At 8:45 pm last night, Denmark's Mille Porsild literally blew right through the Rohn checkpoint (mile 188); her official rest time at Rohm is listed as "0h 0m". She's officially the first team out of Rohm and in first place at the moment in the 2026 Iditarod.
The official Iditarod standings show Paige Drobney leaving Rohn some seven minutes after Porsild's fly-by, but Drobney's social media feed disputes that, saying Paige left first. In either case, they left within minutes of each other. Jessie Holmes, the first to arrive at Rohn, took a four-hour rest and left about 30 minutes after Drobney, followed by Ryan Redington, who took only a 17-minutes rest. Matt Hall and Michelle Phillips were the next two out, both also on short rests.
Overall, the race is incredibly close. Right now (5:30 am Alaska time), there are 23 teams on the long, 75-mile stretch between Rohn and Nikolai, the next checkpoint (mile 263). Six teams are still in Rohn, and six more are enroute there from Finger Lake.
Drobney was last reported to be taking a probable four-hour rest at Bear Creek Cabin, about 30 miles from Nikolai. Holmes is camped somewhere nearby, and several other teams, including Porsild, Redington, and Phillips, are camped about 50 miles from Nikolai.
Billionaire donor Kjell Rokke is among the teams out of Rohn, but thank dog, natural selection has knocked him down to 18th place. "Expedition class" racer Steve Curtis is dead last, way back between the Skwenta (mile 83) and Finger Lake (mile 123) checkpoints. Rookie musher Jaye Foucher of New Hampshire made it to Rainy Pass (mile 153) after travelling through an extended wind storm before announcing her scratch; other than "personal reasons," the exact rationale for her decision has not been announced. Her dogs were all in good health.
From Rohn, the trail follows the south fork of the Kuskokwim River, where freezing water flowing over a layer of ice can be a hazard. About 45 miles from Rohn, the path leaves the river and passes into the Farewell Burn, created by a wildfire in 1976.
Nikolai (population 89), the next checkpoint, is an Athabaskan settlement on the banks of the Kuskokwim and the first Native American village used as a checkpoint. The arrival of the mushers is their largest social events of the year.
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