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<UID>
9101100856
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
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<DATE>
910311
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<TDATE>
Monday, March 11, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
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<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Map
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<CAPTION>

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<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
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<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
A WEEK INTO IDITAROD, FATIGUE, FEUDING SET IN
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IDITAROD CHAPTER 7: In which we return to the land of ice and snow. . . . 

  KALTAG, Alaska --  My trusty pilot, Old Jim Okonek, was waiting at the
airport as I landed -- again -- here in the Lonely Country. He tugged on his
blue cap, and his eyes danced under his sunglasses. 

  "Nice to have you back," he said, grabbing a bag.
  "Thanks."
  "Might have been easier if you just stayed  here, you know."
  He smirked. OK. So I am the only journalist in history to leave the
Iditarod on the fourth day, fly back to Michigan, then return to Alaska three
days later. Hey. I needed to wash my clothes, OK? Besides, seeing what has
happened in this gruesome race, I didn't miss anything except the chance to
get my head taken off. Tempers have worn thin out on the frozen trail, and the
lack  of sleep, the long hours, the endless work -- they're  beginning to take
their  toll on the mushers. And the dogs. Apparently, one furry soldier
decided he'd had enough of wearing a harness and clomping  through snowbanks
just to get a piece of lamb every few hours. His musher went to move him and
-- boom! He bolted. Took off into the wilderness, sprinting toward the black
spruce at the base of the Alaska mountain range. A lost dog is disaster in the
Iditarod,  not just because anything can happen out in the abyss -- mostly bad
-- but also because his team will be disqualified if he is not found.
  "I let him go for a second and that was it, that was all it took," the
musher, Bill Peele, told reporters after  it happened. "Everything I worked
for, for years, is shot unless I find him."
  Peele  tried calling the dog. Offering food. Hiding behind his sled. No
go. Every time he tried to get close, the animal took off farther into the
wilderness. Hours passed. It was a nightmare. The other dogs  in his team were
getting restless, and it was just Peele and that one damn dog and about a
thousand miles of frozen wilderness in which to catch him. 
  My heart sank for the guy. I had gotten to  know Peele before the race. He
is one of those divided souls, a pharmaceuticals businessman from North
Carolina who, deep down, has the heart of a wilderness pioneer. He has been
coming to Alaska for  years, climbing mountains, dreaming of the Iditarod --
then going back to his 9-to-5 job in North Carolina. Finally, at age 55, he
figured time was short, so he traded in three years' worth of vacation,
borrowed $40,000 against his retirement and got into this year's race. His
dream. His soul on fire.
  And now a doggie had done him in. Bolted into the blue. At last look,
Peele had dropped off his  dogs at the Nikolai checkpoint and was headed back,
alone, to try to find a single dog in a mountain range. "I gotta get that dog,
no matter what it takes," Peele said. "Not for me. For the dog. 
  "All life is sacred to me.  . . . All I thought about on the way to Nikolai
was him out there freezing and starvin' to death, and dying. . . . "
  He had tears in his eyes.
  The Last Great Race  on Earth.
Mushers start to feud
  Of course, arguing with a dog beats arguing with humans, which is pretty
much what's been going on near the front of the race.  Since I've been gone,
it seems, the  Iditarod has become a machismo war, a boy-vs.-girl thing, kind
of like those battles you used to have in grade school. 
  "He hit me!" 
  "She started it!"
  It began with a 90-mile stretch of  trail between tiny Ophir and Iditarod
-- two places never to be confused with Las Vegas and Reno -- where a blizzard
and high winds had obliterated most of the trail. Susan Butcher, the four-time
champion,  and DeeDee Jonrowe, maybe the world's second-best female sled
driver, wound up breaking much of the trail for their mostly male competitors.
They had to get off the sleds and hoof it in snowshoes. Their  dogs, at times,
were neck deep in drifts. Ugly stuff.
  But when the other (male) mushers caught up, Butcher claimed, they didn't
exactly volunteer to go ahead. Breaking trail is tough on the dogs,  wears
them out, and apparently, the mushers behind Butcher -- including her
arch-rival Rick Swenson, the only other person to win this race four times --
were just as happy to let her have the honors,  thank you. "Hey," they seemed
to say. "You're the champion. You go first." 
  Which began a mini-war of words in the press:
  Butcher: "It's bad sportsmanship."
  Swenson: "Hey, it's bad sportsmanship  for her to bitch about it."
  Butcher: "It's obnoxious of racers not to put in their turn leading."
  Swenson: "I'm running my race on my schedule, and if that doesn't suit
Susan, too bad."
  Butcher:  "Schedule is no excuse when the nose of his lead dog is near the
tail of my sled."
  Swenson: "What a bunch of crybabies."
  At one point, reportedly, Butcher turned and called Swenson "a lazy son  of
a bitch." So I guess we have to keep these two away from any sharp kitchen
utensils. Their little feud has caught the attention of the Alaskan public,
and some actually find it amusing that out there,  among the frozen rivers and
bone-chilling winds, there is still room for a good, old- fashioned sports
argument.
  If you ask me, these mushers are acting perfectly normal for people who
haven't showered  in a week.
A sleeping bag? 
  I, myself, have no such plans. I packed soap. Still, in the Lonely Country,
you never know. Just before we took off in the small plane Sunday morning,
Jim's wife, Julie,  was stuffing food and flashlights and gas stoves -- gas
stoves?  -- into a duffel bag.
  "You do have a lighter, don't you?" she said.
  "A lighter? What do I need a --"
  "And a sleeping bag?"
  "A sleeping bag?"
  But these were  not my only surprises. Once we flew into the wilderness, it
was clear that not only had the weather grown colder, but the Iditarod, now
more than a week old, was  no longer the happy hunting ground I had left
behind. The checkpoint in McGrath, beyond the Alaska mountain range -- where
you land your plane on Main Street -- was deserted, save for a few dozen dogs
chained to a  fence. These were the damned, the wounded, the animals the
mushers had dumped along the trail, too sick or too injured to go on. They
eventually would be shipped home. For now, they howled  like prisoners in some
medieval chamber. "Awwwooooooo! . . . Awoooooo!"
  Chilling. Then, in Shageluk, a lonely pit stop on the Innoko River, I
encountered Jim Cantor, the Anchorage lawyer -- and former  Michigander -- who
had been so funny at the start of the race, going the first few miles dressed
in a three-piece suit, with a sign on his sled: "Send a lawyer to Nome."
  Now he was curled up in the  checkpoint cabin. His face was red, his eyes
glazed. He looked like hell, like Charlie Sheen after the first battle in
"Platoon."  "I've banged into everything I can bang into," he said. "I've had
some  rough going.'  "You gonna make it?"
  He looked at his feet. "I'm kinda groggy now. I haven't had much sleep."
  Chilling. Before the day would end, we would stick the plane in a snow
drift, and everyone would have to get out and push. But that's a story for
later. For now, as we lifted into the Alaskan skies, I pondered the dangers
ahead and behind. I thought about the upcoming stretch  along the Bering Sea,
where the winds eat through your best winter clothes and burn you with cold. I
pictured Cantor, back there, looking a hell of a lot worse than he ever does
in court. And I saw Peele,  the hard-luck North Carolina man who watched that
dog take off with his dream.
  Let's face it. This is not "Lassie," folks.  This is the Iditarod, it's a
damn long race and you never know how you'll spend it: arguing with a
competitor, staring at your feet, or squatting in the wilderness, looking for
one stinking dog that doesn't want to come home.
  And what did she mean, sleeping bag?
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