Von joins the team

Around campfires, across dinner tables and at presentations we talked about our 2007 Serum Run experience with many mushing friends. One in particular, Von Martin, listened with keen interest. Von and I share a passion for dogs of the expedition era. He is on a personal pilgrimage to ensure the contribution by these dogs, to the quest of discovery, shall never be forgotten. Currently he is in the process of publishing a book detailing the events of the 1914 Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition, better known as the Shackleton Expedition, as seen through the perspective of one of the heroic sled dogs named Shakespeare. It is appropriately titled A dog called Shakespeare.

With the love of his own sled dogs and his historical interest in expeditions, Von was an ideal candidate for the Serum Run. Striking a deep chord in Von was the fact that while doing research for his book, he flew to Alaska and spent time with Norman Vaughan one of the few survivors of the expedition era. Given all of this, he was easily persuaded to submit an application for the 2009 Serum Run.

October 21st, 2008 Von, Margaret and I received notice our applications had been accepted. Now it was time for him and his wife Judy to figure out how to make it happen. Like Margaret, Von’s time off work would be limited, just enough to do the Serum Run and make the drive to and from Alaska. As a rookie, Von was required to participate in the mandatory shake down run, Margaret and I being finishers were exempt. A huge hurdle was crossed when we got permission to do a shake down run here in Washington State and save Von the trouble of having to go to Alaska a month early.

Throughout fall ATV training Von and I constantly monitored weather reports for the first sign of snow. Usually it comes around the end of November and enough accumulates to safely switch to sleds by the second weekend in December. In lucky years we get it early in November and are on sleds by Thanksgiving. 2008 was shaping up to be a bad year, I actually mowed my lawn around Thanksgiving, not a good sign! It would be another month before we got snow, and in quantities of mass it came! December 18
th a series of storms lined up off the Washington coast and by Sunday December 21st I had 12 inches of snow at my house and the entire Puget Sound region ground to a halt. Ironically, for a couple days I got to fulfill my dream of being able to hook up and run from the dog yard. Of course it was with 4-dog teams, running a 2 mile out and back down a dead end road, but it was sure fun not having to truck the dogs for our first snow outing.

With the sudden accumulation of snow in the Cascades we planned on doing Von’s shake down run over New Years. Accounts of this are in earlier blogs and there is no need to repeat it here. The only thing worth mentioning is we had to delay the shake down as incoming storms over New Years included more snow and sustained winds up to 60 miles an hour, so we postponed it to the MLK holiday weekend and switched locations to Elk River, Idaho.

Coming up next, Nenana bound….

Unending Challenges

From the moment we decided to go, small problems seemed to plague this years Serum Run. A big one was my attitude. Since returning from Iditarod in March of 2008 I was talking the talk of doing the Serum Run, but not really making the preparations. I was not doing any training with the dogs. As mentioned prior, the 2007/2008 season was an exercise in going through the motions of running dogs. It was also a challenging season for snow, too much had fallen and buried trails. Due to poor training conditions the only organized run we did was the Gold Rush Trail Mail Run from which we brought home a case of kennel cough and the finish to our sledding season. With a somewhat lackadaisical attitude we passed through spring and occasional carousel laps to break the monotony of lounging in the yard was the only exercise the dogs received. On July 20th, I weighed everyone and was stunned at how portly they had gotten. This was the slap of reality I needed, it was time to get serious and start conditioning. Immediately we started diets and a loose run routine. Before going to work every Monday and Wednesday and also on Saturdays we’d travel an hour and a half to the foothills of the Olympic Mountains and run a shady gravel road that offered plenty of spring fed water stops. The dogs toughened up fast and by Labor Day weekend we switched to harnesses. I usually take vacation in the fall and when we finished training camp at the end of Sept, they were up to 15 mile runs and all evidence of their leisurely spring had vanished.
Towards the end of summer my list of things to do had gotten long without many completes being scratched off. Included in this were things like servicing the trailer wheel bearings and brakes, later I would learn I should have replaced all the leaf springs too; designing and fabricating a rectangular aluminum replacement to the round bucket style cooker that hogs vital room in the sled bag; inventorying and ordering enough booties to meet the needed 1500 to be sorted, packaged and sent out in drop bags; calculating dog food and snacks; procuring 50 salmon to be cut and packaged for trail snacks; and filling out the detailed Serum Run application to be submitted by the October 1
st deadline; the tasks seemed endless. Another to do was added when an inspection of my sled revealed lots of worn parts that could not take the pounding of another trip to Nome. I called Prairie Built and talked brake bars and brackets, and given the age of my sled it was strongly advised I renew the Aluminum Rex Runners too. When the parts arrived, and to my surprise, it was only necessary to drill a couple holes and all replacement and existing sled parts were transfered to the new runners without a hitch.
Getting time off to do the Serum Run would not be a problem for me as I am entitled by contract to take an annual leave of absence. Margaret was another story. She was only going to be able to take 6 weeks off. This was barely enough time to transport the dogs to Alaska, pack drop bags and complete the Serum Run. If all went according to schedule she would have about 2 days from our arrival in Nome to get home and back to work. She was also on some grant review committee and was going to have to fly down to a meeting soon after our arrival in Alaska. As it worked out, she was able to skip the meeting but spent the entire drive to Alaska and all free time between packing drop bags and training runs writing a grant.

More to come..

Reflections

I must apologize for falling off the radar since returning from Alaska. It was an exhausting trip with a disappointing ending. I mentally placed the whole thing in a box and stuck it up on a shelf.
In June I put together a slide show and did a presentation at the Northwest Sled Dog Association meeting. It helped snap me out of the doldrums so I started writing. It is slow coming and backtracks in time a little but is the course my thought process is traveling.


Reflections

In 1994 I read Gary Paulsen’s Winterdance and hence have been consumed with the notion of a running a team of Samoyeds in Iditarod. Completely addicted, I devoured every book I could find about running “The Race”. While on training runs I would try to imagine the distances, the challenges, the cold, but it was so foreign to my mushing experiences I could never grasp the magnitude. “The Race”, it became a part of my being, my daily thinking, and at night, my dreams. Unfortunately, every dreamer has their nemesis, and mine was the stopwatch. In the late 1990’s, 9 day record breaking finishes evolved Iditarod into a long distance, check point to check point sprint race. In 2002 Martin Buser crushed the 9 day barrier and drove his team onto Front Street in an unprecedented 8 days, 22 hours and 44 minutes. With such swift finishes, Iditarod rule 36, titled competitiveness became the bane of slower, hardier dog teams. In these days it would be nearly impossible for a team of Samoyeds to leave the starting chute and achieve finisher status. Vague in its definition, Rule 36 was designed to provide officials a means to withdraw teams not proceeding along the trial in a timely fashion. 2009 has seen a rewrite of rule 36 with more precise language and defined measurable time increments for enforcement. Set for implementation in 2010 the outcome on the back of the packers remains to be seen. Ironically the individual to whom Rule 36 was originally targeted, longed for a return to his early days when Iditarod was a camping trip across Alaska. In 1997 he envisioned a commemoration to a far distant time when twenty mushers and their heroic dog teams relayed diphtheria antitoxin to quarantined Nome, a frozen outpost in the far reaches of Alaska. This vision became The Norman Vaughan Serum Run 25’ and would offer non-competitive mushers and their teams the ability to follow the original serum trail and fulfill a dream of running to Nome.

If Nome were the Moon than the 2007 Serum Run was my Apollo 11 rocket trip. A dogsled served as the landing module, and the mighty Saturn V rocket engine propelling it to it’s destination, a team of 12 gallant Samoyeds. The journey was steeped in apprehension, euphoria, spectacular scenery and a humbling awe towards the dog’s ability and willingness to proceed through some of the most extreme weather descending upon Alaska in decades. After arriving and leaving paw prints amid the streets of Nome, my thoughts did turn to Neil Armstrong and his Apollo 11 voyage. For months and with a sense of melancholy I pondered “What did he do when he got home, what did he dream about”? How could any future life’s experience equal his “one small step”? With the completion of the Serum Run, my dream of running dogs to Nome was simultaneously realized and subsequently stolen. In the aftermath and throughout the 2007/2008 mushing season I felt a great sense of loss, the soul and passion were absent and running dogs was just an exercise in going through the motions..

But alas, although slight, the Moon exerts a gravitational force. Upon all who have journeyed to Nome by dog team it draws. I felt the force in the fall of 2007, and it grew stronger and eventually irresistible. The Serum Run was canceled in 2008, which was a reprieve. It would have been torturous to be sitting at home knowing teams were lining up at the Nenana Railroad Depot awaiting the arrival of ceremonial serum and the start of their trip to Nome. A quick trip to watch friends start the 2008 Iditarod was all it took to overcome the last bit of resistance. We would revisit the Moon in 2009.
Comparing the 2007 and 2009 Serum Runs would be comparable to doing the same with Apollo 11 and Apollo 13 even down to Astronaut James Lovell’s famous line “Houston we’ve got a problem”.

To be continued….