Friday, March 18, 2022
Bridgett Watkins suffers frostbite and broken clavicle
Thiart out with suspected broken foot
Insider Fans got to watch some drama unfold as a helicopter touched down in White Mountain this afternoon and watched as several volunteers helped someone walk across the snow to the waiting lift. The person had their right leg extended out in front of them as they were hobbled/carried. The confirmation came soon after from the Insider cameraman saying it was Gerhardt Thiart who had to be airlifted to Nome.
Gerhardt was stopped in the Topkok Hills when he managed to crash with his sled and injure his right foot. The musher suspected his ankle was broken. Thankfully someone came up on a snowmachine and stopped to see how he was doing. Gerhardt told him he needed help so they went a half mile back to where Bridgett Watkins was camped to have her take a look. It was decided Gerhardt was definitely in need of help so they left him with her dogs and they went back to get his.
Once they got back with the dogs, Gerhardt reported he was feeling hypothermic. The SOS button was at some point hit, but the snowmachine carried the musher back while search and rescue assembled to meet up with Watkins.
Gerhardt was running Mitch Seavey's puppy team.
BREAKING: Bridgett Watkins has also returned to White Mountain via snowmachine and was taken to the local clinic. No other information on her condition is known. Search and Rescue are with the dog team.
Gerhardt Thiart's race is probably over
As expected, it looks like the rookie from South Africa's time on the Iditarod Trail has ended prematurely. Fans watched most of Friday as his tracker rested with several other teams in the Topkok Hills waiting out a massive windstorm, and then Thiart's tracker started moving backward with speeds that typically mean snowmachine "rescue".
The trackers weren't straightforward, however, as it bounced around the trail with sometimes normal dog team speeds and other time snowmachine speed. However, at last look, his tracker shows in White Mountain going at a speed of 377mph (which signifies air travel). His race is most certainly over, we just need to wait for the official announcement.
BREAKING: (AK 2:32pm) reports are now coming out of Nome that a helicopter was dispatched to rescue a musher off of the trail who has suffered broken leg(s). Judging by the speed of Gerhardt's tracker is a good assumption we know which musher it was that needed the medical support.
Winds stall teams out of White Mountain
Just when we all thought the winds would play nice after what they put the top twenty through, well... we were wrong. Currently, seven teams are hunkered down on the Topkok hills buried into the local topography and in shelter cabins hoping they can start moving in short lulls promised to them by weather reports being texted to them from Nome. Behind White Mountain the final four are still able to move, but judging by their speeds being so inconsistent it's easy to assume that the wind gusts are hitting along Golovin Bay as well.
Riley Dyche was out first of White Mountain and is currently holed up in the shelter cabin at the top of the blowhole (where winds are typically even worse than the hills). He's been there most of the morning and it doesn't look like he's moving any time soon. There is some talk that he'd lost his GPS tracker and that he would be coming into Nome any moment... but those moments have turned into hours and there's no indication that he's ever checked into Safety.
And, as if watching trackers not move at all for over 12 hours isnt enough stress, let's throw in a few wonky what the heck is going on trackers into the mix. Gerhardt Thiart's tracker keeps jumping back and forth to where he had been resting with several other teams out of White Mountain to zooming backwards down the trail, only to bounce back. It would suggest that Thiart's race is done just 70 miles from the finish, but right now his tracker sits at yellow in a very random spot.
And in the back of the pack we have to wayward souls running the wrong trail out of Golovin. Eric Kelly and Yuka Honda show as way off course and it's a 50/50 right now if they are truly off course or if Aliens are just really enjoying messing with our technology today.
No matter what the final 11 teams will all have some wild stories to share if they ever make it to Nome. Could this be our new Elim 11?
Thursday, March 17, 2022
Buser minutes away from completing his 39th Iditarod
Martin Buser is currently on the home stretch of his 39th Iditarod. The musher has never scratched from a race and has been a constant of this race for nearly 4 decades. Always a fan favorite, the four-time Iditarod champion hasn't challenged often for a top placement, but it's clear he runs Iditarod for the love of the race and the dogs. More often than not Buser becomes a mentor out on the trail and an encourager to the rookies he runs with during the thousand mile race.
He's about to come off the beach and onto Front Street in the next few minutes where he will be greeted by his wife Kathy and many friends under the burled arch. Congrats on another fantastic Iditarod, Martin.
Lisbet Norris scratches in Unalakleet
As many guessed, Norris' Iditarod ended prematurely in Unalakleet. The all Siberian team struggled to maintain a speed that kept them in with the back of the pack, and most fans knew it was just a matter of time before she would be asked to withdraw. While her stats show scratch and not withdrawal, it was circulated earlier in the week that the musher had been put on notice to get caught up or face a withdrawl. While not information from official sources, it came as no surprise and most speculated she would end her race where she did.
Her team of 10 dogs at the time of the scratch will fly back to Anchorage in the next day or so. The musher was met with 4 gifted Pizzas in the checkpoint. Better luck next time, Lisbet.
Wednesday, March 16, 2022
Top 20 are into Nome
It's been a busy day on Front Street in Nome. Teams have come in two and three at a time since Tuesday afternoon. Stories from each musher shared over loudspeakers as they were checked in. Well known names mixed with new. Some surprises, some expected.
Dan Kaduce, the fourty place finisher, made it to Nome with a full team of fourteen dogs. This is not common for top teams and the only other time someone in the top five managed a finish with a full team was Jessie Royer in 2017 when she finished fifth with all sixteen dogs. Dan credited luck, but the argument could be made that Kaduce is an excellent dog musher who did everything right by his team. He should be at the top of the list of nominees for the Humanitarian award.
Peter Kaiser, the fifth place finisher traveled the Iditarod with Dick Wilmarth's ashes. Wilmarth was the first ever Iditarod Champion in 1973. Kaiser was asked to carry some of the legend's ashes to Nome and he obliged. Wilmarth was from the Kotzebue area of Alaska, and Kaiser was a very deserving of the honor.
Chad Stoddard was a somewhat surprising seventh place finisher running Dallas Seavey's B-team. The musher ran a team split 50/50 between veteran dogs and "puppies". Chad benefitted not only from a really great line of sled dogs, but also from a wind storm that clustered the 3rd-15th places in Shaktoolik. Chad was one of the last of those teams to reach the Sound, but also one of the first to go out into it (right on schedule). It helped sling shot him into a top ten placement. He may end up winning most improved musher jumping 16 places from last year's 23rd.
Aaron Burmeister ran a master class in mushing in this race and managed eighth after running in third for most of the race (dang ground storm on the sea ice). Burmeister announced after last year's Iditarod that this race was going to be his last. This year he's added "for a while" to the end of that statement. He's been running a very emotional last leg of the race as he meets with fans and friends at each checkpoint. He loves this race, and it shows. That the crowd in Nome chanted "one more year" as he spoke shows just how important he is to everyone.
Mille Porsild and Michelle Phillips spent a long time in a shelter cabin outside of Koyuk. Before that Porsild dealt for a ridiculous amounts of miles with a very broken and unrepairable sled until Mitch Seavey offered his to her in Unalakleet. In her post race Q&A Mille said she wouldn't be at the finish without Mitch's help, but that she also believed he was secretly trying to kill her. Apparently Mitch's sled had a steep learning curve (sounds like a mushing version of a Batmobile?) Mille sounds very happy to have managed fourteenth place.
Mitch Seavey came in happy and chatty in sixteenth place. He wasn't sure (and this blogger isn't either) but he thinks he's the only musher in the field that was also at the first one. Granted he didn't run it, but he was there to see his dad run the first one. He helped Dan train that first Seavey Iditarod team and was immediately hooked on the spirit of Iditarod. Mitch was running an advanced puppy team of sorts and after having a difficult first leg decided to take it easy and make sure his team was preserved for next year. He stated in Nome that "I found out this year that as much as I love racing, and I love running the Iditarod, I just love mushing dogs even more." Mitch also answered a question about what he thinks about being here at the 50th after being at the first, "I think it means we're getting really old."
Hanna Lyrek locked in her Rookie of the Year status with her nineteenth finish. She came in just ahead of Paige Drobny who rounds out the top twenty. Drobny conceded a competitive race back in Ruby, and met up with Hanna around Shaktoolik. Hanna confided in Paige that she was afraid to run across the sea ice in the wind thinking she could get blown out to sea. Paige offered to run with the rookie and then they continued all the way into Nome.
These are just some of the stories already coming out of Iditarod 50. More will no doubt come as mushers catch up on sleep and come back to the land of fast internet. We're about halfway through the race. Many more will be headed in late tonight and tomorrow. Our current red lantern is almost into Unalakleet. Keep watching those trackers, more stories are about to be made and shared.