Science and TechAnimals and Insects

Actions

33 Iditarod sled dog race mushers to trek across Alaska

The race to Nome has 33 mushers this year, which is the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race's smallest field ever.
Attentive sled dogs await the start of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race's ceremonial start
Posted

The race to Nome began Sunday for 33 mushers in this year's Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in Alaska.

Jessie Holmes, an Alabama native living in the Alaska community of Brushkana, was the first musher to leave across a frozen lake about 70 miles north of Anchorage. Holmes works as a carpenter and appears on the reality television show "Life Below Zero."

Other mushers left in two-minute intervals. They will travel nearly a thousand miles over the unforgiving Alaska winterscape, climbing over two mountain ranges, mushing on frozen rivers and streams and across the treacherous Bering Sea ice. The winner is expected to drive their sled dog team down Nome's Front Street to the iconic burled arch finish line in about 10 days.

Iditarod musher and his dogs

Iditarod sled dog doping prompted new rules for the race

Several dogs tested positive for a banned drug for the first time, but the person responsible may not get punished.

LEARN MORE

Leading the charge will be defending champion Brent Sass, a kennel owner and wilderness guide who lives on a homestead about a four-hour drive northwest of Fairbanks.

Also competing is Pete Kaiser, the 2019 champion. The 33 mushers in the race is the smallest field ever. The very first race, held in 1973, had 34 mushers, but the average number of starters in the first 50 races was 63.

Only having two former champions in the race this year is a rarity.

Several veteran mushers have decided to retire or take a break from the Iditarod, including five-time champion Dallas Seavey, four-time winners Martin Buser and Jeff King and three-time champ Mitch Seavey.

Additional reporting by The Associated Press.