Thursday, March 19, 2026

Jesse Terry wins Rookie of the Year

Jesse Terry at the Ceremonial Start of Iditarod 54.
Anchorage, Alaska. March 7, 2026.
Nome welcomed a fourteenth team at 3:06am AKDST Thursday. The first of Iditarod 54's rookie class sped down the street and under the burled arch, their musher all smiles. Jesse Terry and his team looked unfazed by the wind and cold that the race threw at them over the last ten days, the musher's trademark smile didn't waver even when asked how he liked the wind in the Topkok Hills.

Terry spent much of the race running as the third highest placed rookie. While rookies Kevin Hansen and Sam Martin duked it out for the first half of the race, Jesse managed a steady pace. Most fans and analysts were counting him out. By the time the teams finished their run on the Yukon, Sam Martin was the favorite to take the prize for Rookie of the Year. 

Then the coast. Jesse hit the coast and it was like he'd been here before. Like many of the top teams, Terry and his team openned up the throttle. Terry had "built a monster" and he was unleashing it. While Martin had a sizeable lead heading into Shaktoolik, Jesse's team passed Hansen and closed the gap to just two hours behind Martin by the Norton Sound. Martin held off Terry through the run to Koyuk, but it was run to Elim where Terry really let the dogs cut loose.

Terry caught Martin and then just outside Elim he passed Martin, and from there it was nothing but open trail for the rookie. The team sped up. They crossed Golovin Bay and ran up to White Mountain and his final mandatory 8. 

The weather reports for Wednesday Night into Thursday morning had many wondering how the rookies would fare as they left the comfort of the mandatory stop. Winds in the Topkok Hills are legendary. Races have ended in spectacular fashion (with mushers recounting their race like veteran warriors share war stories) even the most trail hardened teams have been stalled on the run from White Mountain to Safety.

But Jesse and his team carried out their mission in spectacular fashion. The musher would recount that the wind caught his sled and threw him a few times in the hills, but the GPS only showed a competent team making good time through the worst winds of the race. Fans keeping track of his final 77 miles were constantly having to redo the math to guess his finish time. 

Terry was greeted in Nome by his wife Mary England who repeatedly embraced him and repeatedly told him how proud she was of him. Terry gave all praise to his team for the job they managed. He didn't know how fast they'd run the last leg as he'd misplaced his GPS (which he said was probably a good thing because he'd have been very annoying constantly looking at it). 

Jesse was one of the favorites to win Rookie of the Year and many who know or have followed his career were not surprised by his run up the coast and final placement. Terry is well liked and respected by those who have mushed with him and raced against him and Thursday morning was all cheers, well wishes, and celebration all over social media.

Rookie of the Year comes with a special trophy and a bonus $2000 on top of the prize money 14th place recieves. He does have the fastest time (so far) from Safety to Nome for this year's race, however it's likely his placement keeps him from qualifying (small field means it isn't the top twenty who are eligible, it's a math equation now). 

Sam Martin was the next rookie in at 6:59am AKDST with less than a minute to spare before veteran (and former Rookie of the Year winner) Josi Shelley finished right behind him, making it the closest race within a race for Iditarod 54 (again, so far). Kevin Hansen is currently on his 8 hour mandatory rest and will lead the next batch of rookies into the finish, but the winds are continuing to be a factor as they always are (and they always seem to wait for the rookies and back of the pack).

It's another wild day out on the Iditarod with many finishes still to come.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Twelve teams join Holmes in Nome

After Jessie Holmes' dominating second consecutive Iditarod win Tuesday night, it has been a very busy day in Nome as teams came in for much of the day. The top ten (plus one) are a whose who of the new generation of mushing with one team talking retirement after many years in The Last Great Race. From just before 2am AKDST to after 7:30pm ten teams crossed under the burled arch to take their place in another historic Iditarod.

Most teams came in with dogs looking strong, perky, and in many cases wondering why they were stopping. The mushers looked much worse for wear with deep windburn evident on their faces and any other place that skin was exposed to the elements. The wind started the first full day of the race and barely ever let up. Temps for the first half of the race saw consistent negative temps dropping to more than -40F at night (when teams do their best running). The dogs seem to thrive in these conditions, but the mushers look exhausted no matter how much rest they managed on the trail.

Travis Beals is our second place finisher this year. The musher's previous highest placement has been fifth place in 2019. Beals has had a roller coaster of a season emotionally. At the end of 2025 his mother died, and just a few weeks later his second son was born. Both events changed some plans for racing leading up to Iditarod, and some speculated what Travis would do here on the race to Nome. The musher is one of the best students of the trail, taking every race and learning something from it. He said in his burled arch interview that he learned a lot about himself and the dogs this year and was so very proud of the accomplishment. Though in earlier race interviews Beals seemed disappointed that he couldn't come up with the winning strategy, he will no doubt look back on this one with pride.

Jeff Deeter was a surprise third place finish after having held his team further back early in the race. Deeter made a push on the run from Unalakleet to Koyuk, picking off teams one by one. Like Beals it seems the only thing stopping Deeter from an even higher placement was running out of real estate. The musher was all smiles as he made his way under the burled arch and his dogs were happily wagging their tails as they recognized KattiJo Deeter in the chute. Deeter came into Nome at 5:10am AKDST.

Paige Drobny finished fourth, a noble battle at the end of a race where she spent most of the time in second place. Just getting to the start line this year was a win for Paige as she has been battling "an aggressive form of breast cancer" since her diagnosis in August. Drobny and her Squids ran a beautiful race, but due to the extreme cold the musher had issues with equipment pretty much from the start. Her alarm clock died on her and she overslept on a key rest out on the trail running to the Yukon. Her phone battery died and she had no way to charge it on the trail because her USB cables snapped in the cold making her external chargers useless. She was tired. Probably more tired than she expected with the cold zapping every musher's energy quickly. But she perservered. She said in Unalakleet she believed her dogs capable of catching Jessie at that point, but that she didn't believe in pushing them to their limit to do so. Dogs first. Paige came in Wednesday at 5:38am AKDST after racing Deeter all the way.

Wade Marrs had a steep learning curve running dogs he admitted under the burled arch were a different speed than what he was used to. The team of dogs out of Mitch Seavey's kennel that he integrated with several of his own kennel weren't quite as speedy as he was used to but "they never quit". Many fans are saying Marrs had the "cutest" finish as he was met but his two young sons who excitedly yelled out "DADA" when they realized the musher in the chute was theirs. The oldest chasing his dad around wanting to be close, the younger going up to each dog and giving them big hugs. Marrs ran a style similar to that of Seavey where he held back through the half way point where he quickly picked off teams and jumped into the top ten, ending in fifth place. After a three year hiatus Marrs reminded everyone why he's one to watch.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

"Lucky number seven strikes again!"

Tuesday night as crowds lined Front Street in Nome, Alaska, Jessie Holmes recreated a bit of history. The reining Iditarod Champion finished what he set out to do nine and a half days ago - he won back to back titles. The musher once better known for his stint on an Alaskan based Reality TV Show is now known to be a master at dog mushing.

As Jessie and team ran their way into Nome after coming off of their final mountain crossing the musher waved and cheered to the Iditarod Insider cameras "Lucky number seven strikes again!" referencing his first Iditarod when he wore Bib Number 7 and became Rookie of the Year. In 2026 he wore Bib Number 7 to become one of the few repeat Iditarod Champions.

Holmes and team lead for much of the race, something rarely seen in this era of dog mushing. They won every "first to the" award in this years race, sharing those honors with no one. Most races have seen those that win the early first awards lose position on the coast, but not Jessie. Holmes managed to keep at least two hours over his next closest competitor throughout the race and by the time he reached White Mountain he extended that lead to nearly four. 

Never showing the fastest average speed, it was all about strategy and team management. When things felt like they weren't going according to plan, Jessie pivoted. He wasn't feeling well himself at the beginning of the race so he held himself back. He 24ed earlier than expected in Takotna. He rested in Cripple and in Ruby. He didn't spend as much time as we normally see him camping outside of checkpoints. Holmes had time to talk with fans, volunteers, and other mushers. He put his team in their cuddle puddles and kept pace with his chores.

All the while faster teams threatened to catch him, but it didn't matter. He was playing a sort of cat and mouse game with them all. And now, in the end, he finished as the sun set over Nome, Alaska and the Bering Strait.  

"I've been chasing greatness since I got here," Jessie Holmes said in his Insider interview under the arch, "Susan and Lance... gonna try and make it three, one of them made it four."

After being signed off the trail and finishing his Insider interview Holmes went to his sled bag and pulled out steaks for each of his canine teammates. As Insider's Greg Heister exclaimed the dogs were getting ribeyes, Jessie responded, "I called my handler and told her champagne and steaks!"

When asked how he did it Holmes said he ran the race how they run things, and that he gave his team ample rest. "If you want to do great things, you gotta be an original," the now two time champ said.

Several times while talking to Insider and KNOM and KTUU in the chute, Jessie Holmes got choked up talking about his dogs. "Dogs first," Holmes told the media, "these guys deserve all the recognition and all the glory."

Zeus and Polar were the dogs chosen by the musher to sit for the champion photo. While Greg Heister acknowledged that Jessie would want all twelve dogs up there (but the platform isn't big enough) Holmes gave another round of pets and good dogs to each team member before unhooking the two that would sit with him under the arch.

Jessie's team were confident when they ran into the chute and under the burled arch, and after snacking were banging in harness and screaming wanting to continue on (considering it's over 100 miles shorter than what they ran last year they no doubt thought they weren't done!)

"It's unimaginable how attached I am to these dogs right now. I'm attached all year long, but after what we went through on that trail..." Holmes choked out with Greg Heister as he watched his handlers run his team down to the dog lot while Holmes stayed behind to be awarded his check. The 2026 winners check came to $80,000 to which Jessie yelled out, "DOG FOOD! DOG BOOTIES!" before thanking all of the sponsors for the prize money.

"We'll be back," he told them, "and I hope you will be, too."

Jessie Holmes came into the finish in 9 days, 7 hours, 32 minutes, and 51 seconds. The two-time Iditarod Champion says they're going for three in 2027. There are twenty-nine teams still out on the trail. 

Grayson Bruton scratches from Iditarod 54

Grayson Bruton at the start of Iditarod 54.
March 7, 2026. Anchorage, Alaska.
Iditarod released a statement Tuesday night that Iditarod Veteran Grayson Bruton's race has ended in the checkpoint of Unalakleet. Bruton had ten dogs on his team when the decision was made.

"Veteran Iditarod musher Grayson Bruton (bib #37) of Tok, Alaska," wrote Iditarod, "scratched at the Unalakleet checkpoint at 6:16 p.m. today, in the best interest of his team.  Bruton had 10 dogs in harness when he arrived at the checkpoint. The Iditarod Trail Committee commends Bruton for his determination, dedication, and exemplary sportsmanship throughout this year’s race, and looks forward to welcoming him back to the Trail in the future."

Grayson ran the race out of the gate in the back of the pack, running mostly with Jody Potts-Joseph through the middle of the race. There is no information coming from Bruton's kennel to give more detail on the reason behind the scratch, but it is always a very difficult decision for any musher - even when the answer is clear.

Bruton's scratch is the third one on the day, and fourth in the entire race. The Red Lantern position now belongs to Iditarod Rookie Adam Lindemuth who is currently on his way to Shaktoolik.

Mille Porsild scratches from Iditarod 54

Mille Porsild at the Ceremonial Start
of Iditarod 54. March 7, 2026.
Anchorage, Alaska
Iditarod released a brief statement Tuesday afternoon of Iditarod Veteran and fan favorite Mille Porsild scratching in Elim earlier in the day. The release was short with no additional information.

"Veteran Musher Mille Porsild (bib #15) of Denmark, scratched Tuesday, March 17 at 11:43 a.m.  at the Elim checkpoint pursuant to Rule 42," the statement reads. "Porsild had 13 dogs in harness when she scratched."

Rule 42 is the expired dog rule. The race takes all dog deaths seriously and, as part of rule 42, will perform testing and necropsy to try to determine the cause of death. Rule 42 gives the musher the option to scratch or be withdrawn from the race when a dog expires.

Porsild was running in sixth position when she scratched.

Iditarod 54 has its second official scratch

Jody Potts-Joseph and team at the Ceremonial Start
of Iditarod 54. March 7, 2026. Anchorage, Alaska.
Iditarod released a statement Tuesday that a second team has scratched from Iditarod 54. Rookie Jody Potts-Joseph and her team of ten dogs have ended their race ahead of reaching Nome. The musher had many fans concerned as she sat for many hours at the Tripod Cabin area allowing Grayson Bruton, the red lantern, to catch her and pass her. 

While Jody's team back at home posted on her social media early Tuesday morning that musher and team were well and that Jody was just giving them a little more rest, fans still found themselves wondering what was really happening.

"Rookie Iditarod musher Jody Potts-Joseph (bib #32) of Eagle Village, Alaska, scratched from the 2026 Iditarod at 11:19 a.m. today at the Tripod Flats Cabin, located between Kaltag and Unalakleet, in the best interest of her team," Iditarod wrote.

"Potts-Joseph communicated her decision to ITC Race Officials via two-way communication, and ITC personnel are assisting her with the safe transport of her 10-dog team to Unalakleet via snow machine.

The Iditarod Trail Committee recognizes Potts-Joseph’s determination, dedication, and sportsmanship throughout this year’s race and looks forward to seeing her back on the Trail in the future."

After the press release was posted, Jody's social media team posted an update from the musher giving a little more insight into her decision. Potts-Joseph's team was showing signs of kennel cough and she was concerned for their well being. A musher's number one goal is to keep the trust with their canine team-mates, and so with the love and care any musher would give Jody did the wise thing and ended her race.




"To the dogs that traveled the course with her, we send our utmost thanks and praise," her team wrote on Facebook. "To Stoller, Blaze, Anna, Stormy, Coconut, and Freya, who are all waiting for their team back in Talkeetna. To Coki, Sunny, Ninjuu, Natrah, Lebowski, Kobuk, Loki, Revna, Bodil, and Ginger, who remained with her til the end of the run—we lift you up for safe travels back home."

On Iditarod's official release on Facebook about Potts-Joseph's scratch, 6-time Champion Dallas Seavey sent out a message of support. "So bummed to see this," Seavey wrote. "I was having a blast watching her and the team on the trail. Recover well, and hope to see you on the trail again soon!"

With Jody officially out of the race, Iditarod Veteran Grayson Bruton is now Iditarod's current Red Lantern. Jody's scratch is the second official scratch of this year's Iditarod.

Iditarod champion should finish tonight

Jessie Holmes at the Ceremonial Start of Iditarod 54.
March 7, 2026. Anchorage, Alaska.
Jessie Holmes and his team of twelve dogs rolled into White Mountain at 3:10am AKDST Tuesday for their final 8 hour mandatory break. As stated in previous posts, Jessie Holmes and his team of dogs have dominated the race almost from the get go. The musher felt the pressure to defend his title and made that the only real goal for this season. Should he succeed, he will only be the third musher in race history to defend his title after winning his first one (other mushers have won more, but not consecutively after their first win). He will join his name with legends Susan Butcher and Lance Mackey if all things go according to plan today.

With Jessie coming in at 3:10am he will be able to leave as soon as 11:10am. The team has a four hour cushion (give or take a few minutes) on the next team (and currently only other team) in White Mountain. Travis Beals and his team of eleven came into White Mountain at 7:07am AKDST. The musher ran a solid race and managed his team well to have the ability to pick off quite a few teams that ran the race ahead of him. Beals mentioned to Insider that he felt that his team should be the champion team and that he was just running out of miles to catch Holmes. That seems to be the case with the nearly four hour lead Holmes has. Still, as we learned in 2014, solid leads mean nothing if Mother Nature wants to have her say. Beals will be able to leave White Mountain at 3:07pm AKDST.

The chase pack of positions third through fifth is where the real race is. Not knocking the top two, it's just that there is no clear cut winner for those placements between the trio of Jeff Deeter, Wade Marrs, and Paige Drobny. Drobny, of course, spent much of this race playing cat and mouse with Jessie Holmes sticking with him until the Kaltag Portage where Holmes managed to surge ahead from his already 1.5-2hour lead over the Squids. Marrs, much like Beals, sat back away from the leaders on his run to the coast choosing to bank rest so that his team would be ready to push on the coast. And, in somewhat of a surprise to fans Monday, Jeff Deeter made a huge move on the coast and finds himself in prime position to match or exceed his last finishing placement (4th in 2024 - Deeter did not finish in 2025.)

In a year where many fan favorite mushers spoke to Insider hinting that they were winding down their Iditarod racing careers (Michelle Phillips saying this is her last one as a musher but hopes to be a race judge in the future, Jessie Royer hinting she doesn't have many Iditarods left, and even Jason Mackey hedging on how long he'll keep running the race), the top five give hope that the next generation of Iditarod is in very capable hands. (Honestly, the current top 10 all should stick around a while. - excluding Phillips.)

The back of the pack saw a flip flop over night. When last we spoke Grayson Bruton was the race's red lantern winner, but how that is back to being Jody Potts-Joseph who has a worrisome long campout going on near Old Woman's(?) Cabin. With the champion finish closing in, the back of the pack may need to pick up their pace a smidge - though with Dan Carter being first time race marshall we have yet to know how he will handle that rule of being "non-competitive" at this point. Unalakleet is a major hub and an easy spot to move teams off the trail, so it's the "best bet" for where teams will be WD in this portion of the race. No guarantee that is what will happen here, however.

With Jessie Holmes being able to leave at 11:10am AKDST today, and a 70-77mile jaunt left for his team (mileage depends on who you talk to) there's still plenty of room for a race to go sideways. Most top teams make the run from White Mountain to Nome between ten and eleven hours so start looking for Holmes to finish between 9pm and 10pm AKDST Tuesday night (but watch those trackers sometimes team surprise us with a burst of speed and others surprise us by being blown off course - looking again at you, 2014!).



How do you think those last 70+ miles will shake out for the champ? What races within a race are you excited for? Comment with your thoughts below!

Monday, March 16, 2026

Clipboard Nicolle changing things up

Fans of the Iditarod in the last few years have become smitten with Iditarod's finisher announcer. "Clipboard Nicolle" as she's lovingly referred welcomes each team to Nome, announcing over the loud speakers the musher's bio and stats as they run up Front Street. She greets each team with a smile, a congratulations, and then goes to work checking for mandatory gear before asking the musher to sign themselves off the trail.

Nicolle welcomes every team to the finishline no matter the weather or time of day. Fans get absolutely giddy to see her in her purple parka. You know the team is near when Nicolle walks into camera view with mic in hand. 

Only this year... this year she won't be in purple. The Iditarod volunteer posted to her socials earlier in March that it was time to retire her beloved parka. It was showing its age, and wasn't exactly promising to keep things warm and dry. Nicolle asked her friends and followers to help her decide what she should do.

Just before the start Nicolle dropped into this blogger's messages to share that she'd decided on a new look. Instead of purple Clipboard Nicolle will walk out to the burled arch in what she calls a mustard yellow coat. 

So, heads up, Iditafans. Nicolle won't be purple this year, but she's still your beloved Clipboard Nicolle. 

Teams running out of real estate to catch Holmes

Travis Beals and team at the Ceremonial Start of Iditarod 54.
Anchorage, Alaska. March 7, 2026.
Jessie Holmes continues to dominate the trail of Iditarod 54. The reigning Iditarod Champion has led for much of the race and sits with a nice cushion of over 2 hours ahead of the next team. The musher has been very candid throughout the race that he had a goal of joining two other legendary mushers to repeat his win on his first win.

While there are a handful of mushers who have won multiple Iditarods and some winning back to back, only two mushers in the last 53 runnings have defended their first win. Susan Butcher was first to do it when she won in 1986 and then again in 1987. It wouldn't be until 2007 and 2008 when Lance Mackey won the first two of four consecutive wins that a first time champ would repeat back to back.

Now Holmes is poised to be the third. 

Jessie Holmes and his Team Can't Stop dogs have just left Elim after a little over three hours in the checkpoint. Travis Beals and Wade Marrs have attempted to make a charge up the coast to catch the champ. Beals told Insider he felt like his team should be the winning team, Wade Marrs told Insider he had to just keep running the race he had planned and wait for someone to slow up (or mess up) so he could possibly take advantage. Beals rested nearly five and a half hours in Koyuk, Marrs stayed mere minutes. Both will most likely need to break up the run from Koyuk to White Mountain.

Paige Drobny who kept pace with Holmes for much of the middle of the race has seemingly conceded first, and is now in the battle for second place. Drobny is still running a similar schedule to that of Holmes which is opposite in many ways of Beals and Marrs.  The Squids are now facing a battle for fourth against Jeff Deeter who has made a huge leap along the coast to get into the mix.

Travis Beals is currently nine miles behind Holmes, he's rested 5.5 hours to Jessie's 3(ish) hours but Beals has been running several hours and will have to take a break sooner rather than later. Beals is quickly running out of real estate to make a move on Holmes. Barring any random storm popping up out of nowhere (there's nothing really dramatic forecasted for the front runners at this time) that can slow a team up, it may be too late to catch Holmes.

Further back the race for Rookie of the Year continues to be an interesting one. Sam Martin has seemingly pulled ahead to have a strong lead in the RotY department. Kevin Hansen and Martin have been duking it out for much of the race, but the team from Kotzebue is the third ranked rookie leaving Unalakleet Monday. Sandwiched between the two - and currently running two miles ahead of Hansen. Terry's run fairly conservatively to this point and it will be interesting to see how he races on the coast - a very different terrain from the races he's used to running.

Our red lantern has changed hands on the run from Kaltag to the coast. Currently Grayson Bruton is the final musher with Jody Potts-Joseph having leaped-frog (leap-frogged?) over the veteran musher after coming off the Yukon Monday.

Holmes has 43ish miles to go until he hits White Mountain and his final eight hour mandatory rest. He averaged a speed of 8mph on the run from Koyuk to Elim. It's less likely he'll stop now before White Mountain and so if he maintains that average he could be into White Mountain as early as 1:15am (give or take). That would put Holmes with a leave time of 9:15am and a ten to eleven-ish hour jaunt into the finish line from there. Puts him into Nome by dark Tuesday night. We'll know more once he has his official into time in White Mountain.



Do you think Holmes has this in the bag? Can Beals keep second place? Do you think Travis can catch Jessie? Comment below with your thoughts!

(and has this blogger mentioned math and she are not friends?)

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Jessie Holmes reaches the coast

Jessie Holmes at the Ceremonial Start of Iditarod 54.
March 7, 2026. Anchorage, Alaska.
The Western Alaskan village of Unalakleet welcomed its first competitive musher this morning at 9:27am AKDST Sunday when reigning Iditarod Champion Jessie Holmes reached the checkpoint. The musher made the trek across the Kaltag Portage Saturday Night into early Sunday morning electing to camp along the trail ahead of his competitors. Upon reaching the checkpoint of Unalakleet the musher formed his famed cuddle puddle of dogs bedding them down for a well deserved rest.

Jessie Holmes has led the majority of the race in the 54th running of Iditarod, even while battling illness himself early on in the race and electing to do his mandatory rest well before he had planned back in Takotna. The musher again elected an early mandatory 8 hour rest on the Yukon choosing the first stop in Ruby. Through it all his spirits have remained high as he focuses on his race in front of him and not the ones around him.

Behind Jessie are Paige Drobny and Travis Beals who are leapfrogging across the Portage. Currently the GPS Tracker shows Beals resting while Drobny is now up and moving and is about 18 miles away from Unalakleet. 16 miles behind Travis are Mille Porsild and Riley Dyche both of whom may join Beals for a bit of trail camping when they reach his spot. 

Currently rounding out the top ten are Wade Marrs, Michelle Phillips, Jeff Deeter, Matt Hall, and Ryan Redington (respectfully, according to current GPS Tracker placement). Lauro Eklund is the eleventh musher off the Yukon and into the Kaltag Portage. Several teams have elected to rest in Kaltag before heading across what can be a very challenging crossing to the coast. 

The trail from Kaltag to Unalakleet is often a bumpy ride with a trail full of moguls. There's also much of the time wind directly in the team's face. Iditarod is not for the faint of heart and even the most prepared teams falter on their way to the final stretch of race.

Even expedition teams are having a difficult time on the Iditarod with the first Expedition Musher reportedly cutting his run short. Steve Curtis, the last minute expedition entry, has elected to cut his expedition short and announced this morning he was coming off the trail in McGrath. Fans wondered much of Saturday if this was his fate as he spent several days in the checkpoint. One more reminder that Iditarod is anything but easy - even when you have a support team and the ability to swap out dogs and camp in style.

At the back of the pack, the teams have made their way to Galena - all but Jody Potts-Joseph who is about 10 miles back - with only Jody having taken her mandatory Yukon 8 in Ruby. It's probably a good guess that these teams are looking at taking their 8 in Galena as the sun rises and sets up the heat of the day. Sadie appears to have been in Galena almost seven hours at this point, and should be expected to leave in another hour or so. Grayson came in a little after seven this morning and if he takes his eight hours here should be ready to leave after 3pm Sunday giving Jody time to get into Galena and settled for a rest if she chooses and able to continue traveling with "the back of the pack."

It's reportedly not windy (what?!) in Unalakleet this morning, which no doubt makes the teams running into the checkpoint very thankful.

We have officially entered the race part of the race. All bets are off as the foot comes off the brake and it's pedal to the medal! Hold onto your hats and glasses, folks, cuz this here's the wildest ride in the wilderness! (Couldn't help it!)



Do you think Jessie still has this in the bag? Is he having that magic ride? Did you know only three mushers in race history have defended their first Iditarod win? Comment below with your thoughts about the race so far and who you're cheering for!