The Iditarod Trail

From Resurrection Bay to Norton Sound


The newest book published by Northern Light Media is a complete history of the Iditarod Trail, from long before its founding as a route to the Innoko-Iditarod gold fields, to its official designation as a dogteam mail trail from Seward to Nome, to decades of becoming overgrown and unusable, to its resurrection as a race route and the northernmost Congressionally designated National Historic Trail! 


From tidewater at Seward and over multiple mountain ranges, across treacherous rivers and through temperatures reaching 50 below, travelers of the Iditarod Trail face challenges which make the route unique among our nation’s National Historic Trails, the only winter trail in the National Trails System. 

The most well-known use of the Iditarod Trail is the annual 1,000-mile sled dog race from Anchorage to Nome, but many other sled dog races use portions of the trail as well, not only present-day races, but historic sled dog races from Anchorage, Iditarod, and Nome.

But there are many more uses of the trail, such as the the Iron Dog Snowmachine race; the Iditarod Trail Invitational, an ultra marathon for skiers, runners, and mountain bikers; and the grueling Crow Pass Crossing over the most daunting section of the route.

The book includes details on the network of groups which manage, maintain, and advocate for the Iditarod Trail, including the Alaska Bureau of Land Management, the Iditarod Historic Trail Alliance, the Iditarod Trail Committee Inc., the Iditarod Trail Blazers and many others. 


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About Helen Hegener

Author and publisher, Northern Light Media
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