five victories. The late Susan Butcher won the race four times. As has Martin Buser of Big Lake, Jeff King of Denali Park, Doug Swingley of Lincoln, Montana, and Lance Mackey of Fairbanks.
Family dynasties have evolved. Dick Mackey helped Redington stage the first Iditarod and then outraced Swenson by one second in 1978 in the closest race of them all. His son Rick won in 1983 and another son Lance won those four times. Jason, a third son, is still racing. Dan Seavey recorded a top finish in the first Iditarod. His son Mitch has won twice and Dan s grandson Dallas won in 2012 and 2014.
Mushers have been separated from their dog teams in forbidding weather and had to walk miles to safety, not to be confused with the last checkpoint of Safety, twenty-two miles from Nome. They have somehow navigated blown-in trails where visibility was practically nil. They have suffered frostbite. For one reason or another, even simply dog-tired fatigue, it is always a battle to reach Nome. There a good night s rest, a hot meal, and warmth dispensed by loved ones are on the agenda to soothe the aching body. There is also the glow of satisfaction in the form of prize money if one does well, or the simpler prize of an Iditarod belt buckle awarded for reaching the terminus of the trail.
Not everyone can be a champion. The Iditarod appeals to Everyman and Everywoman, those motivated by the spirit of adventure, the challenge of competition, or the love of the land. Some mushers, Martin Buser, Jeff King, DeeDee Jonrowe, Sonny Lindner, and others, have made virtual careers out of competing in the thousand-mile race each year, raising dogs in their kennels, mushing dogs, suborning other goals, to the Iditarod. Some are full-time, professional mushers, living off sponsorships, appearances, and prize money. Some are hooked by the race and have no desire to remove the hook.
It is often said that the Iditarod is to Alaska what the Kentucky Derby is to Louisville or the Indianapolis 500 is to Indiana. Each year there is great anticipation as the first Saturday in March draws near. Fans have their favorites, for many different reasons. They admire excellence among the front-running contenders. They wish to see a Native musher take a turn, or a woman cross the finish line first. As the mushers work their way across the state, passing through the small villages of almost unoccupied locales that make up the checkpoints, in Rohn and Nikolai, McGrath and Unalakleet, Anvik and Grayling, their presence is eagerly anticipated.
Iditarod mushers are so well-known that many of them are referred to by fans by first names only, as if they are friends and neighbors more than the best athletes in their sport. In a way they are friends and neighbors the rest of the year when they are not busy on the trail.
Whether a musher has completed the Iditarod once, or two dozen times, chances are he or she will have a story to tell. In Iditarod Adventures, mushers explain why they have chosen this rugged lifestyle, what has kept them in long-distance mushing, and what types of experiences they have endured along that unforgiving trail between Anchorage and Nome during their careers.
There are twenty-eight individuals included whose stories are related, and not every one of those people spend their Iditarod time on the trail. Included also are administrators who organize the event and make sure it happens every year, volunteers, and others whose connection to the Iditarod is self-evident even if they don t have an official title.
One thing all of these Iditarod people agree upon is that none of them have seen it all. Each time the Iditarod unfolds it is a new and fresh adventure. Each time a musher steps upon the sled runners and urges the team onward from the starting line, he is plunging into the unknown.
Never was this more evident than in the 2014 race. The trail over the first two hundred miles was brutal, devoid of snow and filled with large boulders. Sleds and human bones were broken and in one day alone twelve mushers scratched. Then the trail became swift and smooth and mushers were on a record pace to finish. Abruptly, on the Bering Sea Coast, the weather changed, the wind blowing violently up to sixty-five miles per hour. Just when it seemed certain that the top three had been sorted out, the Iditarod fooled everyone again, shaking up the final standings.
The reminder was very vivid: A new script is written each March and no one knows the ending in advance.
-Lew Freedman March 2014
The 100th All Alaska Sweepstakes commemorative poster.
CHAPTER 1
Martin BUSER
Born in Zurich, Switzerland, in 1958, Martin Buser is one of the most decorated of Iditarod champions. A four-time winner of the race, Buser, who l