Alaska's Iditarod sled-dog race rerouted due to COVID-19 pandemic
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[December 19, 2020]
By Yereth Rosen
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - The famed
Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race across Alaska will not run to Nome in 2021,
a drastic change called necessary to protect the mushers from the
COVID-19 pandemic and reduce its spread in rural Alaska, race officials
announced on Friday.
Instead, the 2021 Iditarod race route will take racers and dogs to the
halfway point - the abandoned gold-mining town of Iditarod for which the
trail is named. Then they will double back to the starting point.
“The board, after thoughtful deliberation has determined that the
highest standards of safety can be maintained for the canine and human
athletes, volunteers, and communities, so we are excited for the unique
setting and challenges of this year’s race,” Mike Mills, president of
the Iditarod’s board, said in a statement.
The total distance of what is now dubbed the “Gold Trail Loop” is about
860 miles, close to the nearly 1,000 miles of the traditional route.
The change for the world’s most famous sled-dog race will skip the
mostly Native communities along the Yukon River and Bering Sea that are
normally checkpoints on the northern half of the trail.
The new route will be challenging, requiring mushers and dogs to cross
the rugged Alaska Range twice, race officials said.
Nome Mayor John Handeland, whose city is usually packed with celebrating
visitors gathered to watch Iditarod teams cross the finish line, said
the city supports the change. “We understand the circumstances and wish
they were different,” Handeland, an Iditarod board member, said in the
statement.
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Norwegian musher Thomas Waerner crosses the finish line under the
Burled Arch to win the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in Nome, Alaska
March 18, 2020. REUTERS/Diana Haecker/Nome Nugget/File Photo
The announcement came a day after the Iditarod released a detailed
COVID-19 plan that includes mandatory rapid testing at the
ceremonial start in Anchorage, use of face masks wherever groups are
gathered, limited access to checkpoints and other measures.
The Iditarod is scheduled to start on March 6 in Anchorage, with
timed competition starting the following day at Willow, a small
about 80 miles north of the city. Willow will now be the finish line
as well.
This is the fourth time the Iditarod course has been significantly
altered, though it is the most drastic change. Three times in the
past, the start of timed competition was moved north to Fairbanks
because of warm and snow-sparse conditions.
(Reporting by Yereth Rosen in Anchorage; Editing by Dan Whitcomb and
David Gregorio)
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