Training has been going very well. In fact, so 
				well that I've been having a tough time making cuts to the team. 
				It was decided that we would use the Goose Bay race to help sort 
				out a few of the rookie dogs. 
				
				So we split the teams up without really putting an 'A' team and 
				a 'B' team out on the trail. 
				
				My team was:
				
				Dasher and Tess 
				Sprite and Jinx
				Nahanni and X
				Watt and Crunchie
				Boom and Runner
				Q and Charge
				
				 
				
				Mark's team was:
Moses
				Hilda and Spider
				Holly and Bingo
				Batdog and Barq
				Herman and Hector
				Togo and Jr
				
				 
				Just to give you some of the reasons certain dogs were where 
				they were - Tess is becoming a key dog in the kennel and I 
				wanted to see how she performed as a leader under the pressure 
				of a race. X and Runner are the most promising true rookies, so 
				a race would hopefully help me decide whether they were close to 
				being ready for something like Iditarod. Boom has not been 
				having great runs since we got to Alaska, but in the last week 
				he has stepped it up a little and I wanted to see if he would 
				settle into his normal hard driving self on some new trail. 
				
				Now, of course I had to give Mark some good leaders to ensure he 
				had a good trip. He loves having Moses in single lead, so that 
				was easy. Spider, Hilda and Holly were other leaders that I knew 
				would listen to him and give him good runs (not all my leaders 
				perform as well for Mark as for me). Bingo and Togo are probably 
				not going to make the Iditarod team this year, so I just wanted 
				them to have a lower pressure, fun race with Mark. 
				
				The rest of the group was just sort of divided up randomly. 
				
				I drew bib number 9 and Mark drew number 17, which gave us some 
				time to easily get two teams off the truck. 
				
				They had give us the option of just starting off our dog trucks 
				or being helped across the parking lot, across the road crossing 
				and onto the trail - I trusted my leaders.well.I trusted Dasher, 
				I wasn't sure what Tess would do, so I opted to just be started 
				from the truck. Unfortunately, a couple volunteers stepped over 
				to help out at the last second and didn't realize I didn't want 
				help over to the trail. I was hollering at them to just let the 
				dogs go, but they couldn't hear me over the other barking dogs 
				in the parking lot. Finally, thankful, they just couldn't hold 
				on anymore and let go. I said 'thanks' (after all they were just 
				trying to be helpful and I appreciate that) and we shot across 
				the parking lot and onto the trail.
				
				It had been a couple years since I had been on the trails out 
				this way and it was nice to be traveling them again. I played 
				leapfrog with Julie Deloach's team, caught and passed a few 
				teams and was passed by a couple others. 
				
				By the time we hit the 'Nome sign swamp', which is about 20 
				miles out the wind was blowing with an intensity that made it 
				impossible to ignore. Around here we also started passing 
				participants in the Su 100 - a 100-mile adventure race. Folks 
				either travel by bike, cross country skis or walk. Each year 
				different disciplines excel depending on trail conditions. This 
				year the bikers were having a tough go of the warm, soft trail. 
				I don't think I saw many actually riding their bikes; most were 
				just pushing them along. 
				
				Tess was definitely being challenged by road crossing, 
				snowmachines, and adventure racers. She'd balk a bit every time 
				she met a new obstacle, but recovered quickly and was soon 
				roaring by all sorts of distractions without a second glance.
				
				
				We dropped onto Fish Creek and followed it towards the mouth of 
				Flathorn Lake. There were ice fisherman, adventure racers and 
				snowmachiners kicking around and behind them all a nasty looking 
				lake. You could see the wind howling and snow blowing as you 
				approached. "Now that doesn't look too friendly", I commented to 
				2 snowmachiners sitting on the side of the trail. They agreed.
				
				
				Sure enough, we hit the lake and the power of the wind hit us. 
				Dasher has seen bigger storms in lead for me and Tess just 
				didn't seem to care. We caught and past a team whose leaders did 
				seem to care and continued to pick our way across the lake with 
				ease. Good dogs. I honestly never get bored of watching a couple 
				good leaders picking out a blown in trail. It really is amazing.
				
				
				It was nice to hit the little treed area on the far bank of 
				Flathorn though. I stopped and let everyone roll in the snow and 
				gave them all some praise. A few miles later and we hit 'the Big 
				Swamp'. It made Flathorn Lake seem sheltered, but luckily the 
				snow was blowing right through, so it was only drifted in in a 
				few spots. 
				
				I figured that the rivers were going to be nasty, but we made 
				the big drop onto the Big Su, which was GREAT this year, and 
				things seemed to calm down. It was still windy and blowing snow, 
				but not with near the force it had been on Flathorn or the 
				Swamp. 
				
				The dogs moved along well and I leaped frogged a few more times 
				with Julie before rolling into Yentna Station just ahead of her 
				at 8pm. 
				
				Parking wasn't great and we were in close quarters with a couple 
				other teams. Luckily, other then trying to steal a bit of food 
				off of each other, there were no problems between them. My team 
				devoured all their food and a bit of their neighbors. I got them 
				all fed and settled down and then headed off to find that heated 
				outhouse the checkers were bragging about. Sure enough, it was a 
				lovely little tent with a heater, sanitary lotion, and even 
				scented candles burning!! Almost enough to make you forget you 
				were sitting on a 'honey bucket'. 
				
				I wandered over to the big tent where there was food for the 
				mushers and chowed down on some beef stew while chatting with 
				the Redington boys and Scott Smith. Mostly we griped about 
				Iditarod and things we thought they could be doing better. That 
				conversation is almost a given when you toss a bunch of Iditarod 
				mushers in a room together. 
				
				Finally, I wandered down to see if Mark was in yet. He actually 
				met me on the pathway up to the tents. Not only was he in, his 
				dogs were all fed and bedded down. I was pleased to hear he had 
				gotten in just 55 minutes behind me. He reported that he had had 
				a good run, everyone was doing well, and raved about how amazing 
				Moses was. 
				
				We wandered up to the Roadhouse to get a meal for Mark. I 
				figured we might be able to dry out some clothes up there and 
				although we would have to pay for Mark's meal, it never hurts to 
				spend money at the roadhouses that put up with us mushers on 
				these races. 
				
				I was shocked that owners Dan and Jean Gabryszak (www.yentnastation.com) 
				remembered me. It had been 7 years since I actually stopped and 
				went up to the roadhouse when I passed through Yentna, but then 
				again, I did spend a lot of time here in '99, '00, and '01!!!
				
				
				We passed a pleasant few hours in the nice warm roadhouse before 
				strolling back down to check on dogs. Everyone was sleeping 
				soundly. I puttered and cleaned up around my sled, wandered down 
				and pestered Mark and generally killed time until it was time to 
				feed dogs again. 
				
				At 4:44 am it was time to go. As there was a stack of mushers 
				leaving within minutes of each other, things were pretty chaotic 
				but thanks to some help from Mark I got off down the trail with 
				just minimal problems. 
				
				The team was roaring to go and took off at breakneck speed. I 
				had Sprite up in lead with Dasher, just because Tess wandered a 
				bit too much in the checkpoint with the extra space her leader 
				line gave her, so I moved her back into swing for our break and 
				kind of forgot to move her back up before I left. 
				
				We settled into a nice pace and the dogs moved lovely through 
				the early morning. Occasionally I'd get glimpses of headlights 
				ahead, or hear a few dog barking, so I knew I wasn't far off 
				some of the teams in front of me. 
				
				At the beginning of the big swamp, I passed a musher that had 
				stopped to load a dog. The swamp was windy again, but the wind 
				was at our backs this time! 
				
				Flathorn Lake was REALLY blown in. There was only the occasional 
				sign of where the trail was. Now, there was trail markers, but 
				the packed trail ranged from right next to 20 to 30 ft from the 
				markers - and if you were traveling off the trail, you were 
				wallowing in snow! So it was up to the leaders to keep us on the 
				packed trail, which was now buried under a pile of blown snow. 
				Dasher and Sprite did it flawlessly and without hesitation. I 
				felt for the mushers that didn't have leaders that could do this 
				- or didn't trust their leaders and kept trying to second-guess 
				them. Experience has shown me that we just end up exposing our 
				human shortcomings when we second-guess a good dog in conditions 
				like this! 
				
				Once we got back into the woods, I stopped to snack dogs and to 
				ruffle their fur. Everyone was in great spirits. 
				
				Back in the swamp before the 'Nome sign' (a famous landmark on 
				the Iditarod Trail), we came to a spot where sled tracks went 
				straight, but my dogs were sure we headed right onto a blown in 
				trail that I could barely make out. I really thought the dogs 
				were making a wrong choice here, but as I said, experience has 
				shown me that second guessing them is usually a dumb move. 
				
				I was kinda nervous until a marker showed up about a ½ mile down 
				the trail. I'm pretty sure Dasher shot an 'I told you so' glance 
				over her shoulder as the marker came into view. 
				
				Turns out that Vern Halter had second-guessed his leaders there 
				and the sled tracks I saw were his as he went off the trail and 
				lost some time! 
				
				A while after that I stopped and put little Tesla back into lead 
				with Dasher. That picked our speed up a bit. Occasionally, I 
				thought I might have caught sight of a team on the hills ahead 
				of me, but I convinced myself that it was just trees hanging 
				over the trail I was seeing. So imagine my surprise when we 
				popped onto 7-Mile Lake and I found 2 teams stopped on the 
				trail. We passed the first one, but the second one was Julie, 
				who I had been playing leapfrog with most of this race and she 
				pulled the hooked and headed down the trail. Now Julie seemed 
				like a really nice lady, she had said some really nice things 
				about my team, and I had enjoyed traveling with her this race, 
				but I WANTED TO BEAT HER. I know she felt the same way. She 
				asked if I wanted to pass and I declined. Really I just wanted a 
				chance to judge her speed, so I followed along behind her for a 
				bit. After about a mile or so I figured my dogs could hold a 
				lead on Julie, so I asked for trail. Julie and I spent the last 
				7 miles of trail racing each other hard. I wasn't sure what 
				position were we in, but I knew it was nothing in the money; 
				still it was fun to see what the dogs could do. I hadn't called 
				up my team all race, I had just been letting them do their 
				thing, so I was curious what they would do when I asked them for 
				more. I chirped and whistled at them and they responded 
				wonderfully. Julie hung with me until we turned into woods for 
				the last ½ mile or so to the finish line. I could hear her dogs 
				barking behind me, so I knew she had stopped and I didn't see 
				her again. 
				
				Harry and Jamie were waiting at the finish line and we got the 
				dogs hooked onto the truck. They looked a little tired after 
				their finishing push and I thought they might not eat, but they 
				inhaled everything that we offered them. 
				
				Turns out our finishing time was 11:41, which put me in 12 place 
				of 27 finishers with a time of 22:41. 
				
				Mark showed up at 7 minutes after 1, for a total time of 24:07, 
				which was good for a 21st place finish. 
				
				All and all a nice weekend!!!
				
				Karen