1 0 Archive | March, 2005
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picture You’ve followed the race, now see the pictures.

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I just got back into Nome after spending a few days in Unalakleet. Check out the photos that I posted within the Iditarod Gallery. Also, as mushers come into Nome, take a look at the Nome Cam (click here). I’ll be at the KICY booth.

-To view the Unalakleet gallery (click here)
-To read the blog entries and hear the audio (click here)

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15. Mar, 2005
1:56 pm
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Idita-outta here

I’m hoping to leave on a flight back to Nome in 20 minutes. Here are the current standings.

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As of 10:30 am

Sorlie out of Elim at 4:17am

John Baker out of Elim at 7:08am

Mitch Seavey out of Elim at 7:26

Ramey Brooks out of Elim at 7:34

Ed Iten out of Elim at 7:50

Buser still in Elim

DougSwingly in Elim

I’ve got lots of audio & photos for you when I get back to nome!

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15. Mar, 2005
10:27 am

written by Josh
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Idita-comeback

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Well, my last post was correct, I did get marooned only it was here in Unalakleet instead of Koyuk. So I’m spending one more night here, and one less night out on the trail somewhere else. This has given me the chance to speak with a few more mushers that I wouldn’t have otherwise had a chance to catch up with. Hopefully tomorrow morning I can catch the first flight out of here back to Nome. I’ll have to get White Mountian perhaps after the finisher comes into Nome.

Some pretty funky stuff went on today with the race standings, I’ll try and break it down for you.

Robert Sorlie is still in first place, however he got lost on the trail out of Unalakleet on the way to Shaktoolik, he left Koyuk around 6:00 this evening. Mitch Seavey came from a number 9 or 10 position into number 2 and is resting in Koyuk right now. Word is that he has a very fast team that he has been holding back for most of the race. He might try and make a pass at Sorlie, but there is some time in between them. Ramey Brooks came into Koyuk about an hour after Seavey did, and Martin Buser came in 20 minutes after that. Another huge move was made by Lance Mackey who is in the number 5 spot right now, earlier he was down in the teens, but after a 7 hour rest here in Unalakleet was able to climb up the ring. I spoke with him this morning around 9, and he was talking about taking it easy, enjoying the race, not taking things to seriously….and BAM, he is a contender again.

Its on its way back to Nome, only 171 more miles. Hopefully I can beat them all there! I’ve also got to write some updates this evening that I can call in tomorrow morning for the Breakfast club.

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14. Mar, 2005
9:03 pm

written by Josh
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Idita-Marooned?

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As of 10:14 am, Monday March 14th

I’m heading out from Unalakleet this afternoon to Koyuk, where there is a good chance that I’ll get stranded for the evening. We’ll see.

Rober Sorlie came into Unksville last night at 8:45, we were out there for almost 3 hours waiting for him to get in. Martin Buser came in a few hours later. As soon as Buser came in, Sorlie started collecting his things and got ready to go. It was 10 after midnight when he left. Ramy Brooks apperantly camped outside of town for a few hours, he came in around 2:30 and took right off, Martin Buser left about 15 minutes later. All the top mushers cruised through here last night, most leaving early this morning before I had a chance to catch them. I did have an interesting conversation with Lance Mackey who won the Yukon Quest a few weeks ago, and Hugh Neff who came in 3rd. They both are in the top twenty and have a whole different outlook on the race. I wrote up a nice story on it and will post the audio for you when I get back to Nome.

Sorlie and Brooks have checked into Shaktoolick and are on their way to Koyuk. We’ll see what I get there on the next leg of my iditarod adventure.

Secrest out.

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14. Mar, 2005
10:17 am

written by Josh
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idita-Unksville

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Update as of 4:33pm, Sunday March 13th

Right now all the top ten teams have left Kaltag and are on their way to Unalakleet. Robert Sorlie is in first, and Ramy Brooks is an hour behind him. Martin Buser is an hour behind Ramy in third place, John Baker from Kotzabue in 4th, Jeff King in 5th with defending champion Mitch Seavey about 20 minutes behind. Ed Iten in 7th, Bjonar Anderson in 8th and DeeDee Jonrowe in 9th. The last person to leave Kaltag was Doug Swingley in 10th position. Its about 90 miles from Kaltag to Unakaleet, and the first musher is expected in around 6:00 tonight.

I’m here in Unalakleet waiting for mushers to get in. I’ll head up to Koyuk tomorrow before going home tomorrow evening. Here is a blog entry that I wrote last night about my experences in Unksville

(written at 11:00pm, Saturday March 12th)

Well, what a day this has been. Every time I think about the amazing opportunities that We’ve had since moving to Alaska, I’m just in awe. It shows you that if you give God something precious to you, like a year of service away from your friends and family, he will talk that gift and bless it. I really feel blessed with the great opportunities that we have been given. I can’t speak for Lydia, she is Miss travels around to villages on a regular basis, but this is only my second time out to one. I’m just blown away at how different it is than life at home in Seattle, its even different that Nome!

I’ve had a great time here so far, and have lots of time left. I flew in around 4:30, and after getting off the place started talking to another passenger, come to find out it was a reporter for the Nome Nugget Newspaper. We both had no idea what to do, so we start making the walk into town, when we are offered a ride to the checkpoint. Once there, we met an iditarod volunteer from Norway, and the three of us went to Dinner at Unalakleet’s pizza place. It was very cool, about halfway through dinner the owner and a friend started playing guitars and singing. It was such a surreal experience to be having pizza in a remote Alaskan village with two strangers I didn’t know 2 hours earlier, one from Norway, the other a former attorney from Ohio turned Journalist…all while being sung original compositions by some dude at his restraunt.

We headed back to the checkpoint and I decided that I should go check out the place I was going to stay, while my nugget friend went looking for one. I found my way to the Covenant Church an met Joel & Olga. After getting the rundown and having some coffee with the family, I headed back to the checkpoint. There wasn’t to much going on so I started walking around town. I ran into another Iditarod volunteer, this guy was around my age and from New Hampshire. He was on his way to the UNK basketball game with a few others, and I asked if I could join. Again, an hour later I found myself in a small high school gym, watching basketball with three more complete strangers, a dog handler from Minnesota, a dude from New Hampshire, and a native from Unksville. Around 10 I thought I should get going back to the house I was staying at. I visited with Olga and her daughter Evia who is a few years older than I. We played the covenant “do you know?” game for a while, then I went to bed. Sunday some teams should arrive.

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13. Mar, 2005
4:34 pm

written by Josh
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Idita-lead

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Update as of Saturday, 1:oopm AKST

Will anyone be able to catch up with Sorlie? Robert was the first one to arrive in Eagle Island earlier this afternoon, the checkpoint that for some reason is absent from the maps I’ve been using off the Cabela’s Iditarod website. Its halfway from Grayling to Kaltag, with about 300 miles left until the finish line. With his mandatory layovers out of way, all Robert has to do now is stay in the lead and victory will be his. Historically the first musher to reach unalakleet often will win the race, Sorlie lived up to that standard in 2003, coming in first to Unksville (as I like to call it), and then into Nome. The nine fingered Martin Buser is only 2 hours behind however, and Ramey Brooks 2 more behind Buser. Paul Gebhardt who was the first into Anvik, but hadn’t taken his 24 hour layover is still in the top ten, but he is the only one in the top 10 to not have taken his additional required 8 hour layover, so he probably won’t be holding that position for to long, atleast he got the free meal though!

I’m heading out to Unalakeet in a few hours and will hopefully catch some of the race leaders before *I* have to leave Sunday afternoon. Right now the mushers are coming in a bit later than I had originally expected. But I’m excited to hit the trail and experience this thing from beginning, middle and the end.

Here is some extra audio to make up for the absence yesterday:

1. Report on Paul Gebhardt making it into Anvik first (click here)

2. Report and Interview with Charlie Boulding (click here)

3. Report and Interview with Charlie Boulding (click here)

4. Report and Interview with DoDo Perri, Musher from Italy (click here)

5. Report and Interview with the first Musher off the starting line, Jessie Royer (click here)

I’ve been meaning to give you all some website to check out if you are interested in following the race more than the updates I’ve been able to provide each day.

I use Cabela’s Iditarod website the most: http://www.cabelasiditarod.com/

The Main Iditarod website is pretty good: http://www.iditarod.com

Robert Sorlie & Team norway are writting constant articles: http://hurdal.com/

Martin Buser’s website is also being updated on a regular basis: http://www.buserdog.com/buserdog/

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12. Mar, 2005
12:55 pm

written by Josh
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Idita-Meal.

Today I’ve got an AP Article for you off of ABC New’s website. There will be audio down at the bottom later.

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska Mar 11, 2005 – Paul Gebhardt enjoyed a seven-course gourmet meal Friday for being the first musher to reach the Yukon River in the 1,100-mile Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race.

Gebhardt, 48, whose best finish was second in 2000, reached the Anvik checkpoint at 7:14 a.m. For being first to the Yukon, Gebhardt enjoyed some distinctly non-trail fare that included braised musk ox and shitake mushroom stew and buffalo tenderloin with peppercorn sauce. He also received 3,500 crisp $1 bills.

Gebhardt is the only one of several mushers in the top tier who has not taken a mandatory 24-hour rest of his team. He said he would satisfy the requirement at Anvik, 481 miles from Nome.

In second place was Robert Sorlie of Norway, the 2003 Iditarod winner. Four-time winner Martin Buser was in third, followed by Yukon Quest winner Aliy Zirkle and Ramy Brooks of Healy.

Rick Swenson, the only five-time winner of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, dropped out of the running Thursday the first time he’s scratched from the race to Nome in 29 years on the trail.

The 54-year-old musher officially withdrew after returning to the checkpoint at McGrath, 722 miles from the finish line. Swenson told race managers he was concerned about the well-being of his dog team.

“He said they weren’t running as well as he wanted them to,” said race marshal Mark Nordman.

Swenson took his mandatory 24-hour rest at McGrath, then traveled 18 miles to the Takotna checkpoint, arriving shortly before 7 a.m. Thursday, race officials said. He dropped off one of his dogs, then headed for Ophir 25 miles away with 12 dogs. Mushers start the race with 16 dogs and must end it with at least five.

On the trail, Swenson decided to turn back to McGrath, a busy hub where he could transport his dogs home quicker, said Iditarod spokesman Chas St. George.

“He’s the kind of guy who hates to quit, so his decision was based on what’s in the best interest of his team,” he said.

Another top musher withdrew from competition late Wednesday, also surprising race officials. Zack Steer was in eighth place when he scratched at the Ophir checkpoint, about 475 miles into the race to Nome.

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11. Mar, 2005
3:02 pm

written by Josh
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Idita-rest

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The leaders are halfway there

As of Mar 10 – 2:00pm
Today Iditarod speculation is very difficult because its come to the point in the race when many mushers are planning their 24 hour layovers or have already taken them. The Iditarod trail committee mandates that each musher take 24 hours off in one checkpoint. Where or when they do it is up to each individual team. Many mushers took theirs yesterday and are now free to continue going without much hesitation, however no one in the top 10 have completed their layover yet and many of them are working on it right now . The highest position musher that has completed a layover is Aliy Zirkle who is in the number 11 spot. Over the next few hours the top ten field will be changing dramatically with top mushers being forced to sit back and watch others wiz in and out of checkpoints with renewed energy.

Sorlie will be leaving around 2:50am on Friday, so will Martin Buser. Ramey Brooks will leave at 4:00am, and DeeDee Jonrow around 6:00am. Mitch Seavey, Jeff King, Ed Iten, Paul Gebhardt, and John Baker are all taking their 24 hour layovers at the ghost town of Iditarod as well. Approaching the checkpoint with their 24 under their belt is Aliy Zirkle, Lance Mackey, Bjonar Andersen, and Doug Swingly.

Its going to be pretty interesting to see if anyone is able to get ahead of Sorlie, Buser, and Brooks and how the competitive landscape changes over the next few hours.

Late Tuesday night Sorlie checked into McGrath as the first musher, receiving the PenAir Spirit of Alaska Award. Robert then continued leading the trail, and early Thursday morning was the first musher to check into the ghost town of Iditarod, on the banks of Iditarod Creek. The checkpoint is about 564 miles into the race and signifies the halfway point in the southern route. Being the first musher in gave him the GCI Dorthy Page Halfway Award, as well as $4,000 in gold nuggets.

Robert may be experiencing some dejivu, last time he ran the Iditarod in 2003, he won the PenAir award, and won the Halfway Award, he also went on to win the race.

I’ve got some more audio for you, here are my reports on:

1. Report and interview with Team Norway (click here)
2. Report and interview with Robert Sorlie (click here)
3. Layover speculation (click here)
4. Press Release of 5 time winner Rick Swenson scratching from the race (click here)

ALSO,

Yesterday I posted photos of my Anchorage trip last week. There are some great pictures in there of the start, restart, musher interviews, and around town. (go take a look)

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10. Mar, 2005
2:40 pm

written by Josh
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added: pictures of the Iditarod Start

picture You’ve followed the race, now see the pictures.

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It started in Anchorage, over 1,000 miles away and we were there. I’ll continue to follow the Iditarod all the way back to Nome bringing you updates, audio, and pictures.

-To view the gallery (click here)
-To read the blog entries and hear the audio (click here)

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09. Mar, 2005
6:24 pm
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Idita-trade

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Its day two of watching the race from the internet, and again things are all different from what they were yesterday.

As of 11:20 AKST

Not to long after my update yesterday morning, Robert Sorlie jumped into the first place spot and has managed to remain there ever since. Four time winner Martin Buser is right behind him in second place right now taking a break in Ophir. Martin didn’t do to well last year, scoring in the 11th spot after getting 4th in 2003. Martin was a name to watch, but I wasn’t really expecting him to do exceptionally well, espically after he lost a finger about one week ago, just a few days before the race! That’s right, the man is running on nine digits.

Ramy Brooks is in third right now having left Takotna this morning around 8:00. Jeff King in 4th, Zach Steer in 5th, Cancer survivor DeeDee Jonrowe in 6th and Ed Iten from Kotzabue in 7th they all left Takotna later this morning.

This morning we had the Teacher on the Trail call in a report live from Nikolai, a checkpoint that over half of the mushers have still yet to reach. I handed off my satellite phone to her at the race restart on Sunday. Its nice to see some of my pre-race plans and aspirations work out.

Something else that is working out is our partnership with the Outdoor Life Network. I’ve been talking to the production company in New York, and they’ve been able to take the KICY reports that I emailed them and insert the audio into the documentaries that will be airing OLN in early April. So, anyone out there with cable make sure you are tuning in starting on April 2nd. In exchange for us providing audio, former musher and journalist Joe Runyan will be sending audio from the helicopter above the trail. And BOOM, we’ve got extended Iditarod coverage without having to send a staff person out.

1. To hear my story and interview with Lynn Gordon the Teacher on the Trail (click here)
2. To hear Lynn’s update from Nikolai this morning (click here)

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09. Mar, 2005
11:22 am

written by Josh