Monday, December 27, 2021

Just as we thought............

 Not any good for training on Sunday or Christmas but did get a couple of inches of snow on Monday - which covered up the icy parts just enough for the dogs not to get hurt - so ran a 9 dog team 20 miles ome today and they were looking like they were enjoying the ride!!!

Yesterday because we couldn't train we ran around some of the parts of the race trail for January 8th that hadn't been packed yet - close to getting stuck again but didn't do that and have to walk back home again!!!  The loggers are plowing more of the trails that were supposed to be part of the trail for the race so don't know at this point whether we can just re-route or they will be done logging those areas and not plowing up the roads by the time we need them for the trail!

Sunday, December 26, 2021

Hope you all had a glorious and Blessed Christmas!!!

 We didn't train today because we got a slug of warm weather and it softened up the trail yesterday and then overbite got cold so it got icy and would have been unsafe for the dogs - so everybody got a day off!

We did go into Mass last evening to a 6:30 service and then today (even though the road was quite icy) went in to help at our church's free community Christmas supper     - it was a good thing  - we met many people while there and now will have more people we can recognize when we go to church!!  They had asked people to sign up for a designated time in advance to minimize the chance of exposure to covid.  So this year they only served about 100 versus years past when they served 200 and magnificent turkey dinner!!!

So it was hard to pass up the dinner at church but we went home and picked up our dishes to pass and went to Jan Shaw's for a turkey dinner!!  Regina and Frank Caldwell were also there and we had a delightful dinner with good company!!!  Stayed from 5?30 until 10 so we got a lot of quality visiting done!!!

It is looking iffy for training tomorrow unless we get and inch or two tonight of snow - will just have to check it out in the morning!!

Thursday, December 23, 2021

Snow.............snow............snow!! As they sing in its "White Christmas"!!!

It's here!!  actually too much to train today on Wednesday!  Over all in the last few days we have probably gotten about a foot of snow! the trails are back to looking good again and needing Randy to go out and run the pipe drag to get some of the air out of the snow and pack it down again - we never lost all of the trail with the warm weather and the recent snowfall has made everything good again........except where the loggers keep grading the road and bringing it down to almost dirt again!!  But even that is looking good again because they can't really get all the way down to dirt with as much snow as we have gotten!

Didn't train today because of so much snowfall - we went into town to get some provisions (and some secret candies for Randy for his Christmas presents, who has the biggest sweet tooth and has not had any since we started on our weight loss program in September - and he had lost 28 pounds!!)  I have to sneak/hide anything that I buy for him because we are always together!!

Tomorrow should be a good training day but maybe a bit cold!!

Friday, December 17, 2021

Never a dull moment!!

 Without power again!!  We thought we were going to miss having any power lines down from the 35 mph up to 50 winds overnite (almost made it to daylight………) and then when we got up the power and most or at least ½ of the snow were gone!!!

Over the last 3 days we were having some soft trail issues but the trail held up pretty good and we trained 12 miles the last 3 days until today………..now we are pumping out puddles (because they will never freeze solid until we get temps below 0 – with our sump pump – at least 3 huge ones without any way for the dogs to go around them!  Then tonite after dark, once it gets down to freezing again, we will drag the trail and try to get it smoothed out before it freezes!!

Went to town and had lunch – there won’t be any cooking going on at least until maybe tomorrow when we get power back- at Mickey D’s – we saw where the tree had come down over the power line and cut it in half!!!!  It’s pretty obvious that’s the problem but there was no  body working on it……………….

Went to the post office and mailed the last of the 4 holiday packages…………may not be coming down south to west Michigan until after Christmas to do the Baldwin dog race, so thought I would send everything to have there early!  We did enter 4 DeKuipers in the race on the 15 and 16 of January:  Randy in the 8 dog, Aeja and Oak in the 4 dog, and Aurea in the 3 dog – none of them have driven a sled before so they are going to have to get some practice in by visiting Jim Moe Moyer – they all wanted to try so let’s hope the snow is back by then!!!

Speaking of snow – it rained hard last nite with the warm temps and right now at 2:30pm it’s getting cold and snowing – so maybe it won’t take too long to get the trails back in tip top shape!!!

The remainder of daylight we spent changing out the straw in the dogs' boxes and giving them one of the 2 required shots needed to participate in the Wyoming stage race.

Up in one of my "middle of the nite can't sleep moments" and lo and behold, the power is back on!!!!   It's always nice when it happens before you think it should happen!!!  Now we have to see in the morning if there was enough snowfall during the nite to make it safe for dogs' feet to train on the trails today!!


Tuesday, December 14, 2021

What I neglected to say in the previous blog............

 was that when one is alone in the dark in the remote forest, one does many things for the 2 hour journey.............I was able to say the rosary, review my Christmas present list, and most importantly, think about what one does when they encounter a wolf in the remote forest.....does one scream......just yell "get away", wave one's arms like a windmill, play dead, run (even if I had been able to run) or believe that I didn't smell appetizing and therefore a wolf attack was not likely!!!!

Monday, December 13, 2021

I should have know..............

 13 inches of snow predicted Friday through Saturday..............heavy wet snow...........as expected we lost power about 11............Randy "invited" me to go out with him and look at the trail at about 2....we drove the trail until about 4 and Randy wanted to open a path off from the trail that Bruce had already packed and groomed with his equipment............so we turned off the packed trail with our snow machine into the deep snow...........and immediately tipped over!!!!  I "jumped" off (more like fell off....) so the machine wouldn't land on my leg......then we got upright again and moved slowly through the 13 inch deep snow going up a rather steep hill..............and proceeded to get stuck!!!  Not just a little stuck,,,,,,,,,,,,,really stuck!!!  We tried forward's, backward digging out around the tracks with the blade cover for the chainsaw, lifting the back, lifting the front........made little headway once and moved about 6 feet -- but after that, nothing!!!!  Randy gave up and said we were going to start walking..............now Randy had just done this very similar walk of 8 miles with the other snow machine dying just a week ago - it had taken him 2 hours to walk back near our house and have Bruce pick him up on his 4 wheeler!!!!   Mind you it's about 4:30 by now and the sun is starting to set - we start walking and not far into it I tell Randy he better walk ahead cause I can already tell that I won't be able to keep up (mainly because of my groin injury in September - usually I "outwalk" Randy but now my steps are quite a bit shorter.........and the fact that I thought this was going to be a fun ride and wore the 8 pound mickey mouse boots)  You're right.............it's getting dark and I'm out walking in the woods by myself where Randy saw wolf tracks last week and the guy doing the clear cutting/logging said he heard wolves 3 days ago............  Thank goodness part of the time the clouds cleared and there was a half moon out that made it much easier to follow the snowmachine track instead of sloughing thru the deep snow!  And only 8 miles to go!!!  I stopped often and sat down on the snow banks but felt bad I was making such slow progress - and hoping that I would see headlights soon----I did see headlights about 4 miles into my walk - Randy came on the other snowmachine and not the truck because he was afraid with the temp getting warmer that the truck would get stuck -   I was amazed on our way back home how far I had yet to go and knew then that I would have taken all night to travel that far - my body was having competition with which part was yelling loudest...........foot, tendon, back, knee or groin!!!

So, tragedy averted and more lessons learned and I have told Randy he doesn't need to create any more of these situations so that I might have something fun to write about on the blog!!!!!!!!!

That nite was recuperation and so the next day - lots of muscles we both haven't used in a long time but better today!

Took one team out and the weather was a bit warm but they only went 12 miles!  We did have one glitch----Randy went out on the sled for the first time this year ahead of me......When I was trying to catch up to him after taking time to get my coat and gloves on, I came upon the turn off from 7 mile fire lane leading into the woods and the rest of the trail, only to find out that the logging crew had once again  graded 7 mile fire lane and had left a bird of 4ft tall hard snow bank that somehow Randy had managed to go over with the team and the sled!!!! (I found out after that it wasn't that way just one hour before we took off with the dogs and that he did have trouble getting the leaders to climb up the snow bank and pull the sled with them!!!)

So I punched the snow machine to get up and over the bank to follow Randy and was afraid I was going to tip over but didn't1  the rest of the run went good until Randy motioned me to pull around him and the team and I couldn't hear what he was telling me but imagined that he wanted me to make the bird less difficult for him to get back over the snow bank with the team and the sled - so I drove fast, like 23 mph back to 7 mile fire lane to try and crush the bank with the snow machine - went over once, no problem - turned around in the road , no problem, back over no problem, tried to turn around to over the bank a couple of more times and got stuck!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  Stuck almost all the way across the trail with only 2 foot for the team to go around me!!!!  In the interim I had shoveled out most of the bank to make it easier for Randy to cross and our team went by me and down the bank without a problem!  A nice young guy from New Hampshire here to train out of Bruce's yard came back after he saw I was stuck (his 2 teams had also gone around me) and the young, strong guy lifted the rear end of the snow machine and pulled it over and then the front and got it turned enough so that it would go down the trail straight!!!  By the time I got back to our dog yard Randy was just jumping on the other snowmachine ready to come and unstuck me!!  He had gotten back and unhooked and unharnessed all the 8 dogs! 

So enough excitement for this week -planning to train again tomorrow unless it gets so warm it will be "punchy" (where the dos feet sink into the snow which can result in injury)

Happy birthday and love to Donna yesterday, Kay today, and Lydia tomorrow!!!!

Thursday, December 9, 2021

Even more snow!!

 Didn't really technically measure it but it seems we have about 8 to 10 in of snow on the ground!!! 

Randy seems to have given up on the "loser snowmaking" so today and yesterday we ran the dogs with our"wimpy" snow machine (which I might as has no back rest for me)

It was not as cold today temperature wise but I still managed to get cold feet out on the trail!  I had ordered some new Sorel boots good down to -100 degrees but had some trouble getting them to apply the 15% discount through PayPal so I ended up cancelling the order and instead today found a Sorel outlet supply store and got the same boots that sell for $180 for $55 (including shipping of $10)  Randy thinks they won't turn out to be the same quality boot but we shall see!!

We trained today with 8 dogs and the snow machine - Bruce and Laura are training with the sled but we don't feel confident the sled could be stopped with putting the snow hook down but don't think the trail is hard enough for the hook to hold - so still with the snowmachine

Went to Newberry again last nite and went to the hardware - it took us 45 minutes and they were just about to close but it's good Randy got what he needed!

After the hardware we went to the board meeting of the Tahquamenon race committee as we often do just to see how things are going - and offering advice if asked for.  this was the last meeting until the week before the race when the draw the bibs for starting sequence - they are going to have the meeting/draw at Waltman's so we will be there!!

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

We asked for it and we got it!!!

Snow to be exact!!

We need some snow to cover up the ruts of ice that several vehicles had left by driving over the trail while it was slush = so we had hoped that by Sunday morning there would be enough snow to cover up the icy parts and we did get a couple of inches in some places and managed to train on of the 2 teams of 9 - it went well and Randy got in a 28 mile run!!!  so he was very happy!!  We don't like to have the weather change our training schedule but he was thinking that we are well on our way to being where we need to be at the end of January for the stage race in Wyoming so it wasn't as "painful"!

So today on Monday we get up and we've been hammered with a ton of snow!!!  Like 6 to 8 inches in some places- so Randy feeds the dogs and then says he needs to go out and pack the trail so the dogs wouldn't need to be running in such deep stuff and that he might easily be gone 3 hours to do the 28 miles of trail and for me to come looking for him if he is out longer than 3 hours...........well that was the first clue that things were not going to go well for the day!!!

2pm came around and he was not back and the 3 hours was up so I got all my clothes on (which at this point with the temp in the mid to high 20's is like 5 layers !!!) and started out on the 4 wheeler to see if he was in trouble=  no sooner did I get across the road and about a mile down the trail and here comes Bruce on his snow machine and Laura running a 9 (?) dog team on the sled behind him, and who should be on the snow machine with Bruce...........you guessed it!!!  Randy!!  The snowmachine that we bought used 4 years ago and that has broken down every year since then (as both Ocean our grandson and I can attest......) broke down again!!!  Just stopped going down the trail 8 miles out and then wouldn't start again!!!  so Randy starts walking back (wearing his white Mickey Mouse boots which probably weigh 4  pounds each or more..........) and gets all the way shy of 2 miles back to the house and Bruce picks him up and is bringing him back to the main road we live off from when I see them going out to find Randy on the 4 wheeler!!!  He is so sore from walking that far and with those heavy boots on!!! When he gets on the 4 wheeler with me he has to stand up and drive because his legs are cramping!!!  and then has to change every layer of clothes when he gets in the house because he sweated so bad walking through the 8 inches of snow and 6 miles in those boots!!!!!

Bruce offered to go out with his snow machine and pull ours back in but Randy opted to take our pick up out and pull it back - when we got to it and turned around to hook onto it we had one big hill to pull it up and then it was pretty much flat going - so I got on the dead snowmaking and Randy pulled me up the hill and even with 8 inches of snow I got a dirt bath with the truck trying to get a grip going up the hill!!!  By the time we got back it was too late to train dogs so we had another lost day and the team that was supposed to run today will have had 5 days off............

More snow tonite and will probably have to pack the trail before we train tomorrow but this time I am thinking I will have to be the "escort" vehicle to make sure he doesn't have to schlepp it back home again!!!!

Saturday, December 4, 2021

No training for 2 days and maybe even not tomorrow

 Depending on how much snow we get tonite it may not be in the dog's best interest not to train again for the 3rd day!!  Yesterday Randy knew that if he ran the dogs they would sink into the slush and maybe hurt themselves and surely make the trail a dangerous one when it froze overnite.

So no training yesterday and then today as predicted, anywhere someone rode over the trail left and icy treacherous course for any dog..........it will take a couple of inches of snow and for Randy too smooth it out with the drag before it will be safe for the dogs to run on again............So today we went to Sault Ste. Marie to do a Walmart binge!!  One and a half hours there and spent $300 and still didn't get all the things on the list!!!  It did snow a bit on the way home but not yet the blizzard they are predicting!!! 

We will see what it looks like in the morning to know if we will be able to train safely tomorrow!!!

Thursday, December 2, 2021

Rain, rain, go away ====come back again some other day.................

 Like in the spring!!!

We trained today early afternoon knowing that is might rain overbite an mush up the trail - and it is and we won't know how bad the damage is until tomorrow.  It was about freezing when we ran the 9 dog team and the trail was good!!  We are a bit worried about the loggers dropping off their machines right near where we train but so far haven't seen too much impact - we think we can change our training routes to avoid them and still get in the miles we need!

So at this point we are 2/3d's into our training season and are pretty happy with how the dogs are handling 24 miles - they come back not breathing hard and seem happy to go every day!!!

Probably are not going to train tomorrow because this heavy rain will puddle plus when it freezes overbite it will make the terrain frozen and sharp and hard for their feet!!

Will have to think of something fun to do tomorrow!!

Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Winter is here............will he stay???

 So far since Thanksgiving we have had snow intermittently and it is still here out on the ground!!  It has been just enough to keep us from having to run the dogs on frozen dirt and has saved their feet............not quite enough to pack but Randy did even the snow out once or twice using the pipe drag -   we are going 24 miles now and traveling out to the trail that goes around Ready and Rainy lakes - the most beautiful part of the training trails in my estimation - the dogs are still very happy to get harnessed and run and come back without breathing hard at all!

We did find a Christmas tree from one of the trees that were going to end up coming down over the trail so that has taken up much of my time since Sunday!!!  Though I don't have all of my ornaments and decorations from home, I have accumulated things that are special to our home in the UP and enjoy seeing them again each of the 4 years we have been here for the holidays.

Randy just communicated with Greg Janders near Escanaba and he is going to be putting liver in the beef that we order and mixing it and putting it in the square buckets that we have the fit under the floor in the dog part of the trailer - so that's lining up food for the rest of the dog racing season=  I also means that we will be going thru Escanaba again in a week or so and that means stops at Aldi's and Walmart!!!  Places that I can get foods and cheaper that around here!!


Thursday, November 25, 2021

And a wonderful dinner was had by all!!!!

We went down to the neighbors (Ray and Patty Brown) for dinner today and enjoyed it immensely!!  We had thought about training but it had thawed and then refrozen overbite enough to make the trail dangerous for dog foot injuries so instead Randy went out and dragged 28 miles of trails so it would be good to train tomorrow - as we came back from dinner tonite it looked like we had gotten about 2 inches of new snow which will help a lot towards making the trail safe again!!!!  Again God Bless you all and remember to count those that you have been given!!! 

Back to the UP!!

Time flies by so fast and here we are already back up in Deer Park/Newberry to train dogs again!!

We were happy to have our son Luke and his family come to visit and do some dirt biking and 4 wheeling the first week we were in at the end of September and had a great visit to Oswalds Bear Ranch just down the road from us 15 miles!

What should have been a great ending to the week they were here visiting ended up with me getting a groin pull getting on the 4 wheeler that was bad enough that I went into the ER in Newberry to be sure I had not fractured my pelvis - not to worry but just soft tissue injury but painful!!!! Enough that Randy had to put me in a chair and push me into the bathroom!!! and then we ended up getting a walker from Jan Shaw that was her mother's!!!  Nothing like an injury to make to count you blessings!!!  Randy was an excellent "nurse" and even cooked and served me meals (along with the generous neighbors who stepped "up to the plate"!!!

I wasn't much help for the first several weeks of training our 18 dogs but have eased into harnessing and un-harnessing the dogs that are not berserk so have been able to support Randy over the last 3 weeks or so - I started out riding the 4 wheeler side=saddle so as to avoid further injury (cause I really need to be able to handle dogs full time starting in January!!!) but now am able to ride pretty much normal!!!

As of this writing we are up to 21.5 miles (we are entered in the Wyoming Stage Race again and need to prepare them to go 30-35 miles a day for 7 days!) and everyone is looking good!!  We have spent a few days out trimming trees and brush from the trail and until today when it got to be 46 degrees outside we had a good 6 inches of snow on the trails - who knows if we will be able to keep the base that we have already packed/dragged with the weather coming up!  It wouldn't be the "Cris and Randy Show" unless we had had some problems..............so..........the first issue we had (after me injuring me) going out 8 miles on the trails training only to have the 4 wheeler start coughing and wheezing cause - you guessed it- we ran out of gas!!  So a great muscle building experience pulling us and the 4 wheeler back home!!!

Another day we were stopped to rest the dogs on the training run and the front 6 dogs took off by themselves!!!  (we are training 9 dog teams every other day)  The cable main line had frazzled and broken!!  We tried to catch up with them (what is faster than 6 sled dogs that suddenly find that aren't pulling anything???!!!!!) so Randy unhooked the 3 at wheel and in front and took off to chase the 6 leaving me with 3 standing in the middle of the trail!!!  (Thankfully they were pretty cooperative and didn't yank me around and re-injure me!!!)  He had to go 28 mph to catch the 6 dogs but he did it and sure enough showed back up with them hooked back on the 4 wheeler ready to repair the break and hook back in the 3 I had been holding (I was a little nervous about how they would react when they saw Randy and the 6 coming back towards us with the 4 wheeler but they remained amazingly calm!!!)

So that has been the excitement so far............more to come I'm sure!!

Tomorrow is Thanksgiving dinner with all the neighborhood in Deer Park!!!  I'm bringing pink stuff and Polish roses!!!

Thursday, March 4, 2021

Pictures from Copper Harbor


 The awards ceremony at 7 that nite - Randy getting 4th place
Red lantern for last place person
Randy getting his gear check - you can see the start line is 2 blocks away and then around a corner!!!!  Long run up and back for me!!
When we came into Copper Harbor this deer herd was just walking around - people feed them and there are about 20 of them all winter 

Final 2021 Season installment!!

 Little did we know when we left for Copper Harbor that we would not be able to communicate with anyone!!!!  No cell service in the town!!!!!

So we got there Friday about 3p and tried..........and I mean TRIED to find a parking spot in the town of Copper Harbor - we drove around blocks and finally parked on a side street next to a restaurant and went in to ask if anyone knew where we could park!  I did speak to the volunteer coordinator and she didn't have any idea!!!  So we drove around some more blocks (and almost took out a light pole..........) on the very narrow streets.............and decided to park on a dead end street - we happened to see both of the ladies that live on the street and neither had a problem with us parking there.  We dropped and fed and then Randy decided we should move closer to the race start so we parked on a side street that butted up to the main street where we though people would park for the race - to be.........banging on the door at 6am and telling us we had to move because we were in JR Anderson's spot - so around the block and waited in line for an hour and a half.........finally parked = 11 am vet check and that was all good!  3 p gear check (we had to have all the mid-distance stuff in the bag i.e. sleeping back, waterproof matches, dog boots, dog food, etc even though the race was 14.4 miles) and finally at 4 pm the Copper Dog 25!!!  the trail conditions were not the best, grainy snow, but it went very well!!!  Randy came in 4th!!!

Slept in our parking spot that nite and headed for Newberry in the morning.  Got to Houghton and I thought we had made a wrong turn so we ended up having to turn onto a very very very steep brick street in downtown Houghton, going down the hill, hoping our brakes wouldn't fail!!!!!  Come to find out it wasn't a wrong turn after all and that we were leaving Houghton on a different route that we came in so that was why it didn't look right to me!

Half hour out of Houghton it started really snowing and soon we were driving on a 2 lane hi way with 5 inches on the road and almost no visibility and no place to pull off!!!!!  Made it to Marquett 2 hour later and decided to wait out the blizzard at the Menard's parking lot - it did lighten and we got to Newberry/Deer Park mid evening where we parked in a lot across the street from where we stay at Jimmy O's - next morning spend 4 hours shoveling and plowing trying to get our Ranger truck out of the garage (so we had something to drive when we got back home that wasn't a gas guzzler!!) then stopped to Jan's and got invited to dinner - Had a lovely dinner and visit and when we got back to the trailer heard bad dog noises in the back and sure enough, there were 4 dogs that "poured" out of the back when we opened the door!!!  They all stayed right around but still stressful in the dark!

Next morning left for home with good roads and sun and made it here about 3 - Dee our wonderful neighbor had come down and started a fire so the house was warm and open!!!  Did have one major problem...........no water.  Randy tried to prime the pump to no avail............it had frozen during the cold snap (first time in 24 years living here)  So we called the guy that is going to put in a new well for us this spring and he came out this morning and brought a new pump that we will just exchange when he puts in the new one!!!!

So finally a shower and fill the hot tub!!!!!!

It's been great year - met many new people going to 3 new races and made new friends!!!!  The dogs did well for the conditions and Randy and I didn't get hurt!!!! So SUCCESS!!!!!

God Bless you all in the coming year and talk to you again next October!!!

Thursday, February 25, 2021

On the road again..........

 We took our daughter Amy's advice and took some days off in a place that was good for us and good for the dogs - being that there is a plowed football field lot for them to run in 3 times a day!!!!  sometimes running a bit too far.......... and thus some got re-tied up as "punishment"/"learning experience"!!!  It's quite something to watch our dogs run full speed the length of the lot and then come to a screeching halt and turn around and run flat out back again!!!!

The people are also enjoying the wifi though it stopped for some reason for 1 1/2 days - and we still don't have any cell service - just far out of town enough it doesn't reach.

Well today we are pulling up stakes (literally) and moving down the road on our way to Copper Harbor in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan-  there is a 14.4 mile race in Copper Harbor at the Copper Dog 25 on Saturday and it will be the last of the year for us!!!!!  Then we will make our way back to Newberry/Deer Park to pick up a few things from the house and our yellow pick up - we are assuming there will still be snow when we get home and the Mustang doesn't do very well in snow!!!

So I will let you know how Saturday goes!!!!  Stay warm and take care!!!🙏


Sunday, February 21, 2021

Photos from the stage stop race

 

statue of Lincoln getting near Lincoln, Nebraska
Beautiful red rock on I80
It was so windy it made this dust storm onI80 - we thought it was a fire!!
Arch of elk antlers in Jackson, Wyoming
The ski area in Jackson right next to where we met at the rodeo grounds
A view from the pass going from Jackson to Alpine - doesn't really show how steep it was and how treacherous!!!
Decor on one of the buildings in Jackson
Antelope in southeast Wyoming
It's hard to see but because they let cattle roam free all over Wyoming, they have these grates in the road where they don't want the cows to cross
One of the 7 race starts!
This was the view going into the snowmobile trail where we trained and stayed for 2 weeks in Alpine, WY
Our first glimpse of the Rockies!!!!

Yes!!!!!! We got 4th place!!!!

 Friday Lydia and Moe did come for a brief visit and invited us to dinner after the race the next day - we woke up kind of early with all the activity in the parking lot (we parked in our spot on Friday nite) with people arriving and we wanted to have given our dogs breakfast before the 8 am singing of the National Anthem!  We helped Moe get up to the line and then found out when he returned he had a heck of a mess at the first road crossing!!!  His dogs blew through the snow fence and he ended up under a car!!!!  He managed to get things straightened out again and finished in 8th!

We didn't race until 1:30 and the dogs were very very excited to go - we still didn't know if we had made the right decision to just let them free drop for exercise since the stage stop race (what with it being so cold and all......) and it turned out to be a good decision!!  They took off strong and ended strong and got 4th!!  So we were very happy!!!

Lydia and Moe took us to dinner at a restaurant in Brule WI and I had the most delicious whitefish dinner ever in my life!!!

Today we moved the truck and trailer closer to the clubhouse because we found out from the owner and race coordinator that we could have free wifi!!!  so free dropped the dogs 2 more times today and don't know if we are going to leave for Calumet in the UP tomorrow or Tuesday - it's really a nice set up here all by ourselves with tv and wifi!!!!

Friday, February 19, 2021

Almost race day again!!!

 What a delight to have it warmer!!!!  The dogs love it and we especially love it!!!  It's supposed to get up to 18 today!!!  WooHoo!!!

Not too much happening over the last several days - just feeding dogs and us and letting the "kids" run around the truck - we are  hoping we made the right decision to not run them in the cold weather and just recover from the stage race - we will see tomorrow!!!

The only thing we did out of the ordinary was to walk over to the Dollar General to buy some dry gas.............

Today we will drop the dogs and then get more fuel for the generator and then go to the race site to park - and Moe and Lydia are supposed to stop over to see us - so after being "just the 2 of us" for 2 weeks we will have company!!!!


Monday, February 15, 2021

Things are looking up..........as the temperature goes up.....................

 Aside from the hour and a half we spent trying to get both the brand new generator and the one we just got fixed for $150 to run,  and a policeman waking us up and threatening us with giving us a ticket for where we were parked..........a pretty good day!  It finally got above "0" today and it felt wonderful!!! 

We had to move the truck and trailer because we were blocking a handicapped parking spot I didn't even notice in the middle of the 8 foot high snow bank................. and he said it was against the law to have dog feces in the parking lot- hard as we try to pick it up there is some telltale left!!!!  He came back about an hour later and had cooled down and never did give us a ticket and told us to move about a block to the other end of the parking lot - not as nice to drop dogs at the new location but at least not a ticket!!!!

We had been running the older generator that was strapped to the top of the truck for the last 24 hours - because it wasn't quitting like the brand new one had been---Randy and I picked the older generator up and brought it down to the ground and then had to lift it back into the space in the gooseneck of the trailer--it's not light!!!!!  All that was after we had lifted the newer one out of the gooseneck!!!!  Then when we got the older one placed it wouldn't start!!!!! and then the newer one wouldn't start!!!!  Finally after Randy about pulled his shoulder out, the older one started!!!  Then we carried the newer one and put it in the back with the dogs..........don't know if we are going to try and return it or not since we bought it in Des Moines Iowa and we don't know if any Honda dealer would take it back!

Sunday, February 14, 2021

Randy has thanked me 3 times for putting up with all this............

 So that should tell you that we are not having fun, not running dogs, not running generators a lot of the nite and also not the furnace and also not the electric heater...........................

The only bright spot is that we decided that because we had moved to a more remote spot in the parking lot we could let the dogs run free- they did perfectly!!!!  And today for the second day of trying we let them all go at once!!!  Pretty almost perfect!!!  And for Valentine's Day we had shrimp cocktail!!!!  We have 2 more nites of this bad, cold weather and hoping we can survive until Tuesday with a high of "0".  Too many times getting up in the middle of the nite at -20degrees to re-start the generator and all the rest!!!!!

Friday, February 12, 2021

If I weren't here I wouldn't believe our bad luck,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

Amazingly------- the brand new generator quit sometime in the nite!!!  I woke i[ about 7 and thought it was unusually quiet......the generator wasn't running !!!!!!  so we got up and dropped dogs turned the burner on the stove for heat and proceeded to go to the Honda website and find out where we could take the brand new Honda for service - 18 miles away and they squeezed us in!!!  Even more upsetting is that when they took it all apart they found that one of the fuel lines had a kink in it and had not been set up correctly!!!!!!!!! 

We also had to drive another 20 miles to get another battery for the 3 year old generator - so now we have 2 that should - and I use that term loosely= work!!!

It's beginning to be one of those "if it weren't for bad luck I'd have no luck at all" trips.....................

Thursday, February 11, 2021

Here we are in Iron River, Wisconsin!!!!

 Yes we made it to Wisconsin, but then the cold weather and more troubles set in!!!!!   the first nite here the truck would not start after we had driven it all day!!!  Randy just was making sure it would start in the extreme cold temps and it didn't!!!!  So we asked the guys at the ambulance building next to where we are parked who might be able to take a look at the truck and find the problem ===he came at the beginning of the day and jump started it with a special jumper - then said he would try to find someone else in town to look at the truck because he was busy and couldn't get the truck in to his garage...............he called back and said he couldn't find anyone else that wanted to work and that he would try to work on it that day or early the next morning - so we drove it to his shop and he brought us back here - luckily he called back late afternoon and said he had found a loose connection in the wiring to the battery!!!!!  So we got the truck back............then this morning while we were getting ready to breakfast dogs the brand new generator quit!!!!!!  Needless to say, Randy was upset - we called the guy we bought it from the day before and he talked him through re-setting the cabin monoxide monitor - and it started up!!!  Must have been the cold temps causing the fumes to drop by the sensor..............

So we went to see the race site and the trail looks good - we are still trying to decide how or if we are going to exercise the dogs over the next week - it's so cold (like -20) it doesn't seem like it would be good for the dogs to run..............................

We also got some groceries and are going to go to the laundromat to wash some very stinky dog clothes!!!!

Tuesday, February 9, 2021

Oh my goodness it is really over?

 The banquet was wonderful - they truly are like a big family and so supportive of each other - the best kind of competition that you can have!!

We left Jackson on Sunday morning after having fed and dropped and then started through the pass going to Pinedale - it was sketchy and scary but we made it OK - the bad part was when we got on I80 and they started to display signs that said there was slippery roads ahead       = well until you see it you don't believe it so we were surprised going around a fairly sharp curve on the expressway and saw black ice and snow on I80!!!! the thing that made it worse is there were 60mph winds and it made the trailer "break loose" when we hit the ice!!!!  Jesus moment................

We made it to Sidney, Nebraska (the original Cabelas ) and we parked it their lot - during the night the generator quit again and Randy had to get up in the 3degree weather and plug in and start our smaller backup generator so we had heat in the trailer!!

So in the morning we looked up the place close that could repair our big generator (the smaller one has a hard time keeping up with the needs of the trailer...ie.   microwave, toaster....)  We drove there and in my words, they thought that going down the road with a lot of bumps caused the gas to pass into the oil and make it hard for it to run.............well they took it in this huge John Deere shop and figured that out and then didn't charge us a thing for the hour they spent troubleshooting!!!!  Talk about Nebraska hospitality!!!

But........after that we stopped to drop dogs and the generator had quit again and then further down the road it had quit again!1  so we got as far as Des Moines Iowa and are parked in a Lowe's parking lot and using the less adequate smaller generator to keep us warm tonite - for sure Randy will have to get up at least once and put gas in the generator cause it won't go more than 7 hours -and of course we are having the worst cold snap of the season!!!

Should be to Iron River, Wisconsin tomorrow all things being good!!

Found a Honda dealer in Des Moines and just bought a new generator for $2300!!!

Saturday, February 6, 2021

Last leg of the Wyoming Stage Race

 We made it to the end!!!!!  Here's hoping they come in the way they went out- full of excitement!!!!!  It's a 30 mile trail today and 8 miles going up, then rolling for 7 to a height of 2000 feet and then back down!!  8 dogs again today - we have to remind ourselves how well we really are doing with only a pool of 11 dogs and needing to rest some of them every day!!!!  Cause most every other team is 10 dogs! And the run up to the start line is the shortest of all the legs - only about 25 yards!!!  I made it all the way to the start line ahead of the team...........well almost.....part of the way the leaders were dragging me!!

The drive from Driggs, ID wasn't too bad- the road coming into Alpine through the pass was clear so we were happy they had done a nice job cleaning the snow off - we were worried it might be bad -  but then we got on the pass from Alpine to Jackson and it did get bad.............all the way here - it was really slippery when we were going through a round-about!!!!  Some people said they bounced off from the snow banks going through!!!!!!!!

Tonight there is an awards banquet in Jackson so we are looking forward to that!!!

Well team DeKuiper did it!!!!!!  19th today and 18th overall!!!!!!!!!!!  Yay!!!!!!!  You can see the video of Randy finishing if you look at the facebook page "Pedigree Stage Stop Race"  He is at 10 minutes and 40 seconds into the video of the Teton county video (thank you Amy....)

I can't say I am going to miss getting up at 6am in order to be ready for a 9am race start for 7 days!!!!!

We drove back to Jackson from the race site in the most horrible weather we have experienced the whole trip!!!! total white out - couldn't see 50 feet ahead of us frequently - Randy said it was more stressful than the race!!!! but now we are safely back at the rodeo grounds in Jackson - Bruce and Laura are going to unhook from their trailer so they are driving us to the banquet because there is no parking for our rig there.

Tomorrow we shall see what the weather around the nation is and make a decision about which route to take to Wisconsin for our next race in Iron River 2 weeks from today - hopefully the weather will have vastly improved!!!

Friday, February 5, 2021

The end is in sight!!!!

 It looks like we might actually finish this race!!!  Of course that's assuming that Randy makes it in this morning!!!  He left on the 29 mile trail at 9:10am and I expect he will be back by 2 and a half hours.

Yesterday at noon we left Alpine and went north following a huge reservoir up and down and up and down, then down into a valley, then back up into a pass then back down into a valley where we are now -Driggs Idaho-  we spent the nite in the parking lot of the fairgrounds and I was even able to go watch some horses training in the arena - this one girl who was training for barrel racing brought her own collapsible barrels!!!! then she proceeded to set them up while sitting on her horse!!!!  Then this morning we made the 1/2 hour trip to the trailhead  - it's been snowing steadily and should make the trip back the way we came treacherous!!!  We have to go back by way of Alpine, through the pass to Jackson and then another hour north of Jackson to tomorrow's race site.  When you think of driving on a pass through the mountains   you would think it would be relatively flat.............no so here.........lots of steep grades and twisting and turning!!!!!!

Good run (not excellent) today - Randy is 18th overall and 19th today!!!

Wednesday, February 3, 2021

Feb 3rd update

February 3rd

It’s a darn good thing that the telephone and the computer have the dates on them or I wouldn’t be able to tell you that it’s Feb 3rd!!!!  Like I said It’s pretty confusing moving to a new town every day!!

We did make it to the next race site just before dark – I was just at a point where I couldn’t decide whether to keep on straight to Lander or turn where it looked like from the map they provided for us in the ‘’ Stage Stop Bible” and just at that moment we saw Bruce and Laura’s trailer parked in what appeared to be a rest stop – we were so lucky to have seen them because that is actually the race start!!!!!  If it had been dark we never would have seen them and would have been driving around for hours looking for it!!!!  Plus we heard from Ed Stielstra that it is a really steep hill going on to the town of Lander – we are currently in the South Pass at an altitude of 8500 feet!!! And yes I had trouble breathing taking the team up to the line but thankfully someone offered to help slow them down running the 25 yards uphill to the start!!!

So here I am waiting in our cozy little trailer – the trail is less miles today at 30 so Randy should be about 2.5 hours I think……….

We saw storm and black ice warnings last nite when we were coming here and supposedly there is a big storm coming – so much so that in the driver’s meeting this morning they said they may want to caravan everybody to the next stop!!!!!!  It was snowing pretty heavily but now it’s just windy – the temp is probably around 30 degrees – I don’t know for sure because ….once again…….no cell service!!!!

 

Final results for today:  overall- 17th and today’s- 19th  thought things went good but must have gone well for everybody!!

Just got our 2nd covid test and are clear – off to Alpine to spend the nite and then leave for Driggs, Idaho tomorrow!!

 

Tuesday, February 2, 2021

update after the 4th stage

January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 

 

 

 

January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 

 

 

 

 January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 

 

 

 

 January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!

 January 31

Lots to catch up on – a little busy over the last 3 days and no internet coverage – 

So Thursday nite we drove to Jackson Hole and finally found the rodeo grounds parking lot after driving in a circle through a residential neighborhood!!  For those of you who have not seen our rig, it is 62 feet long – not easy to maneuver around tight corners!!!

But we spent the nite there and quite early in the morning a a very nice vet from Ohio come and look at our 14 dog pool – everything was good except 2 of our 3 year olds looked like they might be on the verge of losing weight with the long runs – even though we know they are poor eaters and have even been giving them raw chicken from the grocery store to try and fatten them up!!!

So we left Jackson and drove back to Alpine and on the way saw 2 herds of elk – one of the herds was like a tourist attraction where they took people out on horse sleigh-wagons to look at the elk -     both herds were at least 100 by what we could see!

Got back to Alpine and went to the very good market to buy some more dog bisquits because I go through them very fast -  when you think about giving 16 dogs a bisquit every time we let them out of their box at least 5 times a day!!!

Got up at 5;30 am (I set the alarm for 6 but guess I was too anxious!!!) in order to feed the dogs water/breakfast by 6:30 so we could drop them again at the time (8:30) we should be getting ready to harness/hook up the team for a 9:15am start.  So again, for those of you who are not familiar with our race “DeKuiper schedule”- we drop the dogs and as we are dropping them/letting them out of their boxes – I put Zeus Juice on their feet before they even hit the snow so I can drench their inner paws with protective oil to prevent cracks forming in their feet while they are running in snow – wonderfully enough, Fran and Ron Nelson showed up to help me get the dogs ready – they are a couple that used to race in the MUSH organization in Michigan about the same time I started racing – they have in the last 5 years moved to Wyoming and live only 15 miles away from the Alpine race site – so it was very fun to have them here to help us hook up to race = we did have Bruce Magnusson’s snow machine to hook onto to get to the race start so that was good =we got into the shoot good and Randy took off looking good-

I thought, based on our training runs both in the UP and here in Wyoming that Randy would average 15 mph but because the trail was soft with several inches of new snow overnight, it actually took him almost 3 hours to go 30 miles!!!

So for his first stage, he came in 18th – of course not what we had hoped for but at least not last!

We packed up and headed for the next trailhead outside of Pinedale – it was a decent ride , had to go back the way we took to get to Alpine and then a 27 mile side road that dead ended at the trail start.  Nice view – found out after Randy left that the trail took him up switchbacks to the top of a mountain at 10,000 feet!!!!  He says he didn’t have any side effects (some people throw up, get headaches or light headed)  When he came back he had Island in the bag – she ran along for most of the 35 miles but laid down about 3 miles from the finish line – she has been a dog that we have been nursing a pad injury for over a month and is a bit of a pansy…….. she may not run again…….

Surprisingly, Randy moved up a spot to 18th!  So we packed up and headed for the next stage at Kemmerer – on the way we got a text saying they had a Mexican dinner for us in Kemmerer at the community center!  First time eating out in forever!!!!  It was nice and the food was good.

Left the community center and drove about an hour to the race site – we were the only ones here all nite – got a bit chilly (7 degrees) and when we got up at 6am to water the dogs the propane had run out so it was starting to get chilly inside too!!!

So here we are resting before the 8am driver’s meeting and then will drop the dogs about 8:30 and start getting ready for Randy’s 9:18 start!!!

You know I am already having a really hard time remembering what day it is and where we have been the last 4 days!!!!  It’s pretty confusing – kind of what it must be like to be “on tour”…………

Our take off this morning was less than desirable – first we apparently were not calculating his start time correctly so he was supposed to leave earlier than we had planned – so I think about 3 people were there helping us to hurry to the start line so we didn’t miss our chute time and while we were hooking up dogs Randy says some kind hearted helper unhooked the dog team from the trailer so they started leaving!!!!  We didn’t even have all of them hooked in!!! And Randy was nowhere to be seen!!!!!  and then Randy appears (having forgotten his bib in the trailer…………) and we are off to the start line with me huffing and puffing and not able to keep up with the team even with him putting the brake down!!!!!

He did take off and they looked good!  I walked down farther on the trail and wanted to see where they were going (turns out the trail goes through a valley and then up a mountain with switchbacks – both Randy and Ed Stielstra said it was the most beautiful trail of their lives – a lot coming from 2 Iditarod drivers………..)  I stayed down about 1/8 mile and watched more teams go out and then realized that in the confusion and rush to get to the start line we still have 8 dogs out tied to the trailer!!!!  When I got back they were all happy and in the sun so it was all good………..but the door to the trailer was wide open (I thing Randy in his haste had not made sure it was closed ) so who knows how much propane we used trying to heat the outdoors!!!!!

Randy came in to the finish line and I had much less hard time getting them back to the truck than I had getting them to the start line – it was down hill to the start  and of course the dogs are full of energy wanting to go – I  felt like it took me 5 minutes to catch my breath but maybe it wasn’t’ that long 

He did have a dog in the bag – she stopped in the trail about a mile from the finish line and we guess just got tired – the vet checked her and found nothing wrong but Randy thinks it’s probably a shoulder injury come back from last year.  Plus he said our old leader Gretta must have a shoulder problem because he had to keep them going under 15mph even going downhill and her partner had to keep her going  So on that note I am thinking we are really getting down on our pool of dogs and wondering if we will be able to go 4 more races……………… and then we got today’s results and Randy was 18th for the day and is at 16th overall!!!  So things don’t look quite so dismal…………

Went to the rodeo grounds community center (it’s attached to a great big riding arena and there were people training their horses for events) and had a nice roast beef dinner sitting with the Beabers and Magnussons – left there and drove about an hour down another dead end road to the race site – just Magnussons and us here for the nite.

Got up at 5:30 on Tuesday morning because we had to water the dogs earlier because they were coming to drug test 2 of our dogs – when the vets got here we took out a total of 4 dogs and managed to get 2 good samples…………

We hooked everyone up and by luck were able to have Jess, Alix Crittendon’s handler take us up to the start line – like a 1/8 mile away, downhill in soft snow – I made it almost to the line in front of the dogs but then my breathing got the best of me so they went to the line by themselves – I found out we are at over 8,000 feet so no wonder I am having some breathing trouble!!!!

Randy made it back with the dogs looking pretty good!!!  He said the trail took him up over 2 different mountains!!!   So for today he was 17th  at 2:57 hours and overall 16th – with the person in 17thonly 8 seconds behind!!!!  On to Lander – it’s supposed to take 2.5 to 3 hours!!!!!