Friday, March 20, 2026

Iditarod: Blizzard at White Mountain


I thought I was done posting about this year's Iditarod. Jessie Holmes had repeated as champion, Jesse Terry got Rookie of the Year, and the remaining teams were either at or near White Mountain, the last major checkpoint before the finish line. Since my last post, six more teams crossed the finish line - rookie Sam Martin, Josi (Thyr) Shelley, Bailey Vitello, Gabe Dunham, Rohn Buser, and Chad Stoddard - for a total of 20 finishers. 

However, that's when a ground storm blew up between White Mountain and Safety, the penultimate checkpoint, with winds up to 60+ mph. Adam Lindenmuth was the last musher out of Elim on his way to White Mountain but faced a strong headwind and rested his team for several hours out on the ice before he got moving again, often walking out in front of the team for a major portion of that stretch. The team eventually made it to solid ground before resting some more. Ultimately, the deteriorating conditions forced him to activate the emergency SOS on his GPS tracker to request assistance, automatically scratching him from the race. He eventually made it to White Mountain, accompanied by rescue snowmobiles in front and behind his team. 

Nine more teams, including the two Mackeys, are currently holed up in White Mountain. Seven of the teams are rookies. They all had decided to stay at the checkpoint beyond their mandatory 8-hour rest due to the storm conditions, and race official encouraged them to stay there overnight until the storm blows past. The forecast for today has the winds calming down to 10 to 20 mph.

The official Iditarod race standings haven't been updated since 11 pm (Alaska time) last night, so it's not yet apparent if any teams have left the checkpoint or are still huddled down, riding out the storm, or even if the remaining race has been officially cancelled due to the worsening conditions. 

If the race is still on, it's also unclear in what order the teams will leave White Mountain. First in/first out? If so, separated by how much time? The first of the nine remaining mushers, Kevin Hansen, arrived there some 15 hours ahead of the last, Sam Paperman, and Hansen would understandably not want to forfeit a 15-hour lead. Or will each team leave whenever they feel they're up to the challenge? Or will there be some other method to the unofficial restart?

No comments:

Post a Comment