Onward and Other Directions

著者: Will Troshynski / ATAO Kennel
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  • A Podcast About Sled Dogs, Mental Health, and Finding Your Way Home
    Copyright ATAO Kennel 2021
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あらすじ・解説

A Podcast About Sled Dogs, Mental Health, and Finding Your Way Home
Copyright ATAO Kennel 2021
エピソード
  • Episode 1: Is This Recording?
    2021/04/15

    In which Will explains mushing, his journey to Iditarod, and why the audio of the first recording on the trail is so bad. Also in which you learn which dogs will join the team on their first ever Iditarod. On the way, Will and the team embark on the final training run before the race, and Will digs in more into his own journey as a trans guy and how he got into mushing at all. Rogue is naughty.

    Listen on Apple Podcasts • View Plain Text Transcript

    Check out the emails that Buddies received before the race began!

    Iditarod Begins: Drop Bags Iditarod Begins: At the Vet Iditarod Begins: More Vet Adventures! Iditarod Begins: Bib Draw Iditarod Begins: Sled Build Iditarod Begins: Musher's Banquet Iditarod Begins: Driving to Willow  

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    1 時間 9 分
  • Episode 2: Trail!
    2021/04/26

    The race begins! Will talks to us about the oddity of finally being on the Iditarod. The team is passed... A few times! The phone is put into a precarious position.

    Listen on Apple Podcasts • View Plain Text Transcript

    Check out the emails that Buddies received as the race was beginning!

    Here's the Lineup for Iditarod 2021!!! Getting Set And they're off! More photos from today  

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    Onward and Other Directions

    Episode 2: Trail!

    Hi, I'm Will. I live with 28 dogs and together we travel across the winter landscape of Alaska. They run and I hang on to a rickety sled behind them. Our team is called ATAO Kennel. This is Onward and Other Directions, a podcast where I take you along our first Iditarod through recordings I made throughout the race in March of 2021. The Iditarod is one of the longest sled dog races in the world. And I've been working towards running it since I started mushing in the year 2000.

    This episode is the first recording on the race. The team and I have left the starting line and are on our way. We're traveling along wide braided rivers towards Skwentna, the first resupply checkpoint in the race. We will actually end up stopping to camp about 10 miles before Skwentna at mile 50 of the race as part of our race plan. This recording is a few hours into the run and a few hours before we camp. [Musical transition]

    All right.

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    50 分
  • Episode 3: Finger Lake
    2021/05/04

    Will shares some stories of the journey from his first run to Finger Lake, and then records audio in the checkpoint itself. Runaway dogs, exciting trail snacks, and inexplicable gatorade-flavored meals.

    Listen on Apple Podcasts • View Plain Transcript

    Check out the emails that Buddies received as Will was headed into Finger Lake!

    Will and Martin Buser just passed! Passing through Skwentna N

     

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    Onward and Other Directions

    Episode 3: Finger Lake

    Hi, it's Will again. Last time we were here, I had just taken off on the very first leg of my very first Iditarod, one of the longest sled dog races in the world. Me and my team of 14 dogs, AKA my best friends recorded some audio about halfway into that very first run. I rambled about a lot of things. My poor spouse, Shawn, who is very logical, is at wit's end trying to keep track of all these conversations, and I got passed by several teams.

    For that first run, I stuck to my game plan pretty tightly. Shortly after the recording I made, my team and I pass through Yentna station, the first sort of checkpoint of the race. It's a "sort-of" checkpoint because there are no drop bags there. Drop bags are the bags that are flown ahead of teams down the trail. There is no way a sled could carry the amount of food that sled dogs eat during a race like this.

    We packed and mailed about 1200 pounds for this race, and we were very much on the light side of what folks normally pack. Most of that weight is kibble and meat. The dogs eat around 10,000 calories a day while they race. Other supplies that are sent in drop bags or things like blankets to make the dogs cozy at the checkpoints while they rest, human meals and snacks, batteries, gloves, vet supplies, and much more.

    While Yentna Station did not have bags, it did provide straw and heet -- HEET -- better known as antifreeze. We burn that in specially made cookers to melt snow and boil water for the dog's food. It's an essential component of long-distance mushing. The Iditarod provides heat along the whole trail, including Yentna. As my race plan dictated, I grabbed both straw and heet in Yentna.

    I was a little surprised to see how close to the start Yentna it was. It registered on my GPS is only 40 miles or so from the start line. According to what the race had told us, it ought to have been about 50 miles. I wondered if Skwentna, the first official actual checkpoint, would really be 72 miles as it was predicted to be.

    Regardless, my race plan called for me to camp around or just after 50 miles. I debated continuing all the way to Skwentna.

    I talked in the first recording about how warm the first day was. But by the time I hit Yentna, the sun was starting to set, and the temperature was dropping. The dogs were much happier to have some cooler weather and were starting to move well. Its 72-mile run wouldn't be entirely out of their wheelhouse. But the whole reason for my plan to camp before Skwentna was to avoid the notorious hullabaloo that happens with the whole field of mushers camped at the first checkpoint.

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    26 分

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