Latest Newsletter
Transcription
Latest Newsletter
PO Box 344 Kotzebue AK (907) 442-6034 ed@editen.com JUNE 2006 Post Race Issue 2006 Dear Friends, I hope this summer finds you all shedding your winter layers as we finally have after getting a late snowfall the first week of June. Winter didn’t want to leave us this year, perhaps it was still bursting with all we accomplished. I hope you enjoy reading about our racing kennel in this fourth issue of our newsletter. Iten Racing Kennel BY RUTH ITEN Many of you will recognize the picture on the front of the mushers card we had printed this year. It was taken at the finish line of the Kuskokwim 300 in January 2004, the year Ed won the race. This is one of my favorite pictures of Ed. The creases around his eyes show how tired he is, the smile shows how elated he is at finally winning after trying since 1993. I think the only other photos we have of him smiling so big are those from the Iditarod finish line in 2005 when he came in second. You’d think that maybe he’d relax a bit after doing so well but that second place finish has just made him work harder. First place is his goal now more than ever. The reporters and race fans knew Ed would be driven this year. Our Iditarod preparations were very hectic with the extra time Ed spent with the press. He aired on Alaska Public Radio’s Talk of Alaska, he was featured in the Anchorage Daily News Special Iditarod section (if you missed this article it is on our web site), a prime time German TV network filmed a documentary on him, and before both starts you could barely talk to him he was so busy talking into the microphone. All this attention didn’t take his mind off the race, however. He did an excellent job and finished seventh this year. He’s written his account of the race for you in this newsletter. As this summer’s pups are born we look forward to another year of raising, training, running and racing long distance sled dogs. On August third Ed and I will celebrate our twentieth wedding anniversary. Our courtship was spent sharing the runners of one sled, traveling with all sixteen dogs Ed owned. Thanks to your support we’ve built a successful racing kennel from these humble beginnings. Thank you and God bless, Ed and Ruth, Katie and Quinn The Team This year’s Iditarod Team consisted of lots of veterans. They were: Hoover, Piker, Jeb, Ona, Becky, Zoi, Guinnea, Bugs Aaron, Ford, Cool, Fisher and Arrow. Art, Rat and Flap were new additions as three year olds. For a description of these dogs and how they preformed see our web site. Quinn and I graduated an outstanding group of one year olds this spring. Cliff Hyatt, one of our Iditarod start regulars from H.Watt and Scott, got to see a training run in action when he ran a chase sled with seven dogs behind my team in April. His friend from Fair- banks, Bill Rogers, rode in my sled. I was re-named The General after we got home – training yearlings takes a kind of military approach. They respond best to firm consistency. Ed got some good running in on the pups. We kept an awesome selection and were able to sell some nice ones as well. Tollef ran a team consisting of two and three year olds in the Noatak 120, the Iditarod, and the Kobuk 440. Some of his team dogs have been sold; others are waiting Boomer, PeeWee’s pup to join Ed’s Iditarod team next year. Three of the brown Pee Wee pups seen in the picture of Quinn and his puppy palace in the Fall 2003 newsletter have become major players in Tollef’s team. Next year Cargo, Boomer and Scrunch will be ready to run in the race team. 2005-2006 Races “Overall I was pleased with our race” Noatak 120 For the first year in several the weather was cold enough in December for a safe trail up the Noatak River for the Noatak 120, a Kotzebue Dog Mushers Association (KDMA) sponsored race. Ed in his race bib at the 2006 Iditarod start. The teams left Kotzebue in ice fog for the five hour run to Noatak the morning of New Years Eve. After his four hour layover Ed was the first to leave the village located high on the river bank. Ed’s fresh eighteen dog team stormed out of the village. His sled hit a snow berm on the ice covered street and flipped. He drug a city block behind the team while the checkers chased him. Once upright, Ed kept his first place lead over Joe Garnie by just minutes. Both teams arrived back to Kotzebue in time to see the midnight firework show. 2006 Iditarod by Ed Iten “In this competitive field a few hours can represent a few places” The results from this year’s Iditarod were good, but still shy of my expectations for me and the team. I set an aggressive schedule and felt good about the dog’s performance. We fed Momentum Premium dog feed with good results this year. The dogs all ate well, had good energy and showed no signs of diarrhea; the bane of long distance racing. My first bout of pilot error occurred in driving the team from Ophir to Cripple and catching up to the trail breakers. Besides taking our 24 hour rest at 50 below, the soft trail we endured firmed up later and increased traveling speeds of teams behind us by 2 ½ - 3 hours. The second mistake was to break the river in half instead of breaking at Galena and Nulato. The deep drifting trail and a windy rest at Bishops Rock took a lot of energy out of the team, requiring an additional 4 hour break at Old Woman’s cabin on the run from Kaltag to Unalakleet. I was able to secure a 7th place finish by driving through Shaktoolik to Koyuk in one 100 mile run, and then through Elim to White Mountain for a second 100 mile run. Overall I was pleased with our race. In this competitive field a few hours can represent a few places. To be able to reflect on time cost or spent inefficiently is a luxury we don’t always have. There will always be those races where the wheels fall off and you are left wondering what went wrong. And yes, the schedule which I made before the race was about right. Jeff finished within minutes of it. Kuskokwim 300 The Kusko was a mixed bag this year. Ed entered the race with good training miles but not tough ones due to lack of snow. He felt that the effects of this showed up around the 200 mile mark with several dogs developing leg cramps. He managed a fifth place finish and a pay check, but not the results he was driving for. Ed leaving the yard to go to the Iditarod, pulling his race sled with him into town Page 2 Iten Racing Kennel Kobuk 440 We had a perfect trail for the Kobuk 440 this year. Spring lasted forever in our part of the world. The field was the most impressive it’s been since the late eighties. Teams left Kotzebue in a mass start and settled into traveling mode by Noorvik. The race doesn’t usually heat up until the upriver loop and it was the same this year. This year Lance Mackey took the lead in the upriver loop. After that the question was, did he cut too much rest to take this lead? Will the teams behind him catch up? Ed finished second 14 minutes behind Mackey and 10 minutes in front of Jeff King. Besides these top three finishers, Kotzebue and village people were excited to watch Mitch Seavey, Martin Buser, John Baker, and several other well known teams pass through. Stretching their Wings Kate had a great run with the two year olds in the 2005 Jr. Iditarod. This year Tollef ran the two year olds in the Iditarod and Kate spent her time completing her ninth and tenth grades. Her A average shows how well she did. Besides working on schoolwork, Kate and her brother went downhill skiing for their first time at Alyeska with friends of the family in February. In March Kate volunteered at the Jr. Iditarod, helped both our teams at the Iditarod start Kate skiing at Aleyska and finish, and traveled with Jennifer Johnston to Ambler, Shungnak and Kobuk teaching cross-country skiing to school children. Quinn running a team to go sheefishing down on Kobuk Lake Quinn set his sights on the 2007 Jr. Iditarod early in last year’s training season. He helped me train the yearlings all winter. He will get his pick of the best two year olds from this group for his team. I don’t think we can call him The General as by rights there is only one and that is me. Like his sister, Quinn has become a competent dog driver and trainer. New Additions to the Farm Since our last newsletter I’ve acquired a goat from our neighbor. In 40 January cold she gave birth to Nugak (caribou fawn in Inupiaq). “Nugget” is now almost as big as her mom and we’re back up to a quart and a half of milk a day—yummmmm. The guys kept asking for eggs so this spring we got eleven pullets from Fairbanks. Hopefully they’ll produce this fall. Keeping eleven chicks in a box next to the wood stove all break up was no easy feat. Ed rose to the occasion this spring and built a very spacious chicken coop. I’m thinking the chickens brought back pleasant childhood memories for Ed, the longer they lived in our kitchen the more time he spent watching them and reading up on breeds and care. And, yes, the horses are all well. There are some new pictures of them on our website. Iten Racing Kennel Iten Racing Kennel T-SHIRTS FOR SALE color: green price: $20.00 includes shipping Send check and size to me at: PO Box 344 Kotzebue, AK 99752 Page 3 Thank You, Tollef! After five years with our kennel Tollef has decided to move on. I’m glad that he’s not moving far. This fall when he returns from set netting in Kodiak he’ll run John Baker’s two year olds. I’ve already told him that Sunday dinner at the Iten’s is a must. During his stay here not only did Tollef become a sled Tollef dog racer and trainer, racing in two Iditarods, two Kobuk 440s, two Noatak 120s and the Knik 200, he also became an experienced outdoorsman. Tollef helped Ed cut our major training trail into the Squirrel Moun- tains where they spent much time snowshoeing, camping and traveling. When Ed was off working, Tollef and the children hunted our fall caribou. He also was Ed’s major helper setting and checking our sheefish nets. Tollef learned how to build sleds from Ed and this last year he kept the alpine snow machine going with his newfound mechanic’s skills. Whoever replaces Tollef will have the opportunity to do all he has done. This person needs to be dedicated to living in the arctic—cutting wood for heat, hauling drinking water from the creek, and depending on a dog team for work and transportation as much as for sport. It’s a wonderful opportunity for the right person. If you know anyone with these interests please have them contact us. Iten Kennels P.O. Box 344 Kotzebue, AK 99752 To: Prime Sponsor Lynden Air Cargo Corporate Sponsors H. Watt and Scott Contractors Dr. Robert Mauer D.D.S. White Mountain Sponsors Momentum Dog Food 7-Up Alaska Dr. Tim Hunt, Alaska Urological Associates Drake Construction U.I.C. Ophir Sponsors NW Arctic Borough Tiaga Harness Dr. George Rhyneer Rainy Pass Sponsors Alaska Serigraphics Printer’s Ink The Steele/McVey Family Chukchota Store Katie & Jim Walker THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS Iten Racing Kennel Page 4
Similar documents
respect - Iditarod
qualities, actions or achievements. The 6th trait of Iditarod is “R” for Respect. Jeff King is a musher respected by his peers and Iditarod Race Fans alike. Some respect King because he has won num...
More information