Iditarod

ll news stories about the Iditarod or mushing in general are categorized “Iditarod.”

Lanier Takes Iditarod Lead

Veteran musher Jim Lanier took the lead in the Iditarod late Wednesday night leaving Ophir just before midnight. He was being trailed by Trent Herbst. Lanier was racing with 13 dogs, Herbst with 15. Neither musher had taken a 24-hour required stop. Mitch Seavey, Aliy Zirkle and Dallas Seavey took their 24-hour stop in Ophir and were following the leaders Thursday morning. Past champion Jeff King and defending champion John Baker also had taken their long stop in Ophir and were trailing Dallas Seavey. Fan favorite Lance Mackey was out of Ophir about 6:30 this morning and was racing to catch up with the leaders.

Aliy Zirkle First Musher Into Takotna

About 34 teams are taking their mandatory 24-hour break in Takotna during this year’s Iditarod sled dog race. The church and other buildings are filled with sleeping mushers. Two Rivers musher Aliy Zirkle was the first to reach the checkpoint late last night. She says so far, she hasn’t had any surprises.

Reporter’s Notebook – McGrath – March 6, 2012

I feel like it’s my first day really on the trail. Sure, I flew to Finger Lake for a 20-minute stop yesterday, but the hurried visit didn’t have the same feeling to it. We rushed out so we wouldn’t get stuck in a snow storm and only briefly experienced the lines of dogs sleeping on hay as the mushers rested. Here, it’s a whole town that’s experiencing the Iditarod, maybe for better or for worse.

Busers Bolt into Iditarod Lead

Martin Buser and his son, Rohn, stopped for only a few minutes in Takotna and bolted into the Iditarod lead Wednesday morning. Martin Buser arrived in Takotna about 8:30 am, stopped a few minutes and then headed towards the ghost town of Ophir. Rohn, who won the Kusko 300 earlier this year, reached Takotna about 9:45 am and left almost immediately. As of 11:30 Wednesday morning, Aliy Zirkle, who had led much of the race, was still in Takotna.

Zirkle Maintains Lead; Mackey Drops Back

Aliy Zirkle maintained her lead in the 40th Iditarod last night pulling into Takotna about 11:30 pm. Defending champion John Baker was in pursuit, coming into the checkpoint just after midnight. Mitch Seavey was virtually tied with Baker. Jeff King and Dallas Seavey were following the leaders. About two dozen mushers were in Takotna Wednesday morning. Lance Mackey, according to the Iditarod tracking service, was still at the McGrath checkpoint.

Zirkle Leads Baker out of McGrath

Aliy Zirkle maintained her slight lead over defending Iditarod champion John Baker Tuesday night. Both arrived in McGrath about 30 minutes apart. The two leaders spent only a few minutes in McGrath and then headed back onto the trail. Zirkle is racing with 16 dogs. Baker had dropped two from his team.

Zirkle, Baker Lead Mushers Out Of Nikolai

Aliy Zirkle and John Baker are leading the Iditarod. The mushers left the Nikolai checkpoint at 1:50 this afternoon. Jeff King, Lance Mackey, Mitch Seavey and Hugh Neff followed out of Nikolai about an hour later.

Mushers Reach Nikolai; Zirkle, Baker, Mackey, Neff Among Leaders

More than a dozen mushers had reached Nikolai by early afternoon Tuesday in their quest to win the Iditarod. Aliy Zirkle had during the morning, but a number of mushers, including past champions John Baker and Lance Mackey were following close behind. Hugh Neff, Ray Redington, Jr., Mitch Seavey, and Jeff King were among those who had reached Nikolai. Brent Sass was out of Rohn and leading the field of rookies.

Zirkle Leads Mushers Into Nikolai

Aliy Zirkle was the first musher to ride into Nikolai at 9:14 a.m., followed by reigning champion John Baker at 9:36 a.m.. Lance Mackey isn't far behind, making it into the checkpoint just before 10:00 a.m.

Zirkle, Baker, Mackey Lead Iditarod

Aliy Zirkle led a group of mushers towards Nikolai in the Iditarod Tuesday morning. She was followed closely by defending champion John Baker and past champion Lance Mackey. Hugh Neff was not far behind the trio.

Iditarod Leaders Leave Rainy Pass

Hugh Neff is leading the Iditarod. The winner of this year’s Yukon Quest left Rainy Pass at 2:58 this afternoon. Ray Redington, Jr. left the checkpoint at 3:09, followed closely by Aaron Burmeister and Lance Mackey.

Iditarod Leaders Make Rainy Pass

Leaders in the 40th Iditarod were in Rainy Pass late Monday morning, including Ray Redington, Jr., Hugh Neff, Aliy Zirkle, Paul Gebhardt, Jim Lanier and Cim Smyth. The group also included past champions Lance Mackey and rival Jeff King. Defending champion John Baker was out of Finger Lake and not far behind the leaders.

Nicolas Petit Takes Early Iditarod Lead

Nicolas Petit was in to Finger Lake early this morning taking an early lead in the Iditarod. He was followed by Brent Sass of Eureka, Tom Thurston of Oak Creek, Co. and Ray Redington, Jr. of Two Rivers. Defending champion John Baker of Kotzebue was not far behind leaving Skwentna. This is Petit's second Iditarod. He lives in Girdwood.

Early Trail Conditions Look Good For Mushers

Iditarod 2012 is set to start up this weekend, with the ceremonial start Saturday and the restart in Willow on Sunday, and mushers should see some pretty good conditions over the first couple days of the race.

2012 Iditarod Starting Order

This year's field features 66 mushers, with Ray Redington Jr. drawing the number two bib. Dave Olson is this year's honorary musher and will be wearing number one. Read more to see the full field.

Identical Twins Taking On The Iditarod Trail

The Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race gets underway this weekend. The race has had its share of unusual mushers over the years. There have been blind mushers, one legged mushers, a musher in kilts, even three generations of one family all running in the same race. But this year, race viewers may do a double take when identical twins Kristy and Anna Berington take to the runners.

Bus Schedule To The Willow Restart

The Iditarod restart in Willow is set to take place Sunday, March 4 at 2:00 p.m., and it tends to draw quite a crowd. Officials have said that since the state has received so much snow this winter, reportedly over 10 feet in Willow, there will be less parking available than normal. They are urging spectators to take advantage of the shuttle service they are providing from Anchorage, Wasilla, Houston and Talkeetna.

Competitors Run, Ski And Bike Their Way To McGrath, Nome

Competitors in a human powered ultra-marathon on the Iditarod Trail have been slowed by heavy snow. A storm dumped more than two feet of snow just after the race started in Knik Sunday.

Junior Iditarod Mushers Overnight in Yentna

Seward’s Conway Seavey has won the Junior Iditarod. Seavey arrived at the last checkpoint in Willow in 15 hours 52 minutes after the race’s start on Saturday.