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View Full Version : Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race ~ 2008 ~ Lance Mackey WINS on Wednesday!



Cinder & Smoke
03-01-2008, 10:31 PM
Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race 2008

Race Starts SUNDAY, March 2, 2008 at 2:00 pm ALASKA Standard Time
in the Alaskan town of Willow, AK.

A 10-mile Pre-Race ran through the streets of Anchorage, AK, today for the public
and the media - the "real race" starts on Sunday.

PLEASE ~ If you don't "like" or agree with the running of this race ~
PLEASE do your *flaming* in another thread!
THIS ONE is for the Iditarod Race FANS! ;)

The Race is well covered on the "official" Iditarod web site >>>
http://www.iditarod.com/ (http://www.iditarod.com/)

Special Attention:
A New Feature this year (and free, this year) is the trial of a GPS Mapping system
that will track EACH SLED - much the same way they ID and show the speeds of the NASCAR cars.
Each participating sled (MOST of 'em) will carry a small GPS receiver/transponder that
will report the sled's location - for display on a course map.

Sign UP here >>>
http://www.iditarod.com/race/ionearth.html (http://www.iditarod.com/race/ionearth.html) ... It's FREE (this year).

Time Conversions:

2:00 pm ALASKA Standard Time is >>>
* 3:00 pm California / Pacific / Yukon Time
* 4:00 pm Mountain Time
* 5:00 pm Central Time
* 6:00 pm Eastern Time

HEY Tamara ~~~

Do we Pet Talkers have a Favorite Team to *root* for??

MUSH ON!!

:D

jennielynn1970
03-01-2008, 11:08 PM
Question... why would people be against the Iditarod?? :confused:

Cinder & Smoke
03-01-2008, 11:52 PM
Question ... Why would people be against the Iditarod?? :confused:

There are a LOT of rather outspoken folks who think the Iditarod type of sled dog racing
is cruel to the dogs. They usually post their objections when the Race begins.

Let's PLEASE keep This Thread focused on the progress of the race - not it's politics.

;)

Glacier
03-02-2008, 12:43 AM
[HEY Tamara ~~~

Do we Pet Talkers have a Favorite Team to *root* for??

MUSH ON!!

:D


Karen Ramstead is a friend of mine. She's running a team of beautiful, championship titled Siberians.

There are several Yukon mushers this year--Gerry Willomitzer, Sebastian Schnuelle, Hans Gatt(technically he lives in BC, but we claim him).

I'd like to see Lance Mackey repeat as winner.


There are a LOT of rather outspoken folks who think the Iditarod type of sled dog racing is cruel to the dogs.

They don't limit themselves to the I-rod. Most of them would like to ban mushing(and any other form of recreation/activity) that involves animals in all it's forms, including teams like mine.

Cinder & Smoke
03-02-2008, 10:57 AM
Do we Pet Talkers have a Favorite Team to *root* for??




Karen Ramstead is a friend of mine... Racing "Bib" # 19

Yukon mushers >>>
* Gerry Willomitzer ....... Bib # 7
* Sebastian Schnuelle .. Bib # 68
* Hans Gatt ............... Bib # 38

I'd like to see Lance Mackey repeat as winner... Bib # 6

Good Luck to ALL the Teams - Mushers and Dogs!

:)

cyber-sibes
03-02-2008, 04:00 PM
Good luck everyhusky & human! I think the I-rod has a fascinating history and is exciting to follow. It's not the only long-distance mushing event, but it is the most famous. Karen offered her Pretty Sled Dogs (http://www.huskyproductions.net/) as a prize on Meeshka's blog-a-thon last year.... several bloggin dogs made it to her speeches, too. Alas, we were not among them. I keep trying to convince hubby that we ned to do a "sled dog" vacation.

Thanks for the link & the info, we'll be rooting for those Yukon teams!

CountryWolf07
03-02-2008, 04:04 PM
I have nothing against the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Racing --- it is just a sport, and that is what Siberian Huskies were bred to do! I don't see the problem here.

Best of luck to all the mushers. :)

Cinder & Smoke
03-02-2008, 04:14 PM
A New Feature this year (and free, this year) is the trial of a GPS Mapping system
that will track EACH SLED - much the same way they ID and show the speeds of the NASCAR cars.
Each participating sled (MOST of 'em) will carry a small GPS receiver/transponder that
will report the sled's location - for display on a course map.

Sign UP here >>>
http://www.iditarod.com/race/ionearth.html (http://www.iditarod.com/race/ionearth.html) ... It's FREE (this year).


I got it sorta right ...

Not all, Not "most", just SOME Sleds (20 by last count) will be Transponder equipped.
(Out of 90+ Starters!)

Here's the Real Skoop >>>

Twenty sled-mounted GPS units on their way to Nome in test
Starting today, fans will be able to track the progress of 19 mushers and one trailbreaker as the Iditarod runs a live test using leading-edge GPS transmitters with powerful batteries. The Iditarod has floated the idea for about three years to attach a transmitter to every sled in the race, using satellite technology to present each team’s location live at all times as the race moves from Anchorage to Nome.
This year, technology finally caught up to the vision.



A company called IonEarth makes the transmitters, which already are used to track adventure races such as Baja off-road events and ocean sailing competitions; they teamed Iridium Satellite LLC and another company that develops military grade batteries. That’s key: these units are expected to last the entire race with one set of batteries in temperatures down to 40-below Fahrenheit. If the temperature plunges lower than that, which is easily possible, the electronics on some of the transmitters will simply stop working, but the devices should kick back on once it warms up, according to IonEarth.

Not everyone is sold on the concept. There are concerns about mushers being able to get hold of information from the tracking system and use it to their advantage, violating race rules about accepting outside assistance. Race officials say they will limit access to tracking information. And mushers who support the idea say the technology wouldn’t tell them much that they wouldn’t already know simply by observing the competition on the trail.

This year, the 30-ounce units will send a signal every 15 minutes that will tell the speed, temperature and musher’s location along the trail. If it works, the goal would be to put one of these in every sled next year and possibly increase the transmissions to every three minutes, Iditarod director Stan Hooley said.

Get Ready ...

First Sled is off in another 45 minutes.
Dunno who will issue the command "Mushers, START your DOGS!" ...
but I'll bet it's just as noisy as a NASCAR Start!

MUSH ON!
:D

Freedom
03-02-2008, 04:20 PM
OK, so I KNOW I must ask this EVERY year. :rolleyes:

Why are they Siberian Huskies? Why don't they use Malamutes? the bigger the dog, the faster you can cover the territory.

Glacier
03-02-2008, 04:50 PM
OK, so I KNOW I must ask this EVERY year. :rolleyes:

Why are they Siberian Huskies? Why don't they use Malamutes? the bigger the dog, the faster you can cover the territory.

Frankly almost no one uses either breed. I think Karen's is the only team of purebreds in this year. There's never more than two or three siberian teams anymore and they are rarely competitive. Karen's best finish is 51st and that's pretty dang good for a team of purebreds.

Malamutes are extremely slow and their temperment makes them bad racing dogs. Mals are supposed to be dog aggressive. Not a good thing when you have 16 of them trying to pass another team.

Most racing sled dogs don't even look like huskies anymore. They are often GSP and hound mixes. Most weigh under 50 pounds. My dogs are considered frieght style dogs and look huge against competitive racing dogs.

Freedom
03-02-2008, 05:43 PM
Thanks!

Cinder & Smoke
03-02-2008, 06:15 PM
Most racing sled dogs don't even look like huskies anymore.

My dogs are considered frieght style dogs and look huge against competitive racing dogs.

"Freight Haulers" or not ... they sure LOOK the Part!!

Are all the FurKids inside, watchin the Race?

:D

Donnaj4962
03-02-2008, 06:23 PM
I am rooting for my co-worker's daughter! She is a rookie this year, but we are all very excited for her! I will have to find out the name of her team. Several of us in the office bought t-shirts to help her with the cost of the race, and I know it's on the shirt. Problem is it's in the washer! She is from Oregon.

Cinder & Smoke
03-12-2008, 06:31 AM
At about 2:40 am ALASKAN time on Wednesday, March 12, 2008 -
Musher Lance Mackey, Racing Bib #6 -
pulled past the Finish Line in Nome, Alaska, with a comfortable lead over
2nd Place Musher Jeff King.

Way to go, Lance and Nice Pulling by all his DOGS!

:D

elizabethann
03-12-2008, 06:40 AM
The winners father lives in Concord, NH. :)

Congratulations! I just wish it was on t.v.

cyber-sibes
03-12-2008, 10:40 AM
Yeah! Congratulations to Lance & his team!

Grace
03-12-2008, 11:14 AM
The winners father lives in Concord, NH. :)

Congratulations! I just wish it was on t.v.

There will be some of the race shown on VERSUS. If you go HERE (http://www.versus.com/nw/article/view/677/?UserDef=true&catID=76) and scroll down, you'll see the times and dates. And there's a place near the toop to put in your zip code to see what station VERSUS is on in your area.

elizabethann
03-12-2008, 02:08 PM
Thanks for the info.

I just found out his sled was made in NH. :)

I wonder if his dogs came from here too. :)

Glacier
03-12-2008, 02:16 PM
I wonder if his dogs came from here too. :)

He breeds his own dogs, from a line his father started many years ago. His father was also an I-rod champion.

There is a live webcam on the finish line. I think it's only turned on when they are expecting a musher. Check www.iditarod.com to find it.

kuhio98
03-12-2008, 07:52 PM
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2008/more/03/12/iditarod.winner/index.html?eref=T1

http://i.a.cnn.net/si/2008/more/03/12/iditarod.winner/t1_iditarod.jpg

Mackey wins Iditarod again
Cancer survivor triumphs for second year in row

NOME, Alaska (AP) -- Lance Mackey couldn't shake four-time champion Jeff King and his faster team.

So Mackey pulled off a stunt at the Elim checkpoint -- 123 miles from the Nome finish line -- that proved to be the turning point en route to winning his second consecutive Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race on Wednesday.

Mackey arrived at the Elim check point Tuesday three minutes ahead of his rival, drank coffee and made a show of settling in for a nap. He told checkpoint volunteers to wake him in an hour and -- with King snoring -- sneaked out of the checkpoint 70 minutes ahead his opponent.

"I just beat the best musher in the world," the 37-year-old throat cancer survivor said after he crossed the finish line under Nome's burled arch. Fans mobbed Mackey along the final 10 blocks, whooping and cheering and slapping his hand while chanting his name.

"He baited me to sleep, was waiting until I closed my eyes," said King, who won in 2006. "I didn't open them until after he got out the door."

In its 36th running, the Iditarod commemorates a run by sled dogs in 1925 to deliver lifesaving diphtheria serum to Nome. The modern-day Iditarod trail crosses frozen rivers, dense woods and two mountain ranges, then goes along the dangerous sea ice up the Bering Sea shore.

Mackey's win was a repeat of his 2007 feat, when he became the first musher to win back-to-back runs in the 1,000-mile Yukon Quest International Sled Dog Race and the Iditarod. Last month, he won his fourth straight Yukon Quest and headed into the Iditarod, aiming for another double win.

"I'm not much to brag very often, but damn, I'm going to this time," said Mackey, from Fairbanks, whose father and brother won past Iditarods. "I don't know exactly how to explain it. I'm just blessed with an incredible dog team."

Mackey used many of the same dogs that competed in those races in the trek across some of Alaska's harshest terrain.

At the Nome finish line, his family greeted him and he took congratulatory phone calls from his father, Dick Mackey, and Gov. Sarah Palin.

Palin told Mackey: "You're a hero, and truly an inspiration to all of us."

For much of the race Mackey tussled for the lead with King, who closely tailed him from checkpoint to checkpoint. Mackey also struggled with dogs stricken with diarrhea and slowed by unseasonably warm weather that marked much of the trail.

But Mackey's team was in better health in White Mountain, where mushers are required to take an eight-hour break before heading up the icy Bering Sea coast for the 77-mile homestretch to Nome.

"They're the best dogs, hands-down," Mackey said.

Mackey's dogs also quarreled on the trail. He had to drop Hobo -- a leader Mackey called the speed and driving force of the team -- who was badly injured in an ongoing rivalry with Larry, another leader considered the brains of the pack. Some of his dogs were coughing and one was in heat.

King, a 51-year-old musher from Denali Park, ran most of the trail with a full team of 16 dogs that looked remarkably fresh and alert as the race progressed.

King finally dropped two dogs Tuesday at the checkpoint in White Mountain. When he crossed the finish line at 79 minutes after Mackey, the winner was there to shake his hand.

"It was tough competition, but an easy race," King said at the burled arch.

Running a competitive race for third place were Ramey Smyth of Willow, Ken Anderson of Fairbanks, Martin Buser of Big Lake and Hans Gatt, a three-time Yukon Quest winner from Whitehorse, Yukon.

Twelve mushers scratched since the start of the Iditarod and one withdrew. The last was 43-year-old Steve Madsen of Cougar, Wash., who scratched Tuesday in Galena, citing concern for the health of his 11-dog team. Counting Mackey and King, 82 mushers were in the running.

Three dogs died in this year's race. A 7-year-old male, who showed signs of pneumonia, died Saturday. A 3-year-old female was struck by a snowmobile, and a 4-year-old male died Tuesday.

A necropsy will attempt to determine the cause of death of the two dogs, Iditarod officials said.

This year, organizers introduced a new tracking system that let fans follow online the real-time progress of 18 top mushers. Officials hope to expand the system to all participants in future races. Mackey and King each carried one of the devices.

Mushers compete for a piece of an $875,000 purse, to be paid out among the top 30 finishers to reach Nome. Mackey won $69,000 and a new truck.



http://i.a.cnn.net/si/2008/more/03/12/iditarod.winner/mackey.ap.jpg

Donnaj4962
03-12-2008, 08:40 PM
Congratulations to Lance! My co-workers daughter is still in the race. She was in last place yesterday, but moved up one spot today! I am so excited that she is still in. She is a rookie, 50 years old, and has overcome cancer... and the stories she will be able to share!

I have been loving keep track of what is going on each day and where she is in the standings! And the pictures on the website are amazing! I have always wanted to go to Alaska, and this just makes me want to make it sooner! ;)

Alysser
03-12-2008, 09:57 PM
That's awesome! Congratulations to them! I love hearing about the Iditarod. I think it's a really great thing for the dogs to experience and it looks kinda fun! :) When I was a kid I watched the movie Balto, the cartoon one and I said to my parents I wanted to be a "musher" when I grow up. :D :p