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Iditarod 2022 Trail — Why Now?
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Iditarod 2022 Trail

Iditarod map even yearsThe trail and distances between checkpoints:

Willow – Start
Yentna Station – 52 miles [84 km]
Skwentna – 34 miles [55 km]
Finger Lake – 45 miles [72 km]
Rainy Pass – 30 miles [48 km]
Rohn – 48 miles [77 km]
Nikolai – 75 miles [121 km]
McGrath – 54 miles [87 km]
Takotna – 18 miles [29 km]
Ophir – 25 miles [40 km]
Cripple – 59 miles [95 km]
Ruby – 112 miles [180 km]
Galena – 52 miles [84 km]
Nulato – 52 miles [84 km]
Kaltag – 42 miles [68 km]
Unalakleet – 90 miles [145 km]
Shaktoolik – 42 miles [68 km]
Koyuk – 48 miles [77 km]
Elim – 48 miles [77 km]
Golovin – 28 miles [45 km]
White Mountain – 18 miles [29 km]
Safety – 55 miles [88 km]
Nome – 22 miles [35 km]

The distance is from the previous checkpoint. Some teams in the early going will travel at 12 mph [20kph] or better with all dogs eager to go. There are reasons not to do this.

At the beginning of the race, especially if there is deep snow, the moose will use the trail. To a moose a sled dog team is a wolf pack, and they will attack. An adult moose can easily kill, or severely injure, multiple dogs on a team. You don’t want to run into a moose.

Between Finger Lake and Rainy Pass you discover the Happy Valley Steps. The Steps are jarring enough with snow on them, but without the snow they’re slabs of rock, quite capable of busting up a sled. Hopefully the Happy River will be frozen for the race.

After Rainy Pass, you face the descent into the Dalzell Gorge. Without snow to help with steering and braking, it will be even more of a nightmare than the E+ ticket it has always been.

The run from Rohn to Nikolai as two fun features. The Glacier is actually minor; it is a spring that pours water down a hill. If it is cold enough, it will be glare ice, otherwise it will be a cold mud patch.

The bigger problem is the Farewell Burn. This was the result of a forest fire, and the area is second growth, stumps, logs, and the hummocks of grass that can act like the bumpers in a pinball machine. The ideal condition for the Burn is deep snow to cushion the sled and keep above the hummocks and stumps.

After Nikolai things calm down a lot, but people really start thinking about taking their 24-hour stop.

The moon isn’t full until March 18, and a waxing crescent is not much help. There is about 12 hours of visible light during the day (Vernal Equinox is March 20), and an increase of around 6 minutes every day. March 13 is the start of Daylight Saving Time, so there will be a need of adjustment during the race.

4 comments

1 Kryten42 { 03.06.22 at 5:50 pm }

I didn’t know that about their being Moose’s on the trail. But that makes sense! I know they are all over Alaska. And a crazed Moose is nothing anyone sane wants to be anywhere near!

The teams have had it rough in recent years (I do follow your Iditarod posts, I just don’t usually have a comment to make). I hope they all play it smart & safe! 🐶👍

2 Bryan { 03.06.22 at 8:36 pm }

Moose are dangerous year round, but if someone has broken trail for a race, the moose will use the trail rather than dealing with deep snow. They consider a dog team to be a wolf pack and automatically attack. They have killed and injured dogs if they encounter a team and you have to shoot them to stop the attack.

Yes, climate change hasn’t been kind to the sled dog races.

3 Kryten42 { 03.06.22 at 9:43 pm }

*sigh* I posted that in a rush!

“Mouse’s”? 🤦‍♂️😖 I have to admit that did make me sigh when I read it again just now… Then I chuckled a bit at the thought of a crazed Mouse attacking a dog sled team! 😏🤭

And “tams” –> “teams” DUH!

You obviously figured that out! 👍😊

4 Bryan { 03.06.22 at 9:58 pm }

I’m used to odd words, especially from SMS or phone replies. Auto-correct is designed to make us look foolish. Spelling checkers only tell us if the word is in the dictionary and whether it is spelled correctly, not whether it sense in the sentence. If we ever get a computer as smart as a chicken we’ll be trouble. Mouse and tams are both valid words.