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John Balzar - Yukon Alone: The Worlds Toughest Adventure Race

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John Balzar Yukon Alone: The Worlds Toughest Adventure Race
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    Yukon Alone: The Worlds Toughest Adventure Race
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Yukon Alone: The Worlds Toughest Adventure Race: summary, description and annotation

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In the tradition of Into the Wild, John Balzars Yukon Alone is a story of daring and determination in one of natures harshest, loneliest, and most beautiful places.

The Yukon Quest International Sled Dog Race is among the most challenging and dangerous of all the organized sporting events in the world. Every February, a handful of hardy souls sps over two weeks racing sleds pulled by fourteen dogs over 1,023 miles of frozen rivers, icy mountain passes, and spruce forests as big as entire states. Its not unusual for the temperature to drop to 40-below or for the night to be seventeen hours long.
Why would anyone want to run this race? To find out, John Balzar moved to Alaska months before The Quest began and he spent time in the homes of many of the mushers. Balzar then spent many days and nights on the trail, and the result is a book that not only treats us to a vivid day-by-day account of the grueling race itself but also offers an insightful look at the men and women who have moved to this rugged and beautiful place, often leaving behind comfortable houses and jobs in the lower forty-eight states for the sense of exhilaration they find in their new lives. Readers will also be fascinated by Balzars account of what goes into the training and care of the majestic dogs who pull the sleds and whose courage, strength, and devotion make them the true heroes of this story.
For anyone captivated by the wild north country, this riveting tale of courage and adventure will inspire and entertain.

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Table of Contents With My Thanks Behind the scenes there is one - photo 1
Table of Contents



With My Thanks
Behind the scenes, there is one man who holds the Yukon Quest together. Without race manager Leo Olesen, in Fairbanks, the race would have withered away years ago. Every participant, every volunteer, and every spectator who stood on a riverbank and watched in wonder at the passing of dog teams owes Leo first and most. He gave me the chance. I salute him. Well done, friend. That hardly says enough.
Deb Ryan in Fairbanks and Dee Balsam in Whitehorse ran the Quest offices. To appreciate them as I do, you would have to see the impossible tasks demanded of these women. Burt Zielinski pioneered the blood-screening study that will save the lives of dogs. And we tore the hell out of a few good saloons, too, didnt we, buddy?
Dave Arlan of KFAR Fairbanks shared the thankless chore as press liaison, not to mention all those hours on the traila double rum and Coke for my friend, please. Thanks, also, to John McWhorter of KUAC and Bob Eley of the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner.
Yukon board president Tom Randall was a lightning rod for controversy, and he dreamed up the nutty idea of making me press liaison, but ingratitude is not in my nature. Thanks, Tom.
Peacemakers Rob Touey and Tina Sebert spanned the biggest gulf of allbetween the Fulda journalists and the race. Big Al Hallman taught me, among other things, the wisdom of getting the thermometer warm before sticking it up the ass of a sled dog. Larry Cowboy Smith turned me loose with his dogs that first time. Kathy Swenson taught me grit. I tip my hat to race judge Ty Dugger and radioman Brad Brooks, who got us down the path safely and laughing.
A hundred race volunteers added up to a thousand kindnesses. I say thanks to one, Tracie Harris of Whitehorse, but I mean it to all.
It seems long ago, but my first call was to Shannon Walley. Thanks for saying Come on up.
At home at the Los Angeles Times , Scott Kraft gave me the opportunity and encouragement to try. Kit Rachlis made me believe that trying would be worth it. When it counted, he rolled up his sleeves and made sure of it. Two pathfinders, David Lamb and David Shaw, inspired me. Anna Virtue, as always, knew where to find the answers.
And where would I be without the professionals? Editor Tracy Brown believed in this story and in me. My agent, Bonnie Nadell, ran in lead for so many long miles from the first day until the last. My thanks to these two are not casual. I mean to shout them out. I never met Bonnie Thompson, but we lived together for a while in the editing of this manuscript. Ill never write another sentence without thinking how she would make it right.
Last, but by no means least: This story really began in the Brooks Range Mountains. Macgill Adams is the finest wilderness guide in Alaska and the most naturally gifted storyteller Ive ever met. His tales of dog mushing lit my imagination. And he was the first to say, You ought to check out the Quest someday.

In memory of Benson. For all those good years, he pulled his share of the load. And for Prince, who tried.
Order of Finish


SCRATCHED REACHED Cor Guimond Dawson City Yukon Fortymile Tony Blanford - photo 2
SCRATCHED REACHED Cor Guimond Dawson City Yukon Fortymile Tony Blanford - photo 3
SCRATCHEDREACHED
Cor Guimond, Dawson City, YukonFortymile
Tony Blanford, Two Rivers, Alaska*Stewart River
Dieter Dolif, Trebel, GermanyStewart River
John Nash, Nenana, Alaska*Stepping Stone
Terry McMullin, Eagle, Alaska*Stepping Stone
Dan Turner, Haines, AlaskaPelly Crossing
Jimmy Hendrick, Denali National Park, AlaskaPelly Crossing
Stan Njootli, Old Crow, Yukon*Pelly Crossing
Mike King, Salcha, AlaskaPelly Crossing
Ned Cathers, Whitehorse, YukonPelly Crossing
Kurt Smith, North Pole, AlaskaMcCabe Creek
Michael Hyslop, Grizzy Valley, Yukon*Carmacks
* rookie


Happy endings
Aliy Zirkle grew into a champion as well as a crowd pleaser. She advanced to a third place finish in 1999. Then in February 2000, running some of the same dogs she started with in this story, Aliy became the first woman to win the Yukon Quest. Her time through deep snow was ten days, twenty-two hours, and one minute. That was a half-hour ahead of Thomas Tetz, her former rookie colleague. Her prize was $30,000. The Golden Harness Award went to her lead dog, Pedro, along with the traditional invitation to join the humans for a steak dinner at the finishers banquet.
Aliys zest for the wild, her fortitude, and now her victory, proved even more inspirational than I might have guessed. After publication of this book, I visited fourteen cities to speak about the Quest and the people of the Far North who I so admire. Time and again, I found myself approached at the end of a presentation by young women, and twice by young men, whose love of the outdoors and dogs had found a dream. They were bound for Alaska or the Yukon, they said. Just as soon as they finished school. Or when they turned eighteen. Or as soon as they could earn the money. They spoke about Aliy with kindred admiration. By herexample, they saw the boundless possibilities of freedom and simplicity.
The eyes of these young people blazed with a kind of ambition that does not rate nearly enough attention in this age of obsessive acquisitiveness. I wish these young people godspeed. Be safe. Follow your heart. Answer the call. Go. Why do I say these things? Because I met another kind of person in my travels. I could spot them by a piece of caribou jewelry, a native ribbon on their coats, their well-worn northern hats, or maybe just by their knowing nods. One woman had driven eight hours to listen to me talk about the Quest. Another lifted his jacket to display his belt buckle. It read: Iditarod Finisher. Another showed me the scar left on his leg by a snow hook after a sled accident. These were people who once had heard the call, and answered. They had retreated now, and settled down to different lives Outside. But their experiences in the Far North shined in their memories. They had spent glorious months or years in Fairbanks or Whitehorse or on a riverbank in the bush gnawing on game meat. They had seen the curtains of colors in the sky and had felt the bite of the Arctic wind. Back then, some called them foolish. But they know they were wise. Their hearts have told them so ever since.
The Far North makes the blood race not only in anticipation but also in remembrance.
Elsewhere along the trail of the 2000 Quest, Frank Turner finished third and kept his record as the only musher to enter every race since its inception. Jimmy Hendrick decided to try his luck at the Iditarod, but at the last moment changed his mind. He realized that his true love was traveling the frozen, out-of-the-way route of the Quest. He finished eighth. Jerry Louden was eleventh. Rusty Hagan came in fourteenth and was the choice of other mushers for the Sportsmanship Award. Dave Dalton entered and scratched. Paddy Santucci was sidelined.
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