Eye on the Trail: Iditarod 53 – Flattest But Hardest
Between the Musher Banquet in Anchorage where start order is determined and the Finisher’s Banquet in Nome where stories are shared and mushers are honored,
Between the Musher Banquet in Anchorage where start order is determined and the Finisher’s Banquet in Nome where stories are shared and mushers are honored,
The 2025 special awards for the Iditarod 53 were presented to the deserving mushers at the prestigious Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race awards banquet
Rookie Iditarod musher Ebbe Pedersen (bib #5) of Alta, Norway, is the final musher to reach Nome today at 1:40 a.m. with 12 dogs in
Dane Baker and Ebbe Pedersen arrived in Nome early this morning a few hours after the Finisher’s Banquet wrapped up. They will be honored for
Rookie Iditarod musher, Jenny Roddewig (bib #10), of Fairbanks, Alaska scratched at 5:50 a.m. today at the White Mountain checkpoint in the best interest
Calvin Daugherty of Eagle River moved with his family to Alaska from Florida so his father could pursue his Iditarod dream. He began helping his
What makes Iditarod fun for spectators are the small mysterious elements that today’s technology can’t unravel. As Keaton Loebrich and Emily Ford approached Nome, their
Iditarod rookie Samantha LaLonde (bib #3) of Farmington Hills, Michigan, won Rookie of the Year when she and her team crossed under the Burled
Anna Berington completed her 13th Iditarod in 12 days, 13 hours and 6 minutes with 11 dogs in harness. Her previous best finish came in
Matthew Failor picked up his son Theo somewhere along Front Street and carried him into the chute to the finish line behind 7 dogs. Failor
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