Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 2023 Iditarod was the 51st edition of the Iditarod, an annual sled dog race in the U.S. state of Alaska. It began on March 4, 2023, with a ceremonial 11-mile (18 km) start in Anchorage, Alaska. [1] The official 1,000-mile (1,600 km) race began the following day in Willow, Alaska, and ended 9 to 10 days later in Nome, Alaska.
In 2005, he became the youngest musher to run in the race, and in 2012, its youngest champion. Seavey also won Iditarod championships in 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2021. He had previously been tied with ...
Peter Kaiser (born 1987) is an American dog musher who won the 2019 Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. [1] Kaiser is the first Yup’ik musher and the fifth Alaska Native to win an Iditarod championship. [2] [3] He is from Bethel, Alaska. [4] Kaiser graduated from Bethel High School in 2005. He works in construction, and fishes and hunts.
Redington was the winner of the 1,000-mile (1,600 km) Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in 2023. [2] His grandfather, Joe Redington Sr., is known as the “Father of the Iditarod” for co-founding the 1,000 mile race in 1973, and helping to establish the route as a National Historic Trail. [1]
Musher Dallas Seavey became the first six-time champion of the grueling Iditarod sled-dog race on Tuesday in the 52nd annual running of the event in Alaska, event officials said. Seavey overcame ...
Seavey, who has also won the Yukon Quest sled dog race twice, is the son of three-time Iditarod champion Mitch Seavey. Yet another leading contender this year is Peter Kaiser, the 2019 champion ...
In 2015, Seavey won the Iditarod for a third time, in a race held from Fairbanks to Nome, with the official start moved due to a lack of snow in Southcentral Alaska. [9] In 2016, Dallas Seavey won the Iditarod for a fourth time, this time breaking his own record time. His time was 8 days, 11 hours, 20 minutes, and 16 seconds. [10] In 2017 ...
Mar. 10—Through Wednesday, Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race mushers were stretched between the headwaters of the Kuskokwim River to the abandoned gold rush checkpoints of Ophir and Cripple.