February 2010 Archives



Once again the crew at Happy Trails and some "I'm sure would rather have been out enjoying the beautiful Saturday" volunteers made light work of 2010 Food Drops for me and Martin. Many, many thanks to Sean, Magnus and Martin for all the behind the scenes work getting ready for this day: powdering and packing 4,000 booties, cutting and bagging a few tons of meat, bagging dry food, rolling runner plastic, and the million other things.
Thank you volunteer packing crew....Rich, Craig, Matt, Ellen, Peter, Kevin, Caleb, Sean, Magnus, Martin. Special thanks to Kathy for the delicious salmon soup lunch for us all!
Things couldn't have gone more smoothly. We had just put the last bag in the freezer when the sun really started to heat up the day. Perfect timing! Icing on the cake.....I brought home another 12 trail hardened dogs to add to my pool of dogs for Iditarod. These are all young dogs that Sean and Magnus have trained all year. Most have raced and completed the Copper Basin 300 and the Yukon Quest 300. These are 2 of the toughest races, with the toughest conditions and trails, so I think these dogs have resumes worthy of an Iditarod run. I am either the most blessed musher in the world or the luckiest.
Tuesday food drop is due in Anchorage and I'll be taking 24 dogs to get ECGs and blood work done late Tuesday afternoon. I now have 3 weeks to narrow this group down to my final 16. That may be my toughest challenge of the season so far! What a great dilemma to have! Thank you Martin, Sean, and Magnus!!!
This weekend we completed our second 200 mile race of the season. This time it was the Don Bowers Memorial Sled Dog Race. While this race is typically billed as a low keyed race that encourages mushers new to distance racing, a few challenging sections of trail made it a great learning experience for all of us. Due to open leads on the Big Su River the trail, for the second year, had to be rerouted through the woods. The "new" trail made for some spectacular crashes suffered by nearly every musher and thus, some great stories at the finishers' banquet. Most stories involved a very large rock, a corresponding tree, onto which some of us were launched, care of the rock. Most of the trail was great! All of the race personnel was fantastic and the scenery was unbelievable! That very bright moon made traveling both nights on the trail sureal. Although Friday and Saturday were both a bit too warm and made for some very soft trails and slow going it was beautiful, none the less.
The puppies did great! We ran very conservatively the first half of the race up to Joe May's cabin for our 8 hour layover. The dogs got lots of TLC at a campout for 4 hours at about 50 miles and more TLC and lots of rest during the 8 hours at Joe's. I decided to see how well the dogs would respond to only a 2 hour break for some food and water on the way home. After 2 hours they got off that straw and were screaming to go. Had to work to slow them down the whole way home. We finished the race in 7th place and only dropped one dog. Martin stayed behind at Joe's. He had a bit of a sore and swollen wrist from a training run the week before so I didn't want to push it.
The icing on the cake was winning the humanitarian award for best dog care! Every musher wants to be recognized for good dog care! Thank you Don Bowers race crew for noticing!

