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MUSHING IN
ALASKA
From
necessity to
recreation,
mushing has
been a part
of Alaska's
culture
since the
15th
century.
Today,
mushing is
primarily a
competitive
sport, and
the dogs are
kept in
shape during
the summer
using
wheel-pulled
carts. |
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Alaskans have
been racing dogs
since the early
1900's. The All
Alaska Sweepstakes
race began in 1908
traveling between
Nome and Candle.
Today, the most
famous race in the
sport, the Iditarod,
takes place every
March. It begins in
Anchorage and ands
Nome, following an
old supply route. It
is said to have been
inspired in part, by
the famous Serum Run
of 1925.
Nome was stricken
with a diphtheria
epidemic in 1925.
Isolated by winter
wilderness with no
feasible way of
getting in or out of
Nome, the residents
sent an urgent plea
for help via
wireless
transmitter. The
only possible way to
get the serum to
Nome was by dog
sled.
Mushers departed
from Nome and Nenana
and relayed the
serum from one team
to the next until
they were able to
rendezvous 250 miles
from Nome. Leonhard
Seppala, the
greatest musher at
the time, helped
deliver 300,000
units of serum in
time to save the
village.
Today, mushing is
mostly a
recreational sport.
Some mush for sheer
pleasure while
others compete in a
wide variety of
races. Races range
from sprint mushing
to long distance
events such as the
Yukon Quest and
Iditarod. During the
month of March, the
whole state of
Alaska tunes in to
daily updates on the
progress of the
Iditarod racers.
Do you want to try
it?
Princess offers you
many opportunities
to learn about
mushing first hand.
In Denali, we have
teamed up with
three-time Iditarod
winner Jeff King,
for a personal tour
of his homestead and
kennel. You will
also get a chance to
meet his and his
wife, well-known
wildlife artist
Donna Gates King.
The tour can be
booked at the
Outfitter desk at
the Denali Princess
Wilderness Lodge.
During the summer
months, mushers use
wheeled carts to
keep their dogs in
shape for the winter
sporting events. At
the Copper River
Princess Wilderness
Lodge, Princess
offers the
opportunity to learn
about mushing by
actually riding in a
training sled with
real dogs. A local
musher brings his
team right to the
entrance of the
lodge and offers you
the chance to go for
a ride!
The Kenai Princess
Wilderness Lodge
offers an incredible
dogsled adventure
combining a
thrilling helicopter
ride with mushing on
the massive Sargent
Ice field. Your
flight will take you
over the glacial ice
fields nestled in
the Chugach National
Forest only to land
at a remote dogsled
camp on a glacier!
The mushing portion
of the tour features
a top Iditarod team
and last for about
an hour of mushing.
You then helicopter
back down from the
glacier.
There are many ways
to discover the vast
Alaska wilderness
and its unique way
of life. What better
way to learn about
it than from the
back of a sled
piloted by one of
Alaska's great
mushers.