Iditarod race starts with pageantry and focus on preventing disease
spread
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[March 09, 2020]
By Yereth Rosen
ANCHORAGE (Reuters) - With snow falling
lightly and crowds of spectators packed along the sidewalks of downtown
Anchorage, 57 mushers and their dog teams started the 48th Iditarod
Trail Sled Dog Race on Saturday.
The 11-mile trot through Alaska's biggest city was merely ceremonial,
intended as a low-stress event where mushers could mingle with Iditarod
fans. Timed competition for the 1,000-mile race is set to begin Sunday
afternoon from a frozen lake in Willow, a community north of Anchorage,
and the winner is expected at the finish line in Nome about nine days
after that.
For racer Sean Underwood, Saturday’s pageantry was anything but routine.
Underwood, a 28-year-old from Atlanta, is a dog handler working for
four-time champion Jeff King. At the start line on Saturday, he found
himself in his boss’s snowboots. King was knocked out of competition
Monday night by emergency surgery for a perforated intestine; Underwood,
who had been planning to race his first Iditarod next year, got special
permission to run King’s team to Nome.
"It's been a pretty wild week," said Underwood, whose Saturday morning
preparations were interrupted several times by reporters seeking
interviews.
He said the deep snow on the trail this year is likely to slow the pace
and give lots of opportunities for rest, but he has few expectations
beyond that.
"I'll figure that out in about 10 days," he said. "I feel like I’m about
as prepared as you can be with five days' notice."
Another unexpected feature of this year's race is a special focus on
preventing the spread of disease, which the race managers are
undertaking as the novel coronavirus epidemic spreads. Although no cases
have been reported yet in Alaska, race officials have received special
briefings from state officials.
In at least one Native village along the race trail, Koyuk, residents
were worried about Iditarod crowds bringing in the coronavirus, said
four-time champion Martin Buser.
"Once we get there, hopefully, their fears of spreading the virus have
ebbed a little bit," he said.
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Musher Jessie Royer, bib 31, who finished in third place in the 2019
race, steers her sled down a hill in Anchorage during the ceremonial
start of the 2020 Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, Alaska, U.S. March
7, 2020. REUTERS/Yereth Rosen
Running water and wastewater-treatment services are not always
available in some parts of rural Alaska, but Buser said he tries to
demonstrate good hygiene as much as possible along the Iditarod
Trail.
"You will see me doing dishes anyway, anywhere there is running
water," he said. "I will continue doing that, not just for myself
but for the people watching."
Concerns about communicable diseases are part of the history of the
Iditarod Trail. The race, which has been run since 1973,
commemorates a 1925 rescue mission that sent life-saving diphtheria
medicine by sled-dog relay to Nome.
Among this year's field are mushers from Norway, including 2018
champion Joar Leifseth Ulsom, Italy, Canada and Denmark.
The winner will receive a prize of about $55,000 and a new pickup
truck. The monetary prize is smaller than in past years; the
Iditarod has lost several corporate sponsors, a trend for which
animal-rights activists take credit. Groups such as People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals have condemned the Iditarod as cruel.
There was a group of local PETA activists holding protest signs at
the race start line on Saturday. There was also a counter-protest.
Anchorage mural painter Richard "Ziggy" Zeigler, wearing a big fur
hat, stood in front of the PETA group and repeatedly called out:
"Support the Iditarod! Ask PETA to go home!"
(Reporting by Yereth Rosen; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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