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The Parade — Why Now?
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The Parade

Today is Susan Butcher Day in Alaska, so there will be the official start of the Iditarod on the slushy, wet streets of Anchorage with no real racing:

1 Curt Perano (2)
2 Paige Drobny (3)
3 Gus Guenther (4)
4 Dan Kaduce (5)
5 Mitch Seavey (6)
6 Michael Williams, Jr. (7)
7 Yvonne Dabakk (8)R
8 Newton Marshall (9)
9 Aliy Zirkle (10)
10 Richie Diehl (11)
11 Tommy Jordbrudal (12)R
12 Kelly Maixner (13)
13 Dallas Seavey (14)
14 Michelle Phillips (15)
15 DeeDee Jonrowe (16)
16 Jeff King (17)
17 Monica Zappa (18)R
18 Allen Moore (19)
19 Scott Janssen (20)
20 Christian Turner (21)R
21 Robert Sørlie (22)
22 Aaron Burmeister (23)
23 Ellen Halverson (24)
24 Nathan Schroeder (25)R
25 Charley Bejna (26)R
26 Jessie Royer (27)
27 Cim Smyth (28)
28 Nicolas Petit (29)
29 Rick Casillo (30)
30 Lev Shvarts (31)R
31 Linwood Fiedler (32)
32 Karin Hendrickson (33)
33 Justin Savidis (34)
34 Paul Gebhardt (35)
35 Martin Buser (36)
36 Jake Berkowitz (37)
37 Jim Lanier (38)
38 Jason Mackey (39)
39 Jan Steves (40)
40 Lisbet Norris (41)R
41 Cindy Gallea (42)
42 Peter Kaiser (43)
43 Mats Pettersson (44)R
44 John Dixon (45)
45 Cindy Abbott (46)R
46 Joar Leifseth Ulsom (47)
47 Travis Beals (48)
48 Ramey Smyth (49)
49 Marcelle Fressineau (50)Q
50 Ray Redington Jr (51)
51 Anna Berington (52)
52 John Baker (53)
53 Ralph Johannessen (54)R
54 Elliot Anderson (55)R
55 Kristy Berington (56)
56 Matt Failor (57)
57 Hans Gatt (58)
58 Karen Ramstead (59)
59 Alex Buetow (60)R
60 Hugh Neff (61)
61 Danny Seavey (62)
62 Katherine Keith (63)R
63 Robert Bundtzen (64)
64 Ken Anderson (65)
65 Mike Ellis (66)
66 Wade Marrs (67)
67 Mike Santos (68)
68 Abbie West (69)Q
69 Sonny Lindner (70)

The Mushers in bold are former winners of the Iditarod, while italics indicates Yukon Quest winners. The numbers in parentheses are their Bib numbers. The small “R” indicates a total rookie, while the small “Q” indicates an Iditarod rookie who has completed a Yukon Quest.

4 comments

1 Dizzy { 03.01.14 at 11:21 pm }

Ok I gotta ask. What is the fascination with mushing in these northern climes?

I know here it isn’t very feasible. To give you a clue on why, I don’t even own an ice scrapper.

I’m always trying to figure out when Canadians talk about hockey how a whole team fits on an ice cube cause that’s about as big as it comes here.

2 Bryan { 03.02.14 at 12:16 am }

I was stationed in Alaska when I was in the military, and dog teams are the only reliable form transport in interior Alaska that doesn’t involve fuel that cost nearly twice as much as in the ‘lower 48’.

Sled dogs are the most efficient long distance runners of any species on the planet. Their bodies are simply amazing in their ability to convert food into muscle power, and keep themselves alive in an Arctic environment.

I live on the Gulf Coast of the Florida Panhandle, so there is no way I would ever own any northern dog down here. the heat and fleas would destroy it, but I remember them fondly as they hauled loads around at forty below zero in Fairbanks.

If I hadn’t overdrawn my ‘death and destruction account’, I would have probably gone back after I left the military, but shooting caribou and moose to supply my protein requirements was not something I wanted to do.

Newton Marshall, starting in eighth position is a Jamaican. He is sponsored by singer Jimmy Buffett of Margaritaville and Cheeseburger in Paradise fame. Curt Perano, number 1 position, is from New Zealand. There are 5 Norwegians and a Swede in the field. Many of those listed as Alaskans or Canadians are from Austria, Germany, and Switzerland. It really is an international sport.

You can ignore the posts on the Iditarod, the Yukon Quest, the Tour de France, and the World Cup, Dizzy, as most of the regulars do. When you have lived all over the world, you develop worldwide interests.

3 Dizzy { 03.02.14 at 1:48 am }

I’m thankful I did not go to Alaska. I had enough problems with frostbite in Germany. Seeing icicles grow parallel to the ground was not what a Florida boy expect to see.

But when you go for weeks at a time on field exercises in the winter without heaters, tracks become huge deep freezes. Sometimes breakfast caught up with us at 2100 hrs. The green eggs were hard, the milk was frozen solid, and the bacon was cushioned in it’s own solid grease. Thank heaven I didn’t have to deal with more cold to go with that.

It was bad enough when we went to the field that the Germans had determined was already too dangerous for driving and sometimes the only thing between you and that steep cliff dropout was a friggin’ road marker keepin’ you from sliding right on off.

4 Bryan { 03.02.14 at 5:31 pm }

If you had gone to Alaska you would have been issued gear that worked remarkably well at keeping you warm and dry in the cold. No one thinks that this stuff might just be helpful in other areas, so it gets restricted to Alaska. I would certainly found it useful in Omaha, Nebraska during the winter.

Winters in Frankfurt or the German border with Luxembourg weren’t that bad, but heaters in aircraft are better than armored vehicles.