Alaska's Iditarod race starts with smiles, barks and protests
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[March 05, 2018]
By Yereth Rosen
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - With
light snow falling, spectators cheering and hundreds of dogs
barking, sixty-seven mushers and their teams took off for a
ceremonial 11-mile jaunt through Alaska's biggest city as the 46th
Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race began Saturday in Anchorage.
Timed competition in the race, which drew controversy after a
champion musher's dogs tested positive for opioids last year, will
start on Sunday in Willow, about 80 miles north of Anchorage, and
teams will head out from there on the nearly 1,000-mile trek to
Nome.
"Those are some race-hardened teams and they're going to put on an
incredible race," musher Ramey Smyth said admiringly of the
contenders, including three-time champion Mitch Seavey and his dogs,
as he prepared to hitch up his own team Saturday.
Mushers were anticipating good trail conditions for the contest,
which can last a week to ten days. Late-winter storms brought plenty
of snow, and the Iditarod is able to use its traditional route after
several years of alterations forced by warm-weather-related snow
shortages.
But the storied race faces some difficulty this year.
With oil-dependent Alaska experiencing an economic strain, the race
has lost some financial backing. The winners' purse of $500,000 is
down sharply from the nearly $750,000 paid out last year.
Animal-rights activists, long critical of the Iditarod, have also
stepped up protests, citing the doping scandal as well as other
mistreatment of dogs. Race organizers blame protesters for the loss
of at least one large sponsorship.
On Saturday, protesters set up five mock graves to commemorate
Iditarod dogs that died during last year's race or immediately
afterward. They hoisted signs that accused the mushers of cruelty.
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Michi Konno charges through the chute at the ceremonial start of the
Iditarod dog sled race in Anchorage, Alaska, U.S. March 3, 2018.
REUTERS/Mark Meyer
"This is not this nice pretty little race," said Canadian filmmaker
Fern Levitt, director of a documentary critical of the Iditarod.
The start of the race on Saturday drew hundreds of celebrants, who
packed the sidewalks. Fans petted mushers' dogs and musher
assistants - called handlers - sported matching team jackets.
Politicians including U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski mingled with the
crowd.
Many wore costumes. Musher Dee Dee Jonrowe, 65, a top racer who
plans to retire after this year, was decked out in her trademark
pink. Her truck is pink as are the booties and leashes worn by her
dogs.
Jeanne Troshynski, a teacher who wore a long pink dress over rubber
boots, defended the race.
"I think the majority of the people who run it have great integrity
and love their dogs and do the best for their dogs," she said.
(Reporting by Yereth Rosen; editing by Sharon Bernstein and G
Crosse)
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