Iditarod Mushers Begin Nearly 1,000-Mile Race Across Alaska

Iditarod Mushers Begin Nearly 1,000-Mile Race Across Alaska
Alaskan native Ryan Redington, the son of Iditarod veteran, Raymie Redington and grandson of Iditarod co-founder, Joe Redington, Sr., heads down the trail outside of Anchorage, Alaska, 03 March 2007 at the beginning of Iditarod XXXV. JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images
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ANCHORAGE, Alaska—The world’s most famous sled dog race started Monday with 71 mushers setting off from the heart of Alaska and embarking on a nearly 1,000-mile trek across the wilderness.

The grandson of a co-founder of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race was the first competitor on the trail.

Ryan Redington, 33, of Wasilla led the other mushers out of the chute in Fairbanks nearly a half-century after his grandfather, Joe Redington Sr., helped stage the first race in 1973.

The contest has a staggered start so fans, including 2,600 schoolchildren, can cheer on the mushers, who leave every two minutes.

One race rookie, 53-year-old Roger Lee, threw his fist in the air as he took off from the chute.

Iditarod champion Micth Seavey mushes his sled dog team over the frozen Willow Lake as Iditarod XXXV official begins 04 March 2007 in Willow, Alaska. (JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images)
Iditarod champion Micth Seavey mushes his sled dog team over the frozen Willow Lake as Iditarod XXXV official begins 04 March 2007 in Willow, Alaska. JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images