Slim Randles' Home Country
Best wishes from Seven-Dog Slim
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[March 04, 2019]
This Saturday, I’ll probably be right here
in New Mexico. Well, most of me will. But my heart and my wishes and
part of my soul will be many miles from here, up in Anchorage,
Alaska. |
Anchorage. First Saturday in March. Dog trucks
with freight sleds lashed to the top of the dog boxes.
For 46 years now, this has meant only one thing to me: the start of
the Iditarod Dogsled Race. A thousand miles. Anchorage to Nome.
There will be screaming dogs, lunging into their harnesses at the
start line. One team released every two minutes to prevent what
would certainly be a world-record dog fight. Six or eight men and
women holding the dogs and the sled. Two minutes. Go!
And in a flash the team and the musher are gone, silently, rounding
a corner and being lovingly consumed by the birch forest.
In 1973, for the first race, I was lucky enough to be one of those
mushers. I didn’t finish, sorry to say. Crushed an ankle about 300
miles in. But I know what it’s like for those men and women out on
the trail with those dogs, and the snow and cold, and sometimes the
wind. And getting that evening fire going, and melting snow for dog
water, and heating up a frozen piroshki for your own dinner. [to top of second
column] |
And then sinking into sleep,
wondering what tomorrow will bring.
That part, you see, hasn’t changed in 46 years. In fact, that part
hasn’t changed since the gold rush of around 1910 when the trail was
first established.
So I may still be here in Mesa country on Saturday, but I’ll also be
there, with the men and women and dogs, hearing the roaring of the
crowds and then the hush of a thousand-plus miles of silent, frozen
country.
Packed trails and healthy dogs, mushers. That’s the wish from
Seven-Dog Slim. It’s a very long way to Nome.
[Text from file received from
Slim Randles]
Brought to
you by Strange Tales of Alaska by Slim Randles. Available at
amazon.com.
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