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Adventure Snow Sports

Bikepacking Alaska’s Iditarod Trail

Text by
RJ Sauer
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On February 26, 2017, I joined 70 racers at the start line of the annual Iditarod Trail Invitational, a bikepacking race along the Iditarod Trail across the Alaskan backcountry, which takes place at the same time as the dogsled race. Participants are self-supported, carrying all of their own clothing, camping, and cooking gear, with food drops shipped ahead along the trail. This year’s race was fraught with frigid temperatures that frequently dropped to minus 40. Of the 25 racers intending to race the 1,000 miles to Nome, only six would finish. Here’s a series of images from my 18-day, 1000-mile sufferfest.  Photo: Martijn Boonman, a fellow racer I rode with for several days, soaks up the rising sun and the hint of warmth it brings. Keeping dry was a critical, daily chore. The cold temperatures combined with the perspiration and moisture from breathing built up a constant layer of frost on our face and clothing.  Photos and words by RJ Sauer.
(RJ Sauer)

On February 26, 2017, I joined 70 racers at the start line of the annual Iditarod Trail Invitational, a bikepacking race along the Iditarod Trail across the Alaskan backcountry, which takes place at the same time as the dogsled race. Participants are self-supported, carrying all of their own clothing, camping, and cooking gear, with food drops shipped ahead along the trail. This year’s race was fraught with frigid temperatures that frequently dropped to minus 40. Of the 25 racers intending to race the 1,000 miles to Nome, only six would finish.

Here’s a series of images from my 18-day, 1000-mile sufferfest.

Photo: Martijn Boonman, a fellow racer I rode with for several days, soaks up the rising sun and the hint of warmth it brings. Keeping dry was a critical, daily chore. The cold temperatures combined with the perspiration and moisture from breathing built up a constant layer of frost on our face and clothing.

Along the trail, various shelters, cabins, and roadhouses offered an opportunity to get out of the cold, grab a bite to eat, and even a warm place to sleep. Here at Shell Lake Lodge, Frank Janssens unpacks gear he plans to dry inside in the early days of the race.
(RJ Sauer)

Along the trail, various shelters, cabins, and roadhouses offered an opportunity to get out of the cold, grab a bite to eat, and even a warm place to sleep. Here at Shell Lake Lodge, Frank Janssens unpacks gear he plans to dry inside in the early days of the race.

As the sun rose over the Alaskan Range, we pushed our bikes into a fierce headwind, often searching blindly for the vanishing trail as we approached Hell’s Gate and Ptarmigan Pass, about a quarter of the way through the race.
(RJ Sauer)

As the sun rose over the Alaskan Range, we pushed our bikes into a fierce headwind, often searching blindly for the vanishing trail as we approached Hell’s Gate and Ptarmigan Pass, about a quarter of the way through the race.

Boonman followed the hard-packed trail out of the Rohn checkpoint through the Farewell Burn, a charred stretch of landscape leading out of the Alaskan Range. This was the site of Alaska’s largest forest fire, which burned 1.5 million acres in the summer of 1978.
(RJ Sauer)

Boonman followed the hard-packed trail out of the Rohn checkpoint through the Farewell Burn, a charred stretch of landscape leading out of the Alaskan Range. This was the site of Alaska’s largest forest fire, which burned 1.5 million acres in the summer of 1978.

When the temperature dropped to minus 40, we took refuge inside a small wooden shelter in Ophir—385 miles into the race—to cook a hot, dehydrated meal and get some sleep. By morning, the shack was like an icebox. We struggled to repack our bikes and hit the trail.
(RJ Sauer)

When the temperature dropped to minus 40, we took refuge inside a small wooden shelter in Ophir—385 miles into the race—to cook a hot, dehydrated meal and get some sleep. By morning, the shack was like an icebox. We struggled to repack our bikes and hit the trail.

It was hard not to stop and appreciate the breathtaking scenery along the way, but taking photos was a delicate balance of getting the shot while protecting exposed fingers. For me, photography was a great way to emotionally manage the time and distance.
(RJ Sauer)

It was hard not to stop and appreciate the breathtaking scenery along the way, but taking photos was a delicate balance of getting the shot while protecting exposed fingers. For me, photography was a great way to emotionally manage the time and distance.

My loyal setup for the 2017 Iditarod Trail Invitational: a carbon Salsa Mukluk. Both my bike and body managed to stay relatively intact for the duration of the race despite the constant exposure.
(RJ Sauer)

My loyal setup for the 2017 Iditarod Trail Invitational: a carbon Salsa Mukluk. Both my bike and body managed to stay relatively intact for the duration of the race despite the constant exposure.

The portage from Kaltag on the Yukon River, which weaves 75 miles north to Unalakleet on the ocean, was shrouded in a supernatural mist. This stretch of trail was some of the most incredible fat-biking I’ve ever done.
(RJ Sauer)

The portage from Kaltag on the Yukon River, which weaves 75 miles north to Unalakleet on the ocean, was shrouded in a supernatural mist. This stretch of trail was some of the most incredible fat-biking I’ve ever done.

I pulled over to let a team of dogs pass along this narrow stretch of trail. There was a camaraderie and mutual respect among those of us racing the Iditarod by bike and foot and the mushers competing with their dog teams.
(RJ Sauer)

I pulled over to let a team of dogs pass along this narrow stretch of trail. There was a camaraderie and mutual respect among those of us racing the Iditarod by bike and foot and the mushers competing with their dog teams.

The beautiful, warm colors of sunrise, which was around 9:30 a.m., offered an invigorating glimmer of hope and a reprieve from the suffocating cold of night.
(RJ Sauer)

The beautiful, warm colors of sunrise, which was around 9:30 a.m., offered an invigorating glimmer of hope and a reprieve from the suffocating cold of night.

Filed to:
  • Alaska
  • Photography

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