Rohn Buser is the 2012 K300 Champion
Posted: January 22, 2012 Filed under: Kuskokwim 300 2012 | Tags: Bethel, champion, finish, John Baker, K300, Paul Gebhardt, Rohn Buser Leave a comment »Crossing the finish line in Bethel at 11:42 this morning, 22-year old Rohn Buser is the 2012 Kuskokwim 300 champion. Rohn Buser, son of Iditarod legend Martin Buser, won the race with a team of 10 dogs. Marking his third attempt at the K300, the young Buser said he knew he had control of the race fairly early on. “I felt pretty good at the the six hour [layover] at Kalskag,” he said at the finish, adding that his “dogs were just doing their thing and kept it up the whole way.”
Coming in second place was Kotzebue’s John Baker, the 2011 Iditarod champion and 2010 K300 winner. Baker finished at 12:13pm with his team of 12 dogs. Third place went to Kasilof musher Paul Gebhardt, last year’s K300 champ, who crossed the finish line at 12:29pm with his team of 10 dogs.
Stay tuned for more updates from the K300 as more mushers make their way into Bethel.
6 p.m. Update – Mackey and Company in Front.
Posted: January 21, 2012 Filed under: Kuskokwim 300 2012 Leave a comment »14 teams are out of Aniak moving through Whitefish Lake area. After completing their 6-hour rest in Kalskag, the top teams blazed through the Aniak checkpoint to begin the second half of the race.
Lance Mackey was first out of Aniak, but two other mushers—Rohn Buser, and defending champion Paul Gebhardt— were within 10 minutes. The next 4 teams: Ray Redington Jr, Pete Kaiser, Ramey Smyth, and Ken Anderson all left within an hour of Mackey.
The front of the pack is still tight, but there is beginning to be some separation as they make their way through punchy snow. The leaders may make it back to Kalskag by 8 or 9 o’clock tonight.
As of 6 p.m., GPS tracking showed Mackey, Gebhart, and Rohn Buser running close together as they turned north (into the wind) to reconnect with the river at Kalskag.
Scott Smith is finishing up his rest in Aniak. Smith was eligible to depart at 5:16. Louie Ambrose took his 6-hour in Kalskag, and opted to spend a few extra hours in Aniak. All mushers have a mandatory 4-hour rest at Tuluksak before beginning the final sprint into Bethel.
Martin Buser, Aaron Burmeister, and Rohn Buser in Kalskag
Posted: January 21, 2012 Filed under: Kuskokwim 300 2012 | Tags: Kuskokwim 300, Martin Buser 1 Comment »KNOM’s Laureli Kinneen spoke with Martin Buser, Aaron Burmeister, and Rohn Buser Saturday morning in Kalskag.
Photos: Kalskag on Saturday
Posted: January 21, 2012 Filed under: Kuskokwim 300 2012, Photos | Tags: Alaska, Kalskag, Kuskokwim 300, mushing, sled dog Leave a comment »Video: Lance Mackey Departs Kalskag (Saturday)
Posted: January 21, 2012 Filed under: Kuskokwim 300 2012, Video | Tags: Alaska, Kalskag, Kuskokwim 300, Lance Mackey, mushing, race, sled dog Leave a comment »Kuskokwim 300 musher Lance Mackey departs the Kalskag checkpoint Saturday morning with his sled dog team. Mackey is a veteran sled dog musher and a four-time champion of both the Yukon Quest and the Iditarod.
Laureli’s On the Trail Update (12pm from Kalskag)
Posted: January 21, 2012 Filed under: Kuskokwim 300 2012 Leave a comment »Laureli Kinneen’s 12pm update from Kalskag:
In at Kalskag, a Waiting Game
Posted: January 21, 2012 Filed under: Kuskokwim 300 2012 | Tags: Alaska, Aniak, Bethel, John Baker, Kalskag, Lance Mackey, Michael Williams Jr, mushing, Paul Gebhardt, Pete Kaiser, race, Ray Redington Jr, Rohn Buser, Scott Smith, sled dog, Tuluksak Leave a comment »This morning saw a full house at Kalskag: all mushers save one (Scott Smith) appeared to be taking their 6 hour rest, and so it was a waiting game to see who would be leaving when. KNOM’s Laureli Kinneen called in to update us on when the mushers should be leaving (with their times adjusted for the staggered start). Looking at each dog team’s performance since leaving Bethel, and going on what Laureli could tell us in Kalskag, it looks like the real race will be underway soon. On their way to Aniak, the half-way point, with most mushers having taken their 6 hour layover, means it’s going to be an exciting second half of the race.
Last year Paul Gebhardt had a lead coming out of Aniak that he kept all the way to Bethel. He barreled through a 145-mile shot straight to Tuluksak, taking the mandatory 4 hour layover. Will he try a similar move this year? Will Mackey’s dogs, fresh from a strong Knik 200 performance, take him to a first-ever K300 win? Will one of the Busers unleash that trademark speed? Will local boys like Mike Williams Jr and Pete Kasier – two mushers with strong performances last year – find themselves at the head of the pack? And what about John Baker, sitting in position 14 out of Kalskag? It’s all too early to tell.The second half of this race is going to be interesting.
Races like this are so much fun to follow because no matter how closely you look at the online leader boards or how often you refresh the GPS tracking, you’ve got to use your imagination to see these dog teams in your head, to imagine how the musher is pushing his dogs and pacing his team, until you get another update of time in/time out at the next checkpoint.
Based on the estimated times out, adjusted for the staggered start, Lance Mackey, Rohn Buser, Paul Gebhardt, Ray Redington Jr, and Mike Williams Jr. should be back on the trail. It’s going to be an exciting race to Aniak, to Tuluksak, and on to Bethel.
Ready to Cover the Kusko 300!
Posted: January 20, 2012 Filed under: Kuskokwim 300 2012, Photos | Tags: Alaska, Bethel, Kuskokwim 300, mushing, race, sled dog Leave a comment »
On the large window of KNOM's main broadcast studio - Studio A - we've drawn a map of the Kuskokwim 300 route. We're ready for the race!
It’s race season once again in Western Alaska, and at KNOM, we’re excited to be reporting on the sled-dog and snowmachine teams that will be racing across our region in the coming months.
This weekend (January 20-22), we’ll be bringing you special coverage of the 2012 Kuskokwim 300 Sled Dog Race, which – as seen in KNOM’s own map, drawn on our studio window – both starts and ends in the southwestern Alaskan city of Bethel.
Join us on KNOM (96.1fm, 780am) for kickoff K300 coverage on Friday, January 20th at 6:30pm, with race updates throughout Saturday and Sunday, January 21st and 22nd: at 9am, 12noon, 5pm, and 8pm.
Listen for regular, live updates from our reporter on the trail, as well as the live finish of the K300 on Sunday, January 22nd.
Here’s the promotional spot we’ve produced, summarizing our K300 race coverage:
If possible, we’ll also post on this blog during the race. Stay tuned!
In Photos: The Iditarod 2011 Awards Banquet
Posted: March 23, 2011 Filed under: Iditarod 2011, Iditarod News (2011), Photos | Tags: Alaska, Aliy Zirkle, Allen Moore, Ellen Halverson, Hans Gatt, Iditarod, John Baker, Ken Anderson, Michael Williams Jr, Middie Johnson, mushing, Nicholas Petit, Nome, Paul Johnson, Peter Kaiser, Ramey Smyth, Rick Swenson, Robert Nelson, Sebastian Schnuelle, sled dog, Trent Herbst, Unalakleet 1 Comment »photos by David Dodman
- At the beginning of the 2011 awards banquet, KNOM General Manager Ric Schmidt offers a few words about Tom Busch, KNOM’s founder and a broadcaster who reported on decades of Iditarod races.
- Musher Trent Herbst receives the Dorothy G. Page Halfway Award.
- Kotzebue’s John Baker – the Iditarod 2011 champion – took home the Gold Coast Award (for arriving first into the checkpoint of Unalakleet on the Norton Sound coast).
- Rookie of the Year Nicholas Petit.
- Musher Allen Moore, recipient of the coveted Sportsmanship Award.
- His arm in a sling after an injury on the trail that broke his collarbone, longtime musher (and five-time champion) Rick Swenson receives the Mushers’ Choice Award.
- The original Burled Arch (the finish line marker for Iditarod) hangs permanently in the Nome Recreation Center, where Sunday’s awards banquet was held.
- Unalakleet mayor Middie Johnson, receiving the Golden Clipboard Award for his village (as the checkpoint of the year).
- Like every year, Sunday’s awards banquet was packed with attendees. In the middle of the crowd, inconspicuously, sat Iditarod champion John Baker.
- Unalakleet’s Paul Johnson receives the coveted Herbie Nayokpuk Award.
- Unalakleet’s Paul Johnson at the podium, just after receiving the Herbie Nayokpuk Award.
- Aliy Zirkle, initially lost for words – and overcome with emotion – at being awarded the highly prized Leonhard Seppala Humanitarian Award (for exceptional dog care).
- Ellen Halverson receives the Red Lantern Award (for finishing the Iditarod in last place). It was the second time Halverson took home the Red Lantern; she also won it in 2007.
- Kotzebue’s Robert Nelson recounts stories from the trail.
- Akiak’s Mike Williams, Jr. receives his trophy for 13th place. 2011 was Williams’ second Iditarod.
- Musher Ken Anderson recounts his time on the trail after receiving his 9th-place trophy.
- Bethel’s Pete Kaiser, who finished in 8th place.
- 6th-place finisher Sebastian Schnuelle.
- 3rd-place finisher Hans Gatt.
- Musher Ramey Smyth took home 2nd place in Iditarod 2011 after a close chase up the Norton Sound coast. (Smyth finished less than an hour behind Baker.)
- Kotzebue’s John Baker – the first Native Inupiaq man to win an Iditarod – received thunderous applause and a standing ovation at the awards banquet.
- Iditarod 2011 champion John Baker.
- John Baker speaks at the conclusion of the awards banquet. On hand, among others, was US Senator Lisa Murkowski.
The Iditarod 2011 Red Lantern: Ellen Halverson
Posted: March 21, 2011 Filed under: Iditarod 2011, Iditarod News (2011), Photos | Tags: Alaska, Ellen Halverson, Iditarod, mushing, Nome, Red Lantern, sled dog Leave a comment »photos and text by David Dodman
Iditarod 2011 has officially concluded! The last-place finisher, or Red Lantern, arrived into Nome on Sunday morning.
The Red Lantern of Iditarod 2011 was Wasilla, Alaska’s Ellen Halverson, who passed under the Burled Arch at 10:45am Sunday. Halverson is the first musher in Iditarod history to win the Red Lantern twice; she also placed last in 2007, although her finish time this year was more than two days and 16 hours faster.
Here’s a few shots of Halverson’s Red Lantern finish. KNOM reporter Ben Matheson caught up with Halverson under the Burled Arch; he also spoke with US Senator Lisa Murkowski, who was on hand to see the conclusion of Iditarod 2011.

The Iditarod 2011 Red Lantern (last-place finisher), Ellen Halverson, pulling to the finish line on Sunday.

Red Lantern Ellen Halverson talks with Iditarod official Leo Rasmussen (in the red hat) and KNOM's Ben Matheson.

Ben Matheson chats a bit with US Senator Lisa Murkowski, who was on hand - and bundled up - to see Ellen Halverson's Red Lantern finish.

Murkowski talked about her excitement at being back in Nome to witness the conclusion of Iditarod 2011.
































