New record set in human-powered Iditarod
Craig Medred |
Mar 06, 2010
Craig Medred photos
Tracey Petervary
When she labored to push her heavily loaded bicycle up a steep section of the Iditarod Trail coming off the Skwentna River in the Alaska Range, she smiled. As the Iditarod Trail Invitational pushoton wandered in the blowing snow trying to find the buried trail in the not-so-happy Happy Valley, she smiled. When at last the ragtag gang of pedalers from around the globe turned bike-pushers all found better trail along Pass Creek on the last climb to 3,350-foot Rainy Pass, she smiled, chatted and joked with those all around. It was the same during group bushwhacks through the willow thickets that covered the trail, or fighting through the ground blizzard at the top of the Pass, or wading through the open waters of Pass Fork on the other side, or dancing nervously across the sketchy ice bridges that were the only way across Dalzell Creek down in the gorge of the same name, or when trying to trace the scratch marks of snowmachine skis which were pretty much the only indication of where the trail was on the even sketchier ice of the wide Tatina River leading into Rohn on the north side of the Alaska Range.
Women's record holder Tracey Petervary fights her way up from the Skwentna River.
By the time she left Rohn, she was smiling again, and smile she did across the rough, largely snowless Farewell Burn and on to the finish line of the Invitational in McGrath -- 350 miles from the beginning in Knik. And there the positive attitude clearly paid off, for Petervary claimed a new women's record for what is arguably the toughest winter race in Alaska. Participants in the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, or at least the leaders, generally get a packed and well-marked trail to follow. Not so for the Invitational bikers and runners. The trail they follow is only marginally marked, and if it is packed, it is only because they got lucky and a snowmachine happened to go by. Because of bad trail this year, there was a lot of bike pushing. Racers largely pushed for the 30 miles from the Finger Lake checkpoint to Perrin's Rainy Pass Lodge, and then pushed again for 35 miles through Rainy Pass to Rohn. Still, Petervary made it to McGrath in 4 days, 18 hours and 53 minutes unassisted. The previous race record of 5 days, 7 hours, 48 minutes was held by Kathi Merchant, wife of race founder Bill. She was accompanied by her husband when she set the record, although there remains considerable debate as to whether that was an asset or a liability. The consensus seems to be that she was pacing him far more than he paced her.
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