Add a historic Iditarod across Alaska to Emily Ford’s résumé of extreme winter feats.
Under bright sunshine, the rookie musher from Duluth and her team of 10 Alaskan huskies crossed the finish line of the famous sled dog race early Sunday afternoon in downtown Nome. She finished 18th overall.
Interviewed by race officials in the finisher chute, a smiling Ford sounded like she would race more miles if it meant more time outdoors with her sled team.
“It’s just this lifestyle of, we get to be with our dogs and the land all at once, and it brings you back to center,” she said.
Her mother, Paula, texted the Minnesota Star Tribune after witnessing her daughter’s achievement in person.
“It was so good to see her face!” said Paula Ford. “Although I knew she and the dogs were OK, seeing them was the best.”
Ford already has proven her winter chops in other ways, such as her thru-hike of Wisconsin’s 1,200-mile Ice Age Trail in 2020-21 and a solo skijoring trip across the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness a year later.
Expectations for Ford’s first Iditarod race were confident but low-key. Before the race, she said she just hoped to complete the trek. Yet, Ford finished as the third-fastest rookie. Samantha LaLonde of Farmington Hills, Mich., won rookie-of-the-year honors.