The Junior Iditarod Sled Dog Race, or Jr. Iditarod, is a 148- to 158-mile (222 km) sled dog race for mushers between the ages of 14 through 17, which is patterned after the 1,150-mile Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race that is said to be 1049miles. The race is held outside Anchorage in the U.S. state of Alaska, and was the first long-distance race for juvenile mushers.
With the encouragement of "Go for it" Joe Redington, Senior, the Jr. Iditarod was established 1977 by Eric Beeman, Rome Gilman, Karl Clausen, Kenny Pugh, and Clarence Shockley, who were unable to compete in the Iditarod because they were less than 18 years of age. In October 1987, the Jr. Iditarod officially became part of the Iditarod Trail Committee, which manages the senior race.
align=center style="background: #ccf" | Route |
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Settler's Bay to Knik (8 mi/13 km) | |
Knik to Burma Road (9 mi/14 km) | |
Burma Road to Susitna River (23 mi/37 km) | |
Susitna River to Eagle Song (14 mi/23 km) | |
Eagle Song to Yentna Station (15 mi/24 km) | |
align=center style="background: #ccf" | 8- to 12-hour layover |
Yentna Station to Eagle Song (15 mi/24 km) | |
Eagle Song to Susitna River (14 mi/23 km) | |
Susitna River to Burma Road (23 mi/37 km) | |
Burma Road to Knik (9 mi/14 km) A common route runs from | |
Settler's Bay to Knik, (8 mi/13 km) | |
align=center style="background: #ccf" | Finish |
Distance: 138 mi (222 km) |
The Jr. Iditarod is held in the weekend before the Iditarod. The winner of the junior event takes the honorary first position out of the chute during the ceremonial start of the longer race in Anchorage on the first Saturday in March, and leads the pack to the first checkpoint, normally 20 miles (32 km) away in Eagle River.
Jr. Iditarod mushers are mostly from Alaska, though the U.S. states of Minnesota and Montana Montana, Massachusetts, Ohio, Georgia, Washington, Pennsylvania, Yukon Territory, Canada, have been represented, and Thomas Krejci of Czechoslovakia became the first international competitor in 1992, also winning the Humanitarian Award that year. In 2017, Katie Winrich was the first competitor to run the race to hail from Wisconsin.[1] All mushers are between the ages of 14 and 18, and frequently train their own teams of sled dogs. A number of previous competitors have gone on to compete in the longer Iditarod, including Lance Mackey, Tim Osmar, Ramey Smyth, and Cim Smyth, to name but a few.
$15,000 in scholarship money was awarded last year. Of primary concern to Jr. Iditarod are animal care, sportsmanship and furthering education, as well as promotion of our sport. The first three finishers receive $5,000, $2,500, and $1,500, respectively. The winners of the Sportsmanship Award, chosen by their fellow mushers; and the Humanitarian Award, chosen by the race veterinarians, win $1,000 each. The winner also receives round-trip tickets to the Iditarod Awards Banquet in Nome with their parents. All finishers receive a trophy, a patch, and prizes donated by local businesses. Other awards are the Blue Harness, given to the best lead dog; the Rookie of the Year, given to the top musher among those competing for the first time; and the Red Lantern, given to the last to finish.
2021 will see the race be modified resulting from COVID-19 pandemic; strict measures such as competitors wearing masks and social distancing will take effect.
The 28th annual Jr. Iditarod in 2005 had 21 competitors, including 11 females, 10 males. Twelve were rookies running their first Jr. Iditarod. All were from Alaska, though one of the two entrants who withdrew before the start of the race were from Colorado.
Melissa Owens won on February 27, in 10 hours, 51 minutes, 27 seconds. On March 5 she was the first musher out of the chute during the ceremonial first leg of the 2005 Iditarod, representing honorary musher Jirdes Winther Baxter, the last known survivor of the children who were saved from a diphtheria epidemic by the historic 1925 serum run to Nome. Second and third place went to Rohn Buser and Dallas Seavey, sons of former Iditarod champions Martin Buser and Mitch Seavey. Dallas Seavey, whose birthday is on March 4, became the first musher to compete in both the Jr. Iditarod and the Iditarod in the same year. The Red Lantern was Amy Gundlach.
Year | Musher | |
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1978 | Mike Neuman Senior Division, Joe Good Junior Division | |
1979 | Clint Mayeur, | |
1980 | Gary Baumgartner | |
1981 | Christine Delia | |
1982 | Tim Osmar | |
1983 | Tim Osmar | |
1984 | Tim Osmar | |
1985 | Lance Barve | |
1986 | Lance Barve | |
1987 | Dusty VanMeter | |
1988 | Dan Flodin | |
1989 | Jared Jones | |
1990 | Jared Jones | |
1991 | Brian Hanson | |
1992 | Ramey Smyth | |
1993 | Ramey Smyth | |
1994 | Cim Smyth | |
1995 | Dusty Whittemore | |
1996 | Dusty Whittemore | |
1997 | Tony Willis | |
1998 | Charlie Jordan | |
1999 | Ryan Redington | |
2000 | Ryan Redington | |
2001 | Tyrell Seavey | |
2002 | Cali King | |
2003 | Ellie Claus | |
2004 | Nicole Osmar | |
Melissa Owens | ||
2006 | Micah T. Degarlund | |
2007 | Rohn Buser | |
2008 | Jessica Klejka | |
2009 | Cain Carter | |
2010 | Merissa Osmar | |
2011 | Jeremiah Klejka | |
2012 | Conway Seavey | |
2013 | Noah Pereira | |
2014 | Conway Seavey | |
2015 | Kevin Harper |