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Wildlife encounter leads Iditarod racer Dallas Seavey to dispatch and gut moose on trail

Zachariah Hughes, Anchorage Daily News, Alaska on

Published in Outdoors

Five-time Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race champion Dallas Seavey shot and dressed a moose that threatened his dog team early Monday morning, less than 24 hours into this year's race.

The incident happened on a portion of the race route between the Skwentna and Finger Lake checkpoints.

"It was on a downhill. I mean, it fell on my sled, and it was sprawled on the trail," Seavey said in a short video posted on Iditarod Insider, the race's media arm for paying subscribers.

Seavey said he notified race director Mark Nordman via an InReach messaging device, and proceeded to do what the event's rulebook requires in cases where mushers are forced to dispatch edible wildlife.

"I gutted it as best I could, but it was ugly," Seavey said at the Finger Lake checkpoint.

Additional information from Iditarod officials wasn't immediately available Monday.

Under the Iditarod's Rule 34, if a musher kills an edible big game animal in defense of life and property, "the musher must gut the animal and report the incident to a race official at the next checkpoint. Following teams must help gut the animal when possible. No teams may pass until the animal has been gutted and the musher killing the animal has proceeded."

The run from Skwentna to Finger Lake, which speedy mushers do in around five hours, took Seavey eight hours and 14 minutes, though it is unclear how much of that time was spent gutting the moose carcass or if any other mushers happened upon him and helped.

According to Iditarod Insider analyst and race veteran Bruce Lee, Seavey said the incident threw a wrench in his planned run-rest schedule, although he stayed just six minutes in the Finger Lake checkpoint where veterinarians had the chance to look at his dogs, one of which — a female named Faloo — he dropped.

"The Alaska troopers have been notified, the meat will be salvaged," Lee said in a video. "The moose is lying in the trail, some of the other mushers have had to go over it like a snow drift."

 

One of those other mushers was veteran Paige Drobny, who was the third racer to arrive into Finger Lake a little before 6 a.m. Tuesday.

"It's dead in the middle of the trail," Drobny told a race checker in a video of her arrival. "My team went up and over it, it's that in the middle of the trail."

Less than two hours earlier when Jessie Holmes was the first musher to arrive at the checkpoint, he reported that he'd also had an encounter with a moose, one that was very much alive.

"I had to punch a moose in the nose out there. Oh my gosh," Holmes said.

[On the first full day of the Iditarod, mushers ascend the Alaska Range in fuzzy conditions]

News of the incident was still trickling out over the course of Monday.

"With the well-being of his team in mind, Dallas made the tough decision to fell the moose, resulting in a setback for his progression the trail," said a post on Seavey's official Facebook page. "Iditarod officials swiftly organized assistance to handle the aftermath, contacting the authorities and confirming the preservation of the animals meat."

Though animal encounters are not uncommon in Iditarod, rarely do they end in death.


(c)2024 the Alaska Dispatch News (Anchorage, Alaska) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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