Former reality TV star Jessie Holmes wins longest-ever Iditarod
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In Anchorage, Alaska, Jessie Holmes, a former reality TV personality, emerged as the winner of the longest-ever Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. His victory was marked by enthusiastic fist pumps towards a cheering crowd as he posed for pictures with his lead teammates Hercules and Polar, both donning floral wreaths.

Holmes was first to the finish line in the Gold Rush town of Nome, on the Bering Sea coast.

The race began March 3 in Fairbanks after a lack of snow forced changes to the route and starting point.

This edition of the typically 1,000-mile (1,609-kilometer) race was extended to a remarkable 1,129 miles (1,817 kilometers) through the Alaskan wilderness. Holmes completed the challenging course in a time of 10 days, 14 hours, 55 minutes, and 41 seconds.

Reflecting on his achievement, Holmes described the experience as almost magical, emphasizing the importance of the moments encountered along the trail rather than just the finish line celebrations. “It’s hard to put into words, but it’s a magical feeling,” he expressed right after completing the race.

He will take home $57,200 for winning the race, along with awards including $4,500 worth of gold nuggets and 25 pounds of fresh salmon for finishing first in earlier stages.

Holmes, who was competing for the eighth time, previously finished in the top 10 five times, including third last year and in 2022. In his first Iditarod, in 2018, his seventh-place finish earned him Rookie of the Year honors.

Matt Hall, who was born in Eagle, a tiny community on the Yukon River in eastern Alaska and began mushing at age 2, finished in second place.

His parents owned an expedition company, and he grew up with sled dogs and guiding weeklong trips for clients.

This year’s longer distance was grueling, he said after crossing the line three hours after Holmes. “It was too long,” he said with a laugh.

Paige Drobny finished third, becoming the first woman on the podium since Jessie Royer placed third in 2020. It was Drobny’s 10th attempt in the race.

Drobny lives in Cantwell, Alaska, with her husband and fellow long-distance musher Cody Strathe where they raise sled dogs at Squid Acres Kennel.

The name comes from her master’s thesis on squid in the Bering Sea.

Holmes, who was born and raised in Alabama, left at age 18 and worked as a carpenter in Montana for three years.

He arrived in Alaska in 2004 and found adventur- running dogs on a remote location of the Yukon River.

“It’s been a truly amazing 10 days and I soaked in every part of it — the lows, the highs, the in-betweens. … I’m really proud of these dogs and I love them. And they did it. They deserve all the credit,” Holmes said.

He gave a special salute to his two lead canines, Hercules, his half-sprint dog, and Polar, saying, “He’s the brains behind the operation.”

Holmes now lives in Nenana, where he works as a carpenter and lives a subsistence lifestyle.

From 2015 through 2023, he was a cast member of “Life Below Zero,” a National Geographic program that documents the struggles of Alaskans living in remote parts of the state.

Besides the lack of snow north of the Alaska Range that forced the change of starting point to Fairbanks, race organizers also had to make changes to the ceremonial start in Anchorage.

With snow trucked in to cover streets in the state’s largest city, the usual parade route there was shortened from 11 miles to under 2 miles (from about 18 kilometers to under 3.2 kilometers), and the number of dogs was reduced.

It was the fourth time in this century that the race was forced north from the Anchorage area because of a lack of snow.

Only 33 mushers started in Fairbanks, tied with 2023 for the smallest field ever.

The drop in participants has raised concerns about the viability of the race, which has had to contend with inflation, climate change and pressure from animal rights groups.

One dog died in this year’s Iditarod: a pregnant female on the team of musher Daniel Klein, who under race rules scratched due to the death.

Nearly a third of the mushers quit early, including eight who scratched and two who were withdrawn for not being competitive.

This year’s Iditarod run paid tribute to another famous mushing event, the 1925 Serum Run, in which sled dog teams saved Nome from a deadly diphtheria outbreak.

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