Iditarod
The
Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, usually called the "
Iditarod", is an annual
dog sled race in
Alaska, where
mushers and teams of
dogs cover more than 1,000
miles (
1,600 km). While the speed record is held by Martin Buser's team who finished the race in 8 days, 22 hours, 46 minutes and two seconds
[ http://iditaweb-1.gci.net/gdc/archivesyear.php?id=59 ], other mushers cross the finish line days later. In 1990, the last ones finished in just over 21 days.
[http://iditaweb-1.gci.net/gdc/archivesyear.php?id=47] In 2001, Karen Ramstead finished in 14 days, 23 hours and 53 seconds.
[http://iditaweb-1.gci.net/gdc/archivesyear.php?id=58]Frequently teams race through
blizzards causing
whiteout conditions, and
sub-zero weather and
gale-force winds which can cause the
wind chill to reach −100°
F (−75°
C). The trail runs through the
U.S. state of Alaska, from the city of
Anchorage in the southeast, up the Rainy Pass of the
Alaska Range into the sparsely populated
Interior, and then along the shore of the
Bering Sea, finally reaching
Nome in the northwest. The teams cross a harsh but starkly beautiful landscape under the canopy of the
Northern Lights, through
tundra and
spruce forests, over
hills and
mountain passes, and across
rivers. While the start in Anchorage is in the middle of a large urban center, most of the route passes through widely separated towns and villages, and small
Athapaskan and
Inuit settlements. The Iditarod is regarded as a
symbolic link to the early history of the state, and is connected to many traditions commemorating the legacy of dog
mushing.
Arguably, the race is the most popular "
sporting" event in the state, and the top mushers and their teams of dogs are treated as
celebrities; this popularity is credited with the resurgence of recreational mushing in the state since the 1970s. While the yearly field of more than fifty mushers and about a thousand dogs is still largely Alaskan, competitors from fourteen countries have completed the event including the
Norwegian Robert Sørlie, who became the first international winner in 2003. The Iditarod became famous outside the state largely because of
media attention directed at
Libby Riddles, a longshot who became the first woman to win the race in 1985; and then at
Susan Butcher, who became the second woman to win the race in 1986, and went on to dominate the race for half a decade. Print and television journalists and crowds of spectators attend the start at the intersection of Fourth Avenue and D Street in Anchorage, and in smaller numbers at the checkpoints along the trail.
The Iditarod began in
1973 as an event to test the best dogsled mushers and teams, evolving into the highly competitive race it is today.
Portions of the
Iditarod Trail were used by the
Native American Inuit and
Athapaskans hundreds of years before the arrival of
Russian
fur traders in the 1800s, but the trail reached its peak between the late 1880s and the mid 1920s as
miners arrived to dig
coal and later
gold, especially after the
Alaska gold rushes at
Nome in 1898, and at the "Inland Empire" along the
Kuskokwim Mountains between the
Yukon and
Kuskokwim rivers, in 1908.
The primary communication and transportation link to the rest of the world during the summer was the
steamship; but between October and June the northern
ports like Nome became icebound, and
dog sleds delivered
mail,
firewood, mining equipment, gold
ore, food, furs,
priests, and other needed supplies between the
trading posts and settlements across the
Interior and along the western coast.
Roadhouses where travelers could spend the night sprang up every 14 to 30 miles (23 to 48 km) until the end of the 1920s, when the mail carriers were replaced by
bush pilots flying small
aircraft and the roadhouses vanished. Dog sledding persisted in the rural parts of Alaska, but was almost driven into extinction by the spread of
snowmobiles in the 1960s.
During its heyday, mushing was also a popular
sport during the winter, when mining towns shut down. The first major competition was the tremendously popular 1908
All-Alaska Sweepstakes (AAS), which was started by Allan "Scotty" Alexander Allan, and ran 408 miles (657 km) from Nome to
Candle and back. The event introduced the first
Siberian huskies to Alaska in 1910, where they quickly became the favored racing dog, replacing the
Alaskan malamute, and
mongrels bred from imported
huskies and other large breeds, like
setters and
pointers. In 1914, the
Norwegian immigrant
Leonhard Seppala first appeared, and went on to win the race in 1915, 1916, and 1917, before the race was discontinued in 1918 during
World War I.
The most famous event in the history of Alaskan mushing is the
1925 serum run to Nome, also known as the "Great Race of Mercy". A
diphtheria epidemic threatened Nome, especially the Inuit children who had no
immunity to the "white man's disease", and the nearest quantity of
antitoxin was in Anchorage. Since the two available planes were both dismantled and had never been flown in the winter,
Governor Scott Bone approved a safer route. The 20-pound (
9-kg) cylinder of serum was sent by train 298 miles (
480 km) from the southern port of
Seward to
Nenana, where it was passed just before midnight on
January 27 to the first of twenty mushers and more than 100 dogs who relayed the package 674 miles (1,085 km) from Nenana to Nome. In the serum delivery, the dogs ran in relays with no dog running over 100 miles.
The Norwegian
Gunnar Kaasen and his lead dog
Balto, arrived on Front Street in Nome on
February 2 at 5:30 a.m., just five and a half days later. The two became media celebrities, and a statue of Balto was erected at
Central Park in New York City in 1925, where it has become one of the most popular
tourist attractions. However, most mushers consider
Leonhard Seppala and his lead dog
Togo to be the true heroes of the run. Together they covered the most hazardous stretch of the route, and carried the serum further than any other team.
The Iditarod was the brainchild of
Dorothy G. Page (the "
Mother of the Iditarod"), who wanted to sponsor a sled dog race to honor mushers. With the support of
Joe Redington, Sr. (the "Father of the Iditarod"), the first Iditarod Trail Seppala Memorial Race was held in 1967 and covered 25 miles (40 km) near
Anchorage. The purse of
USD $25,000 attracted a field of 58 racers including the winner,
Isaac Okleasik. The next race in 1968 was canceled due to lack of snow, and the small $1,000 purse in 1969 only drew 12 mushers. The race was originally called the Iditarod Trail Seppala Memorial Race in honor of
Leonhard Seppala.
Redington was the impetus behind extending the race more than 1,000 miles along the historic route to Nome, and a major
fundraising campaign which raised a purse of $51,000. The first true Iditarod was held in 1973, and attracted a field of 34 mushers, 22 of whom completed the race. The event was a success; even though the purse dropped in the 1974 race, the popularity caused the field of mushers to rise to 44, and corporate sponsorship in 1975 put the race on secure financial footing. Despite the loss of sponsors during a dog abuse
scandal in 1976, the Iditarod caused a resurgence of recreational mushing in the 1970s, and has continued to grow until it is now the largest
sporting event in the state. While the race was originally patterned after the All Alaska Sweepstakes, the Iditarod Trail Committee promotes it as a commemoration of the serum delivery.
 |
Start of the Iditarod National Historic Trail in Seward |
The race's namesake is the Iditarod Trail, which was designated as one of the first four
National Historic Trails in 1978. The trail in turn is named for the
town of Iditarod, which was an Athabaskan village before becoming the center of the Inland Empire's Iditarod Mining District in 1910, and then turning into a
ghost town at the end of the local gold rush. Iditarod may be derived from the
Athabaskan haiditarod, meaning "far distant place".
The main route of the Iditarod trail extends 938 miles (
1,500 km) from
Seward in the south to Nome in the northwest, and was first surveyed by Walter Goodwin in 1908, and then cleared and marked by the
Alaska Road Commission in 1910 and 1911. The entire network of branching paths covers a total of 2,450 miles (3,945 km). Except for the start in Anchorage, the modern race follows parts of the historic trail.
This route is a grueling one. While always longer than 1,000 miles (1,584 km), the trail is actually composed of a northern route, which is run on even-numbered years, and a southern route, which is run on odd-numbered years. Both follow the same trail for 444 miles (715 km), from Anchorage to
Ophir, where they diverge and then rejoin at
Kaltag, 441 miles (710 km) from Nome. The race used the northern route until 1977, when the southern route was added to distribute the impact of the event on the small villages in the area, none of which have more than a few hundred inhabitants. Passing through the historic town of
Iditarod was a secondary benefit.
Aside from the addition of the southern route, the route has remained relatively constant. The largest changes were the addition of the restart location in 1975, and the shift from Ptarmigan to Rainy Pass in 1976. Checkpoints along the route are also occasionally added or dropped, and the ceremonial start of the route and the restart point are commonly adjusted due to weather.
As a result the exact measured distance of the race varies, but according to the official website the northern route is 1,112 miles (1,790 km) long, and the southern route is 1,131 miles (1820 km) long (ITC,
Southern &
Northern). The length of the race is also frequently rounded to either 1,050, 1,100, or 1,150 miles (1690, 1770 or 1850 km), but is officially set at 1,049 miles (1688 km), which honors Alaska's status as the
49th state.
Checkpoints
There are currently 25 checkpoints on the northern route and 26 on the southern route where mushers must sign in. Some mushers prefer to camp on the trail and immediately press on, but others stay and rest. Mushers purchase supplies and equipment in Anchorage, which are flown ahead to each checkpoint by the Iditarod Air Force. The gear includes food, extra
booties for the dogs,
headlamps for night travel,
batteries (for the lamps, music, or
radios), tools and
sled parts for repairs, and even lightweight sleds for the final dash to Nome. There are three mandatory rests that each team must take during the Iditarod: one 24-hour layover, to be taken at any checkpoint; one eight-hour layover, taken at any checkpoint on the Yukon River; and an eight-hour stop at
White Mountain. Other than these three mandatory stops, the mushers may be racing their dogs.
In 1985, the race was suspended for the first time for safety reasons when weather prevented the Iditarod Air Force from delivering supplies to Rohn and
Nikolai, the first two checkpoints in the Alaska Interior. Fifty-eight mushers and 508 dogs congregated at the small lodge in
Rainy Pass for three days, while emergency shipments of food were flown in from Anchorage. Weather also halted the race later at
McGrath, and the two stops added almost a week to the winning time.
Ceremonial start
style="text-align:right" align=bottom| (ITC, Southern & Northern)| Ceremonial start |
|---|
| Anchorage to Eagle River (20 mi) |
| Highway |
|---|
| Eagle River to Wasilla (29 mi) |
| Restart |
|---|
The race starts the first Saturday in March, at the first checkpoint on Fourth Avenue, in downtown Anchorage. A five-block section of the street is barricaded off as a staging area, and snow is stockpiled and shipped in by truck the night before to cover the route to the first checkpoint. Prior to 1983, the race started at
Mulcahy ParkShortly before the race, a ribbon-cutting ceremony is held under the flags representing the home countries and states of all competitors in the race. The first musher to depart at 10:00 a.m. AST is an honorary musher, selected for their contributions to dog sledding. From the first race in 1973 until 1980, the honorary musher was
Leonhard Seppala, who covered the longest distance in the 1925 diphtheria serum run. The first competitor leaves at 10:02, and the rest follow, separated by two-minute intervals. The start order is determined during a banquet held two days prior by letting the mushers choose their starting position. Selections are made in the order of musher registrations and mushers may choose any position that has not been previously chosen. The teams are helped to the starting line by several handlers and lined up at the starting line while the musher sets his brake in anticipation of the signal to start.
|
Aliy Zirkle's dog team on Anchorage's Fourth Avenue at the start of the 2003 Iditarod. |
On the sled will also be an "Idita-Rider". The Idita-Riders are chosen by an
auction in January, which was held entirely online for the first time in 2005. In 2005, the average bid was
USD $1918.09, and raised a total of $140,021.00. This is an exciting portion of the race for dogs and musher, as it is one of the few portions of the race where there are spectators, and the only spot where the trail winds through an urban environment. However, In "Iditarod Dreams," DeeDee Jonrowe wrote, "A lot of mushers hate the Anchorage start. They don't like crowds. They worry that their dogs get too excited and jumpy."
[Lew Freedman & DeeDee Jonrowe. "Iditarod Dreams," Seattle: Epicenter Press, 1995 p. 20.]The time for covering this portion of the race does not count toward the official race time
per rule #55, so the dogs, musher, and Idita-Rider are free to take this all in at a relaxed pace. The mushers then continue through several miles of city streets and city trails before reaching the foothills to the east of Anchorage, in
Chugach State Park in the
Chugach Mountains. The teams then follow Glenn Highway for two to three hours until they reach Eagle River, 20 miles (30 km) away. Once they arrive at the
Veterans of Foreign Wars building, the mushers check in, unharness their teams, return them to their boxes, and drive 30 miles (50 km) of highway to the restart point.
During the first two races in 1973 and 1974, the teams crossed the mudflats of
Cook Inlet to
Knik (the original restart location), but this was discontinued because the weather frequently hovers around freezing, turning it into a muddy hazard. The second checkpoint also occasionally changes due to weather; in 2005, the checkpoint was changed from Eagle River to Campbell Airstrip, only 11 miles (18 km) away.
Restart
style="text-align:right" align=bottom| (ITC, Southern & Northern)| Restart |
|---|
| Wasilla to Knik 14 mi (23 km) |
| Knik to Yetna 52 mi (84 km) |
| Yetna Station to Skwentna 34 mi (55 km) |
| Skwentna to Finger Lake 45 mi (72 km) |
| Finger Lake to Rainy Pass 30 mi (48 km) |
| Into the Interior |
|---|
After the dogs are shuttled to the third checkpoint, the race restarts the next day (Sunday) at 2:00 p.m. AST. Prior to 2004, the race was restarted at 10:00 a.m., but the time has been moved back so the dogs will be starting in colder weather, and the first mushers arrive at Skwentna well after dark, which reduces the crowds of fans who fly into the checkpoint.
The traditional restart location is the headquarters of the Iditarod Trail Committee, in Wasilla, but warm weather and poor trail conditions can push the restart further north to Willow Lake, and in 2003 it was bumped 300 miles (500 km) north to
Fairbanks. The mushers depart, separated by the same intervals as their arrival at the second checkpoint.
The first 100 miles (
160 km) from Wasilla through the checkpoints at
Knik, and
Yetna Station, to
Skwentna are known as "
moose alley". The many moose in the area find it difficult to move and forage for food when the ground is thick with snow. As a result, the moose sometimes prefer to use pre-existing trails, causing hazards for the dog teams. In 1985, Susan Butcher lost her chance at becoming the first woman to win the Iditarod when her team made a sharp turn, and encountered a pregnant moose. The moose killed two dogs and seriously injured six more in the twenty minutes before Duane "Dewey" Halverson arrived and shot the moose. In 1982, Dick Mackey, Warner Vent, Jerry Austin, and their teams were driven into the forest by a charging moose.
Otherwise, the route to Skwentna is easy, over flat lowlands, and well marked by
stakes or
tripods with
reflectors or
flags. Most mushers push through the night, and the first teams usually arrive at Skwentna before dawn. Skwentna is a 40-minute hop from Anchorage by
aircraft, and dozens of planes land on the airstrip or on the
Skwetna River, bringing journalists, photographers, and spectators.
From Skwentna, the route follows the Skwentna River into the southern part of the Alaska Range to
Finger Lake. The stretch from Finger Lake to
Rainy Pass, on Puntilla Lake, becomes more difficult, as the teams follow the narrow Happy River Gorge, where the trail balances on the side of a heavily forested incline. In 1985, Jerry Austin broke a hand and two of his dogs were injured when the sled went out of control and hit a stand of trees. Rainy Pass is part of the Historic Iditarod Trail, but until 1976 the pass was inaccessible and route detoured through
Ptarmigan Pass, also known as Hellsgate, because of the 1964
Good Friday Earthquake.
Into the Interior
From Rainy Pass, the route continues up the mountain, past the
tree line to the
divide of the Alaska Range, and then passes down into the Alaska Interior. The elevation of the pass is 3,200 feet (
975 m), and some nearby peaks exceed 5,000 feet (
1,500 m). The
valley up the mountains is exposed to blizzards. In 1974, there were several cases of
frostbite when the temperature dropped to −50°
F (−45°C), and the 50-
mile-per-hour (80-
km/h)
winds caused the
windchill to drop to −130°F (−90°C). The wind also erases the trail and markers, making the path hard to follow. In 1976, retired colonel
Norman Vaughan, who drove a dog team in
Richard E. Byrd's 1928 expedition to the South Pole and competed in the
only Olympic sled dog race, became lost for five days after leaving Rainy Pass, and nearly died.
The trail down Dalzell Gorge from the divide is regarded as the worst stretch of the trail. Steep and twisting, it drops 1,000 feet (300 m) in elevation in just five miles (8 km), and there is little traction so the teams are hard to control. Mushers have to ride the brake most of the way down, and use a snow hook for traction. In 1988, rookie Peryll Kyzer fell through an ice bridge into a creek, and spent the night wet. The route then follows
Tatina River, which is also hazardous: in 1986 Butcher's lead dogs fell through the ice, but landed on a second layer of ice instead of falling into the river. In 1997, Ramey Smyth lost the end of his pinkie when it hit an overhanging branch while negotiating the gorge
[[http://www.adn.com/iditarod/news/story/6236819p-6111967c.html].
Rohn is the next checkpoint, and is located in a spruce forest with no wind and a poor airstrip. The isolation, and its location immediately after the rigors of Rainy Pass, and before the 75-mile haul to the next checkpoint, makes it a popular place for mushers to take their mandatory 24-hour stop. From Rohn, the trail follows the south fork of the
Kuskokwim River, where freezing water running over a layer of ice (overflow) is a hazard. In 1975, Vaughan was hospitalized for frostbite after running through an overflow. In 1973, Terry Miller and his team were almost drawn into a hole in the river by the powerful current in an overflow, but were rescued by Tom Mercer who came back to save them.
About 45 miles (70 km) from Rohn, the path leaves the river and passes into the Farewell Burn. In 1976, a
wildfire turned 360,000 acres (1,500 km) of spruce into blackened
badland of burnt timber. Fallen trees, and falling through clumps of
sedge or
grass which balloon out into a canopy two feet (600 mm) above the ground, supporting a deceptively thin crust of snow, are common dangers. The Burn forces teams to move very slowly, and can cause
paw injuries.
Nikolai, an Athapaskan settlement on the banks of the
Kuskokwim River, is the first Native American village used as a checkpoint, and the arrival of the sled teams is one of the largest social events of the year. The route then follows the south fork of the Kuskokwim to the former mining town of McGrath. According to the
2000 census, it has a population of 401, making it the largest checkpoint in the Interior. McGrath is also notable for being the first site in Alaska to receive
mail by aircraft (in 1924), heralding the end of the sled dog era. It still has a good airfield, so journalists are common.
The next checkpoint is the ghost town of
Takotna, which was a commercial hub during the
gold rush.
Ophir, named for the reputed source of King
Solomon's gold by religious prospectors, is the next checkpoint. By this stage in the race, the front-runners are several days ahead of those in the back of the pack.
Divided path
style="text-align:right" align=bottom| (ITC, Northern)| Northern route (even years) |
|---|
| Ophir to Cripple (59 mi) |
| Cripple to Ruby (112 mi) |
| Ruby to Galena (52 mi) |
| Galena to Nulato (52 mi) |
| Nulato to Kaltag (42 mi) |
| Trails rejoin |
|---|
After Ophir, the trail diverges into a northern and a southern route, which rejoin at Kaltag. On even years, the northern route is used; and on odd years the southern route is used. During the first few Iditarods there was only one trail, which followed the route of what is now the northern trail. In the late 1970s, the southern leg of the route was added to give the southern villages a chance to host the Iditarod, and also to allow the route to pass through the trail's namesake, the historical town of Iditarod. The two routes differ by less than 10 miles (16 km).
On even years, the northern route first passes through
Cripple, which is 503 miles (810 km) from Anchorage, and 609 miles (980 km) from Nome (ITC,
Northern), making it the middlemost checkpoint. From Cripple, the route passes through
Sulatna Crossing to
Ruby, on the
Yukon River. Ruby is another former gold rush town which became an Athapaskan village.
style="text-align:right" align=bottom| (ITC, Southern)| Southern route (odd years) |
|---|
| Ophir to Iditarod (90 mi) |
| Iditarod to Shageluk (65 mi) |
| Shageluk to Anvik (25 mi) |
| Anvik to Grayling (18 mi) |
| Grayling to Eagle Island (60 mi) |
| Eagle Island to Kaltag (70 mi) |
| Trails rejoin |
|---|
On odd years, the southern route first passes through the ghost town of Iditarod, which is the alternate halfway mark, at 599 miles (964 km) from Anchorage, and 532 miles (856 km) from Nome (ITC,
Southern). From Iditarod the route goes through the Athapaskan villages of
Shageluk,
Anvik,
Grayling, and
Eagle Island.
Ruby and Anvik are on the longest river in Alaska, the Yukon, which is swept by strong winds which can wipe out the trail and drop the windchill below −100 °F (−75 °C). A greater hazard is the uniformity of this long stretch: Suffering from
sleep deprivation, many mushers report
hallucinations (
Sherwonit, 1991).
style="text-align:right" align=bottom| (ITC, Southern & Northern)| Trails rejoin |
|---|
| Kaltag to Unalakleet (90 mi) |
| Last dash |
|---|
| Unalakleet to Shaktoolik (42 mi) |
| Shaktoolik to Koyuk (48 mi) |
| Koyuk to Elim (48 mi) |
| Elim to Golivin (28 mi) |
| Golivin to White Mountain (18 mi) |
| White Mountain to Safety (55 mi) |
| Safety to Nome (22 mi) |
| End of Iditarod |
|---|
| Southern route: 1,131 miles |
| Northern route: 1,112 miles |
Both trails meet again in Kaltag, which for hundreds of years has been a gateway between the Athapaskan villages in the Interior, and the Inuit settlements on the coast of the Bering Sea. The "Kaltag Portage" runs through a 1,000-foot (300-m) pass down to the Inuit town of
Unalakleet, on the shore of the Bering Sea.
Last dash
In the early years of the Iditarod, the last stretch along the shores of the
Norton Sound of the Bering Sea to Nome was a slow, easy trip. Now that the race is more competitive, the last stretch has become one long dash to the finish.
According to the 2000 census, the village of Unalakleet has a population of 747, making it the largest Native American town along the Iditarod. The majority of the residents are
Inupiat, the Inuit people of the
Bering Strait region. The town's name means the "place where the east wind blows", and the buildings are commonly buried under
snowdrifts. Racers are met by
church bells or
sirens, and mobbed by crowds.
From Unalakleet, the route passes through the hills to the Inupiat village of
Shaktoolik, which is also buried in snow, after the northeast wind brings ground blizzards. The route then passes across the frozen Norton Bay, where the markers are young spruce trees that were dropped into holes in the ice, where they froze, to
Koyuk. After the Bay, the route swings west along the south shore of
Seward Peninsula though the tiny villages of
Elim,
Golovin and
White Mountain.
All teams must rest their dogs for at least eight hours at White Mountain, before the final sprint. From White Mountain to
Safety is 77 miles (124 km), and from Safety to Nome is just 22 miles (35 km). The last leg is crucial because the lead teams are often within a few hours of each other at this point.
As of 1991, the race has been decided by less than an hour seven different times, less than five minutes three times, and in the closest race the winner and the runner-up were only one second apart.
 |
The old "Burled Arch", the official finish line in Nome, Alaska, which collapsed in 2001. |
The official finish line is the Red "Fox" Olson Trail Monument, more commonly known as the "burled arch", in Nome. The original burled arch lasted from 1975, until it was destroyed by
dry rot and years of inclement weather in 2001. The new arch is a
spruce log with two distinct
burls, similar but not identical to the old arch. While the old arch spelled out "End of the Iditarod Dog Race", the new arch has an additional word: "End of the Iditarod
Sled Dog Race".
A "Widow's Lamp" is lit and remains hanging on the arch until the last competitor crosses the finish line. The tradition is based on the
kerosene lamp lit and hung outside a
roadhouse, when a musher carrying goods or
mail was en route.
On the way to the arch, each musher passes down Front Street, past a
saloon once owned by
Wyatt Earp, and down the fenced-off 50-yard end stretch. The city's fire siren is sounded as each musher crosses the finish line. While the winner of the first race in 1973 completed the competition in just over 20 days, preparation of the trail in advance of the
dog sled teams and improvements in
dog training have dropped the winning time to under 10 days in every race since 1996.
An awards banquet is held the Sunday after the winner's arrival. Brass belt buckles and special patches are given to everyone who completes the race.
More than 50 mushers enter each year. Most are from rural
South Central Alaska, the Interior, and the "
Bush"; few are urban, and only a small percentage are from the Lower 48,
Canada, or overseas. Some are professionals who make their living by selling dogs, running sled dog tours, giving mushing instruction, and speaking about their Iditarod experiences. Others make money from Iditarod-related advertising contracts or book deals. Some are amateurs who make their living
hunting,
fishing,
trapping,
gardening, or with seasonal jobs, though
lawyers,
surgeons, airline
pilots,
veterinarians,
biologists, and
CEOs have competed. Per
rules#38 and #41, only experienced mushers are allowed to complete in the Iditarod. If a musher has been convicted of a charge of animal or neglect, or if the Iditarod Trail Committee determines the musher is unfit, they are not allowed to compete. Rookie mushers must pre-qualify by finishing an assortment of qualifying races first.
As of 2006, the combined cost of the entry fee, dog maintenance, and transportation was estimated by one musher at between USD $20,000 to $30,000
[Snow Bound Kennels, 2006]. But that figure varies depending upon how many dogs a musher has, what the musher feeds the dogs and how much is spent on housing and handlers. Expenses faced by modern teams include lightweight gear including thousands of booties and quick-change runners, special high-energy
dog foods,
veterinary care, and
breeding costs. According to Athabaskan musher Ken Chase, "the big expenses [for rural Alaskans] are the freight and having to buy dog food". (
Hutchinson) Most modern teams cost $10,000 to $40,000, and the top 10 spend between $80,000 and $100,000 a year. The top finisher won at least $69,000, the remaining top thirty finishers won an average of $26,500 each.
[CNN, 2006]"Musher" is derived from the
French marche, meaning "to march", and originated among the French fur trappers in Alaska. The term has been used to mean "move out" by foot or snowshoes since the middle of the 19th century. Applying it to dogs is a 20th-century coinage; prior to that time the term was "dog driver" or "dog puncher". "Mush" is rarely used by modern teams, having been replaced by "hike" or "let's go".
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