Wednesday, January 11, 2023

2023 Copper Basin 300 musher roster

The Copper Basin, the toughest 300 miles in Alaska - or for sure the coldest. It's also one of the most popular of races in Alaska. This year's roster is a lot of well known names as well as hopeful qualifiers for future Iditarods and Quests. The Knik 200 was chilly enough at -20F for most of the race, but we've seen CB300s that have gotten as cold as -60F (and a lot of teams scratched because of it). This race is not for the faint of heart, and kudos to all who not only run it but volunteer to work it.

As with all of my musher rosters, the list will not be finalized until the night before race day, but for now the twenty nine names are in alphabetical order with each musher's kennel and links. Bib draw is Friday evening, and as usual the roster will be updated to reflect any changes to the roster as well as bib order. Bib draw happened Friday night where the roster was finalized, the honorary musher revealed, and bib numbers listed. Hopefully no one has a frozen truck in the morning and we see everyone at the start line at 10am Saturday!

01 - Honorary Musher, Lance Mackey
02 - Lara Kittelson (Seavey's Ididaride*) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
03 - Anna Hennessy (Shameless Huskies) - Facebook / Instagram
04 - Matt Hall (Smokin' Aces) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
05 - Nicolas Petit (Team Petit) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
06 - Riley Dyche (Dark Horse Sled Dogs) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
07 - Lauro Eklund (Skookum Expeditions) - Website / Facebook / Facebook 2 / Instagram / Instagram 2
08 - Calvin Daugherty (Seavey's Ididaride) - Website / Facebook
09 - Jeremy Traska (Howling Ridge) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
10 - Justin Olnes (ReRun Kennel) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
11 - Gregg Vitello (Northern Exposure Dog Sledding) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
12 - Misha Wiljes (WW Kennel) - Website / Facebook
13 - Bailey Vitello (Team Bailey) - Website / Facebook / Twitter / Instagram
14 - Jessie Holmes (Team Can't Stop) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
15 - Vickie Justice (Awl Alaskan Kennel) - Facebook / Instagram
16 - Brent Sass (Wild and Free Mushing) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
17 - Cody Strathe (Squid Acres) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
18 - Hedda Mosleth (Dallas Seavey Racing) - Facebook / Instagram
19 - Paige Drobny (Squid Acres) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
20 - Tucker Costain (Ryno Sled Dog Kennel) - Website / Facebook
21 - Joshua Armstrong (?) - Facebook / Instagram
22 - Louve Tweddell (Echoes Kennel) - Website / Facebook
23 - Ronald Stiffner (Fast and the Furry) - Facebook
24 - Jeffery Deeter (Black Spruce Kennel) - Website / Facebook / Twitter / Instagram
25 - Richie Beattie (WildThingz) - Website / Facebook / Instagram

*Jonathan Hayes had to withdraw due to musher injury, his place was swapped by another member of Team Seavey, Lara Kittelson (which is why her name is not in order alphabetically.)
**Ashely Dove is off the roster due to her team catching a bug on the Knik 200 which then got passed around to the entire kennel. The dogs are all doing fine and it's a minor illness but better to let it run its course than run with sick dogs - DOGS FIRST ALWAYS.
***Amanda Otto hit a caribou near Cantwell on her way to the race and had to withdraw. All humans and canines are fine, truck and caribou not so much. Amanda says she is bummed, but excited to cheer on everyone running this weekend and will focus on the Quest.

Comment below with any thoughts about the roster, or any corrections. If you like what you see and want to support my addiction (I mean HOBBY) of following these races and stalking (I mean cheering on) the mushers, you can 
buy me a slice of pizza (that really goes to paying for my internet/web expenses).

Sunday, January 8, 2023

"Not a wildcard anymore!" Eddie Burke wins Knik 200

At about 11:15am Alaska time, Eddie Burke Jr. was first to the finish line on Knik Lake to win the Knik 200. Considered a newcomer by many, Burke sticking with the lead teams and then taking the lead surprised mushing fans - but not his fans nor his kennel. 

As he stopped the team and jumped off to celebrate with his team he yelled out to Kale Casey filming live at the finish that he was no longer a wildcard. The musher gave pets to all of the dogs and a big bear hug from his daughter before signing off the trail as the 2023 Champion.

Eddie is running a team out of Aaron Burmeister's Wildstyle Racing Kennel. Burke has been training under Burmeister's mentorship for about three years now and is looking to complete his first Iditarod in March. Brent Sass would finish several minutes behind him with a happy strong team.

As Brent spoke with Eddie after taking care of their teams. "I thought you were Nic, that's how much I know! I really thought you were Nic!"

So it isn't just trackers that are confused out there. 

Burke and Sass battling for first

Eddie Burke at the Iditarod Picnic.
June 25, 2022. Wasilla, Alaska
Nic Petit left out of the mandatory six hour layover in first early this morning, but by the time the front teams reached the Eagle Quest 2 Checkpoint Petit had given trail to Iditarod Champion Brent Sass. Burke, Petit, and Sass were the chase pack all of Saturday, so it's no surprise that coming off of time differentials they were able to leave ahead of front runners Hugh Neff and Michelle Phillips. 

Michelle Phillips and Hugh Neff left the chute Saturday morning burning on all cylinders, there wasn't a lot of brake riding on the lake and they tore up the trail on a mission. In a two hundred mile race that isn't a bad strategy, speed early doesn't always equal a bad thing (it's three hundred and above that being speedy doesn't always work). But, Neff was the second one out of the start, and Michelle was fourth, they had a longer time differential in the mandatory layover than some of the other teams (Burke is Bib 5, but held with the front runners). That gave Sass and Petit in the chase pack a small advantage as they didn't have quite the same layover.

Burke may come as a surprise to some, he's newer to the mushing game (as a musher) and is signed up as a rookie for Iditarod 51. Burke, though, has the privilege of not only learning from Aaron Burmeister, but he's running Burmeister's dog team. This is the same team that Burmeister's kennel partner Tony Browning will run in the Kusko 300 later this year, and Eddie will drive the team to Nome in the Iditarod. It's a brilliant combination that helps Eddie be right in the mix with the big guns.

Judging by the trackers at around 8:15am Sunday morning, Burke appears to be in the lead just about half a mile ahead of the reigning Iditarod champion. The trackers have been fickle for all of this race, most likely due to the cold teams have experienced all weekend, so we won't know for sure who's in the lead until they cross the finishline in about two and a half hours.

That's right, we're expecting a finish between 10:30am and 11am. Looking at times into Knik Lake last night plus speeds of the teams at the moment, the front runners have about two and a half hours left on the runners. This race is far from over, and no one has shot out ahead of everyone, so it's promising to be an exciting morning.

The red lantern is currently Kaiden Foster who is running dogs out of Nic Petit's kennel and is going at a very slow pace in comparison to the Kennel owner's style. We've had one scratch with Casey Ann Randall of Rock On Racing. No report yet on why she chose to end her race early, but I am sure Randall will give us a run down when the time is right.

Stay tuned, folks, it's another great day of racing ahead!


If you like what you see and want to support my addiction (I mean HOBBY) of following these races and stalking (I mean cheering on) the mushers, you can buy me a slice of pizza (that really goes to paying for my internet/web expenses).

Saturday, January 7, 2023

Over half the roster scratches on Gunflint Mail Run

Thirteen teams started the twelve-dog class in the Gunflint Mail Run this morning in Northern Minnesota, by days end at least seven of those teams would scratch. The race had to change the race route before the start due to trail concerns, but felt that the trail would hold up for the loop. 

There was talk race day morning that there was concern of open water, but as teams ran their first lap it seemed that the race was going to be a fast one. During the second leg teams were obviously going slower and soon reports came in that there was more open water than previously. Teams began to make the decision to either go through it or scratch.

Teams like Erin Aili, Colleen Wallin, and Gunnar Johnson all had to scratch when they hit the water. Reports from teams that scratched were that it just was not worth the swim. 

With the chaos surrounding multiple scratches, the race has yet to update with official final times and placement, however it looks like Matt Schmidt of Sawtooth Mountain Racing takes home top prize. 

Neff, Phillips lead the Knik 200

With a little more than a quarter of the race out of the day, the race for first is between two mushers known by mans worldwide. Hugh Neff left second out of the chute and quickly took the lead, with Michelle Phillips heading out just as fast out of Knik Lake and catching up with him. 

Watching the trackers the two blips have been playing leap frog, though it is more likely that Neff has been leading the entire way. Both teams came in hot to the Eagle Quest Lodge as the first checkpoint. Neff left a dog in the hands of handlers and continued on, Phillips took the corner into the checkpoint too tight and dumped her sled but was righted quickly and she left soon after. 

The chase pack is led by Eddie Burke from Wildstyle Racing. Burke will be a rookie in this year's Iditarod, and is running this race as a training run for himself and his team. Wildstyle racing is Aaron Burmeister's kennel and while Burmeister is stepping away from Iditarod to focus on family and his business, he's handed off the A-team to Burke. He has the team to challenge the more veteran teams.

Kale Casey just reported that it is now eight below at Eagle Quest Lodge, and as the sun sets it will continue to get colder. Frosty dogs are happy dogs, but the mushers will be happy to make it back to Knik Lake for their mandatory rest and warm up. 

Friday, January 6, 2023

2023 Gunflint Mail Run roster

The Knik 200 isn't the only race kicking off the start of a new year, down in Northern Minnesota we've got a little race known as the Gunflint Mail Run. First run in the 1970s, the race follows a well known mail route and thus honors the tradition of mail being carried by dog sled. 

This is a smaller race, with the distance being 100 miles for the 12-dog race (which this blog post will focus on). Iditarod fans should notice a few familiar names, though many probably aren't as easy to recognize unless you follow some of the "smaller" races in the lower 48. 

There are thirteen teams this year planning to run the 100 mile race, so let's get to the roster. As always, I've done the best I can to find everyone, and the race kindly put the kennel name of each team with the bib number so that cut down on some of my work. 

Musher Roster

1 Gunnar Johnson (Callin’ Trail Kennel) - Website / Facebook / Twitter 
2 Jen Freking (Manitou Crossing Kennels) - Website / Facebook / Instagram  
3 Ero Wallin (Silver Creek Sled Dogs) - Facebook / Instagram 
4 Erin Aili (Miles Ahead Racing) - Website / Facebook
5 Colleen Wallin (Silver Creek Sled Dogs) - Instagram 
6 David Hicks (Cast Outdoor Adventures) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
7 Ryan Redington (Callin’ Trail Kennel) - Website / Facebook / Instagram 
8 Mary Manning (Doodledog Kennel) - Facebook / Twitter
9 Nick Vigilante (Schroeder Mushing) - Facebook
10 Talia Martens (Martens Mushing) - Facebook / Instagram
11 Frank Holmberg (Holmberg Racing Sleddogs) - Facebook
12 Matt Schmidt (Sawtooth Mtn. Racing) - Facebook
13 Tom Bauer (Otter River Sled Dog) - Facebook

Roster as of January 5, 2023.

Who do you think will take the top prize in this year's Gunflint? Who are you cheering for? Comment below with your thoughts!

If you like what you see and want to support my addiction (I mean HOBBY) of following these races and stalking (I mean cheering on) the mushers, you can buy me a slice of pizza (that really goes to paying for my internet/web expenses).

Thursday, January 5, 2023

2023 Knik 200 race preview

It's the first race weekend of 2023! Welcome back, mushing fans, it's upon us once again! Luckily South Central Alaska was hit with a ton of snow early in December so even with our warmer temperatures of late the Knik 200 has been able to stay alive and run this weekend, so here we go! 

The Knik 200 is a memorial race in honor of the late Joe Redington Sr. For those that may be new to this sport, Redington is known as the Father of the Iditarod. Without Joe we may never have had these longer distance races much less the beautiful niche community of long distance mushers. 

Typically the honorary musher is Joe Sr, but this year they've chosen mushing legend Lance Mackey for the honor. Mackey dominated the sport from 2006-2010, he was a four-time Iditarod and four-time Yukon Quest champion (winning both in the same year twice). Lance passed away from a battle with cancer last summer, and many races are paying tribute to one of the sports greatest mushers.

There are currently 33 names on the roster (as of January 4, 2023) with a handful of teams that are sure to challenge for the win. Let's get to looking at the top names to watch.

Who to Watch

Brenda Mackey - While one could make the argument that the last name "Mackey" would be enough to qualify any musher for "who to watch" in Brenda's case it's a legit argument. The daughter of Iditarod Champion Rick Mackey is no stranger to the lifestyle or the sport and she and her husband have built a fantastic program in their kennel. Brenda has had a difficult end to 2022 with the loss of her beloved uncle as well as now her father dealing with his own battle with cancer, as well as another uncle currently fighting cancer. Once Brenda gets out on the runners she will have a good chance of leaving those worries behind and focusing on the team and trail in front of her. Look for her to make a bid for the win. Brenda has withdrawn.

Brent Sass - the reigning Iditarod Champion is no stranger to winning, he's also a multi-time winner of the Yukon Quest, and he certainly seems prepped to ride the upswing of last year's win for quite a few years. While he could be using the Knik 200 as a way to get the team back into the swing of the race rhythm don't expect him to hold back for the red lantern position either. 

Dave Turner - Dave had to bow out of last year's race, but don't expect that to mean he won't be able to hold his own and challenge for the win this year. Dave thrives in these mid-distance races and could prove to once again be the dark horse. Dave has withdrawn.

Jason Mackey - I don't think there are many mushing fans who aren't pulling for Jason to have a breakout year in 2023. The younger brother of Lance Mackey, Jason has always been in the mix in Iditarod, but he isn't always able to make the mid-distance races, but it looks like Jason's "Top Notch" Kennel is looking to make their mark. He's a musher in his own right and not riding on anyone's coattails, but he's also keeping Lance's kennel alive and running some of Lance's dogs. I'm not counting Jason out of a top finish.

Matt Failor - The expectant dad (baby due in June!) knows these trails, and is a solid musher. He won the Kuskokwim 300 a couple years back and is a consistent top place finisher in races he enters. He was trained up by four time Iditarod champion Martin Buser, so Matt has a strong advantage in that regard from some of his cohorts on the trail. I'd give him an outside chance.

Nic Petit - I'm still declaring Petit the King of the Mid-Distance race. Team Petit thrives on the 200 and 300 mile races. He likes to start fast and race fast all the way through. It makes for a very exciting race but also devastating when the team runs out of gas before trail. Nic is a fan favorite by how he seems to just fly by the seat of his pants, his persona is one of shrugging chaos, and he likes to refer to himself as the team dad and the dogs are his kids. I'd say he's the front runner leading into the race.

Travis Beals - One of those Alaskan kids who grew up knewing he was going to be a dog musher and run these races he grew up watching and volunteering at. Beals is a solid contender year in and year out. He's got the goods to do it, and you shouldn't count him out.

Michelle Phillips - We don't have names for the two teams that Tagish Lake Kennel, but one can assume one of the teams could be Michelle Phillips, in which case definitely put her in the top running for a win. Michelle is a strong competitor who chooses dogs over everything else and we love her for it. 

**Hugh Neff - Neff is once again running dogs out of Jim Lanier's kennel. He has a lot of controversy surrounding him lately that was years in the making. With Neff not being allowed to run the Iditarod this year he made the announcement he'd run the Knik 200 instead (because it's comparable?) he name drops Joe Sr. almost daily and so I expect he will push the dogs past their limits if need be to try and make a point. In a 200 mile race that may not be a bad thing for the race, but it's also why there are so many races that have put his entries into question.

How to Watch

For those of us who cannot watch in person, there will be a lot of refreshing of internet pages, here's a run down on how you can follow along with this weekend's race.

Official Website
The race had to restructure their organization a couple of years ago and is now under the direction of the Knik Iditarod Trail Blazers, so they have just a page on their site for the race, but it has the rules and basic information.

GPS Tracker
What would we do without these little trackers that drive us crazy when they go haywire (I will always blame the aliens), trackleaders.com will once again keep us obsessively refreshing our screen with their wonderful GPS map. It isn't live yet, so an edit to this blog post will happen once it does. The 2023 map and trackers can be found here.

Social Media
The race is most active on Facebook. The race has not been active on Twitter in years. There's also no Instagram. 

And I've just heard that KALE CASEY will be covering the event LIVE, so be sure to watch for when he goes live on Facebook!

Schedule of Events

Friday, January 6, 2023
4:00pm-6:00pm Musher's Dinner and Bib Draw
**It's steak dinner night, come hungry**

Saturday, January 7, 2023
8:00am Mandatory Vet Check
10:00am Start
**Teams will start on Knik Lake**

Sunday, January 8, 2023
6:00pm Award Banquet


Which team do you think will win? Who are you cheering for? Comment below!


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Wednesday, January 4, 2023

2023 Knik 200 Roster

We've made it race fans! The "regular season" is upon us. After record tying - and in some cases breaking - snow fall in the month of December, trails have been dug out and groomed for the mid distance races throughout the great State of Alaska and it kicks off this weekend with the Knik 200 Joe Redington Memorial Race in, where else but Knik, Alaska. 

Thirty three teams signed up to run the 2023 race, with the final team signing up right at the wire. [Now twenty five are signed up as of musher meeting/bib draw on January 6, 2023.] There is a strong mix of veterans and rookies in the mix. Many familiar names and quite a few that are new to most fans. Some will use this race as a way to jumpstart their training plans for the Quest and Iditarod races, others are using this as one of their qualifiers for those races - and some are just out there to have fun!

As has become the "tradition" on Reitter's Block, I've compiled links for each member of the roster. As requested last season, I've also put the kennel name (when known) in parenthesis. Bib draw will happen Friday, January 6, 2023 - so, for now, names will be listed alphabetically until they are updated with the correct numbers. Bibs are drawn, the roster has been edited to reflect bib number and start order.

01 - Honorary Musher, Lance Mackey
02 - 
Hunter Keefe (Redington Mush Alaska) - Facebook / Twitter / Instagram
03 - Hugh Neff (Jim Lanier's Northern Whites) - Facebook / Instagram
04 - Michelle Phillips (Tagish Lake) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
05 - Eddie Burke (Wildstyle Racing) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
06 - Travis Beals (Turning Heads) - Website / Facebook / Twitter / Instagram
07 - Matt Failor (Alaskan Husky Adventures/17th Dog)- Website / Facebook / Instagram
08 - David Burge (Nautique Sky) - Website / Facebook
09 - Casey Ann Randall (Rock On Racing) - Website / Facebook / Twitter
10 - Josh McNeal (Crooked Creek) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
11 - Jennifer LaBar (Rockin' Ridge) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
12 - Jason Mackey (Mackey's Top Notch Racing) - Website / Facebook
13 - Joshua Robbins (Evermore Adventures?) - Facebook / Outreach 22 / Kennel Facebook
14 - Brent Sass (Wild and Free Mushing) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
15 - Nic Petit (Team Petit) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
16 - Aiyana O’Shaughnessy (Tagish Lake?) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
17 - Juliah DeLoach (Oil Well Kennel?) - Facebook
18 - Anna Berington (Seeing Double) - Website / Instagram
19 - Kelly Ridley (Lost Creek Mushing) - Facebook
20 - Ashley Dove (Crooked Creek) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
21 - Jacob Witkop (Piledriver Kennel) - Facebook / Instagram
22 - Kaiden Foster (Team Petit) - Website / Facebook / Instagram
23 - Katie Timmons (Tailwind Kennel)  - Facebook 24 - Eric Kelly (Daybreak Kennel)Facebook / Instagram 25 - Kristy Berington (Seeing Double) - Website / Instagram
26 - Anna Hennessy (Shameless Huskies) - Facebook / Instagram 27 - Dakota Schlosser - Website / Facebook / Instagram

Roster as of January 6, 2023.

Who are you cheering for? Comment below!

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50 years of Iditarod Champion Highlight - Carl Huntington

With 2023 marking 50 years of the Last Great Race, and the 51st running, it's high time we look back on the mushers who had that magic ride into Nome in first. For the next few weeks as we count down to March 4, we'll highlight the 24 Champions of Iditarod. That's right, 50 races with 24 names on the Champion list. Just as more folks have climbed Everest than have run Iditarod, the Champions list is surprisingly short.  

The Sprint Mushing Champion

Carl Huntington
Photo from Iditarod Archives.
The second ever Iditarod Champion was the first Native Alaskan to win the race. Born in 1947, Carl Huntington came from Galena, Alaska. Huntington's Athabascan roots gave him generations of mushing experience, and he was known as a competent sprint musher. In fact, Carl is the only musher to be champion of Iditarod, the Fur Rondy sprint races, and the Open North American Championships (ONAC). Ironically, while Carl would go on to win those sprint races, he holds the record for slowest champion time!

Carl grew up in a large family, and dog mushing was a part of his childhood. With only one sled to carry everyone, the older boys (one being Carl) would often have to run behind the sled on their way to "beaver camp" according to his younger brother Tom. Beaver camp was about a 20 mile run, talk about toughness.

Carl Huntington was a rookie heading to Nome in March of 1974. Not a rookie in the sport, but this was his first time on the still incredibly new Iditarod Race Trail. The 1974 race was a brutal one weather wise. Dick Mackey would write in his autobiography that on one leg he camped with Huntington and several other teams during an overnight windstorm where they piled the dogs together and the mushers hunkered down and kept each other awake all night because it was so cold. They would later find out that with the wind chill the temperature reached a lovely -130 degrees. 

Like many champions who would come after him, Huntington at age 27 came limping up Front Street. He had injured his knee along the trail and at one point was worried he wouldn't be able to finish the race. Huntington would credit his lead dog Nugget - who was eleven years old - with much of his success in getting to the finish line. Nugget was a dog from musher Emmitt Peter's kennel and Carl had borrowed her in 1973 for the Fur Rondy sprint races, which they won. Carl was so impressed with the dog that he asked to take her on the Iditarod the following season. Nugget, at eleven years old, became an Iditarod champion.

Huntington would sign up for the 1975 race, but did not finish. He went back to racing sprint and in 1977 would win the Open North American Championships. In the following years, as Iditarod would pass through Galena, Carl would come down to the teams to give them a once over. Iditarod Champion Joe May would write in 2014: "Carl Huntington came down to the checkpoint, marched up and down the teams and passed 'judgment'...usually with a cursory nod or shrug. With Carl, who had never been known to be wrong about a dog, a “judgment” was as from God to Moses from the Burning Bush.

One year, after scrutinizing my team, he walked to where the checker and I waited with bated breath. I was a mess..bloodshot eyes, ruined nose, peeling cheeks, torn and filthy parka. The checker asked, “what you think Carl?”. Carl looked me up and down and said, “dogs will make it—he won't”, turned and walked away."

Little is publicized about Carl's passing in 2000, but he is remembered fondly by many mushers who knew him. He left his mark in the sport.


For a little bit more on Carl's 1974 race you can read an article archived by the New York Times. Joe Runyan wrote about lead dog Nugget in a blog post for Iditarod insider


What are you thoughts on this new series for the blog? Comment below!

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Sunday, January 1, 2023

50 years of Iditarod Champion Highlight - Dick Wilmarth

With 2023 marking 50 years of the Last Great Race, and the 51st running, it's high time we look back on the mushers who had that magic ride into Nome in first. For the next few weeks as we count down to March 4, we'll highlight the 24 Champions of Iditarod. That's right, 50 races with 24 names on the Champion list. Just as more folks have climbed Everest than have run Iditarod, the Champions list is surprisingly short. 

Iditarod's first Champion


Dick Wilmarth celebrates his win in Nome.
Photo: Iditarod Trail Committee Archives
Dick Wilmarth hailed from Red Devil, Alaska. An "unknown" on the 1973 roster, Wilmarth was a miner and trapline musher, not a racing team. Dick moved to Alaska at 17, leaving his logging job in Idaho behind. He and his brother were wooed to the Last Frontier with the promise of adventure and opportunity. Settling in the mining community of Red Devil, he learned to fly planes and got interested in mushing dogs. 

Born in 1942, Dick was 30 years old when he took off from Anchorage to Nome. Having heard about the race just a few months prior, Wilmarth cobbled a team with very little prep by trading goods for dogs out of several villages to add to his team for a total of twelve dogs at the starting line. He would later say in interviews that it was never about trying to win the race, it just sounded like adventure and he wanted to be a part of it.

As you can imagine, the first ever Iditarod race had its share of trials. There were no air drops of supplies in checkpoints in those days, and very little trail grooming (especially since what little was planned got sidelined when the snow was too much for the snow machines of the day to cut through). No trail had been set for years with just yearly clean up, and so it was more of an extended camping trip than a race. Still, as teams made their way to Nome, it was clear that the unknown from Red Devil was willing to take chances to stay ahead. Part of that, Wilmarth would say years later, was due to the fact that he had to keep moving to stay warm and stay fed. He would tell stories of nearly falling through the ice trying to get fish out of a fish wheel, and how he trapped beaver along the way to eat and feed the dogs. 

One of Dick's best known stories, perhaps, was in his telling of how he ran into a couple who were traveling who couldn't get their camp stove to light. He helped them get it started in exchange for a meal, they were hauling a load of canned goods including Dinty Moore's Beef Stew. Wilmarth said he ate six or seven cans of the stuff before continuing on his way (this was back before the no outside assistance rule was really a thing), a few miles down the trail he said his stomach started to growl - those "hearty meals" weren't Alaskan hearty.

At one point in the race, temps dropped to -50 degrees and some teams wanted to halt the race until conditions improved, but they could only do that if all mushers agreed. Like we've seen in more recent years, the future champ disagreed and felt he needed to continue, so he did.

Of the 34 teams that left Anchorage, only 22 finished, and Wilmarth was first to cross the finish line. He won a whopping $12,000 for the race's first ever win, and won Rookie of the Year (imagine that). He would tell reporters later that he had hoped to use the money to buy a backhoe. 

Wilmarth's win wouldn't be without controversy. There are two camps within the old timers and fans over if his win was legitimate. Some have accused Dick of having a lot more outside help than a few meals along the way, with some rumors to having used an airplane at one point. Dick Mackey would write in his biography in defense of the champion saying he ran close to Wilmarth for a lot of the race and never saw any signs of an airplane having touched down to carry the musher, sled, and dogs anywhere. 

Dick Wilmarth was a one and done champion - completely. He would not return to the race with a team again, which has also fed into the conspiracy theories. Chas St. George of the Iditarod Trail Committee would tell a story that when he asked Dick once why he never ran again Dick responded simply, "because I won." Dick would remain a part of the race lore and family, often showing up at a checkpoint to watch teams in, and in the early days would even fly race officials over the trail to give them a look at the teams from above.

Dick Wilmarth died in 2018 at the age of 75 after a battle with prostate cancer. He left behind a wife and six children as well as grandchildren. The race's first champion was part legend and part mystery, but is very much woven into the lore of the Last Great Race.


For some insights on Iditarod's first champion you can read the article by Tegan Hanlon for Anchorage Daily News after his passing, and view an extended clip of Iditarod Insider's interview with Dick for their documentary on Iditarod created to celebrate their 40th race. 


What are you thoughts on this new series for the blog? Comment below!

Like what you see and want it to continue, you can "buy me a pizza" as a way to support the costs of running the blog.