Sunday, December 05, 2010
Saturday, October 09, 2010
2010 Mushing History Conference
http://sunhusky.blogspot.com/2010/09/musher-history-conference-quick-peek.html for a sampling of my photos and http://www.northernlightmedia.com/2848/2010-mushing-history-conference/ for Helen's recap (with some of my photos)
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Iditarod Volunteer Picnic and Musher Sign-up for 2011
As you can see from my first look down the parking lot, things were a looking kinda gray early on but the rain held off.
I don't know which Seavey was driving this, but will guess maybe Dallas and Jen. Posted with a nod and thanks to Rod Udd for his support of the race and mushing in general.
A picture of Barb Redington taking a picture.
Sign-up table. Julie Busch, right, is media contact for us media types during the race but does whatever she's asked to put her hand to.
A new piece of paper greeted mushers at the table, a request that they submit recipes for an Iditarod recipe book.
Melissa Owens
Deby Trosper, right, helps set up the wine bottles for sale. One bottle per customer, btw, and no drinking it on the premises.
Mushers from last year are all pictured on bottles for purchase by fans.
Okay, okay, not a musher, but the flower bed was looking good.
I got there sorta early, so was able to watch banners being hung and tables and chairs being set out.
Rob Johnson, a virtual friend until today when we finally "officially" met. I know I've met scads of folks in passing but it doesn't always take, so always nice to have an "official" meeting.
Hey, why isn't' my book on the same shelf as Lance's? Yeah, I know. Dumb question.
It was a little short on star-power early on, but Dick Mackey's appearance remedied that fast.
Theresa Daily multi-tasking, showing off her duct tape/blue tarp name tag while playing desk for Dick to sign an autograph for a fan.
Lance was "The Man in Black" for the day.
Tonya, in pink, paying Newton's entry fee.
Lance doing his best imitation of Newton, complete with "Yo, mon", as he turns in Newton's paperwork.
Grandma Tonya
One of the new things the ITC did this year was set up tables for the mushers to sit at and sign autographs, a good idea in my book. Here's Lance before the rush.
GB Jones is back
Karin Hendrickson
Karin's leg was sporting an unwanted attachment.
Bonnie Foster has hosted Sebastian at her home for the last few years during Iditarod days as well as the occasional jaunt that takes him through the area.
KTUU does a film interview with Sebastian while Chas looks on.
Dallas and Jen Seavey having lunch. What made Jen's presence all the more impressive is that today was her due date for their first baby! No, no labor pains while the picnic was going on, so they're still waiting.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Saturday, June 19, 2010
Seavey's Wild Ride Show, Anchorage
Since Rosemary Dunn wasn't able to come out and have her birthday lunch the day the rest of us met for mine, Pat Schue and I went into the big city to meet her and check out the dinner and show at Seavey's Wild Ride in Anchorage. http://www.ididaride.com/tours/anchorage/wildride.htm
After a delicious dinner, we started by cuddling puppies.
Eric Rogers is part of the show and one of his pre-show jobs is to wrangle puppies. Gee, what a tough job, Eric!
I eventually wound up with this puppy, but it was pretty entertaning upfront, too, playing with buddies and a chew rope of sorts.
Meet Buddy, a HUGE Malamute who is a star of the show.
Dallas Seavey does the intro for the show and introduces Eric, who'll be its MC.
I eventually wound up with this puppy, but it was pretty entertaning upfront, too, playing with buddies and a chew rope of sorts.
Meet Buddy, a HUGE Malamute who is a star of the show.
Dallas Seavey does the intro for the show and introduces Eric, who'll be its MC.
Here comes Eric!
Dressed for the part.
Buddy makes his entrance.
Buddy quickly shows off his mushing skills, on the runners, not in front of the sled.
The running gag of the show is a competition between a female and male musher, hence this sign.
Here's the woman musher representative, Kay Burge, a Jr. Iditarod musher who has been mushing since she was five. She's now sixteen.
And for the men, Dallas Seavey.
Look carefully and you'll see the dogs are passing each other as the race in opposite directions. One of the things that impressed me was that they were really flying around the course, too, not just trotting or loping. And, yes, some of these dogs are off Dallas' Iditarod team, plus some future members he has there socializing and getting used to the idea that just about anything can happen while in harness and to take it in stride.
As you can see, Dallas was working it, not just going through the motions. That impressed me.
They were even running and kicking.
I was impressed, too, that tho' the show was educational -- remember, many of the show guests are tourists and this may be their first exposure to the concept of mushing -- it was humorous, too. Hey, Mitch, you not only raised a darn good musher and one time wannabe-wrestler, you raised a comedian in Dallas! Kay and Dallas sharing a humorous moment here.
Look at the intensity in not just Kay's eyes, but the right dog's eyes. Yes, they were running, not trotting.
A quick demo of just how much weight one sled dog can easily move alone. I cut her off, but that's Kay on the left putting the dog through its paces. As many times as I've seen these dogs in action, you'd think their power would be ho-hum to me by now, but it never fails to impress me.
Daisy-Duke patiently waits while Eric fixes the various pieces of mushing regalia that "Bubba" has mistakenly placed on wrong parts of the dog. In the process, you see various parts of the dogs' gear and Eric is describing what it is used for.
Hugo, who starred in "Snow Buddies" is part of the show and used to demo how obedience training is done and incorporated into dog handling.
I think Eric said the command for this stunt was "pawing". The dog puts its paws atop something and walks along the item.
Barrels were set up in a course and using "gee" and "haw", the mushers worked their teams through them using nothing but the verbal commands.
Since many of the guests have never seen a 16-dog team, one of the things they do is hook one up in front of their eyes and then ask the dog to pull the dog truck out of the arena. It's amazing how quickly they get that truck (it's the one Mitch won in '04, btw) with a dog box on it moving and here you see Dallas making a running leap into the cab so he can apply the brake once they're out the gate.
Buddy is back. His calmness is amazing. It's obvious he's happy with the concept of not only having his own team of Alaskan Huskies, but seems to think it's the way it should be.
They exit at a full bore run, btw, and caught a glimpse of Dallas helping snag them as they hit the staging area.
Speaking of the staging area, we hit it again after the show for some more puppy cuddling. Man, if only I could fall asleep this easily in any number of odd positions.
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