For Mushers Who Know Real-Life Struggle, Iditarod is Only Part of a Bigger Journey


It’s been a week of racing for mushers in the Iditarod, and those in the middle of the pack are struggling. Though, it’s for a variety of different reasons. For some, the difficulty is the race itself, but for others, it’s the challenges inside the lives they’re away from while out on the trail.

In the bright mid-day sun, Jason Mackey is trying to fit someone else’s discarded green runners onto his sled.

“And I didn’t send plastic to here. I don’t have anything ’til I get to the coast, so I’m rummaging through the garbage pile.”

With a cigarette clamped at the side of his mouth, Mackey is frustrated to find himself in the middle of the pack arriving into Galena.

“24 hours ago I thought, ‘ya know what, I really got a shot at the last 15.’ ”

Now, that seems like wishful thinking. Nothing’s gone particularly wrong for Mackey, but he never trained his dogs for a race where everyone seems to be pushing at a record-setting tempo.

“It’s unbelievable the pace that’s being set, and is continuing to be set right across. I’ve said for the last few years, this thing’s turning into a long-distance sprint race.”

In spite of what feels like an aggressive schedule, Mackey feels like he’s continually getting passed, and so is cutting his rests a little shorter.

“I mean, I don’t know what else to do. Come to 50th? With that being said, man, I gotta get to boogying.”

At this point he puts his full attention toward the sled.

Cody Strathe in Galena
In Galena, Cody Strathe prepares to leave the checkpoint at the conclusion of his mandatory, 8-hour Yukon layover. Photo: Zachariah Hughes, KSKA/Alaska Public Media.

Another musher finding the field more competitive than expected is rookie Cody Strathe, who arrived 29th into Galena.

“I mean, to be in the top 30 would be a miracle this year with the amount of teams. So if I can stick in the top 30, that would be awesome.”

Strathe was hoping to be rookie of the year, but there’s a strong Norwegian, Geir Hjelvik, staying stubbornly ahead of him.

“I’ve never seen that person, but they’re ahead of me, they have been the whole time.”

For others, the biggest challenge in this middle chunk of the trail is the physical toll it starts taking. That’s especially true for Karin Hendrickson, who was hit by a car in 2014 during fall training and is still recovering.

“I have to stay on top of the pain medication, which is hard, because it’s starting to make me throw up, so I’m dealing with that a little bit. But if I don’t take it, then it gets to the point where I’m really not that functional. So I’m just sort of balancing a few different things for me, physically.”

Hendrickson is running a team with just two dogs that have ever been to Nome before, and her goal is just getting the others trained up. She’s treating this as a year to rebuild and recuperate, even if that means moving over a thousand cold and icy miles with very little rest.

That’s the case for DeeDee Jonrowe, as well. She’s not physically recuperating, but using the focus and solitude of the trail to recover from a year in which her mother passed just a month after her home burned to the ground during the Sockeye fire.

“I’ve had a bad year, I lost everything I own, and chose these dogs over everything I own. And faced with that, this is what I took: my dogs.”

Jonrowe is having trouble fixing a runner and gets a little help from Tore Albrigtsen, who’s camping next to her.

She is exhausted and hungry, but signs autographs and chats amicably in spite of it. She didn’t train to compete for a top spot this year, just to be alone with her dogs to clear her head.

“I’ve struggled plenty, I know how to struggle.” “So this is easy then?” “Compared to what I’ve been through the last few years, this is a piece of cake.”

And with that, Jonrowe heads off to try and dry her large pink coat in a boiler room.

Did you enjoy this Iditarod 2016 story?

Consider supporting our work by becoming a one-time or recurring donor.

Scroll to Top