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Turning Heads Kennel

Alaska Dog Sledding Tours

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2015

2015 Paint-A-Pooloza Was a Blast!

Sarah · May 17, 2015 ·

Look at the beautiful dog sled houses
A mountain scene and some creative squiggles

Wow! We woke up Saturday morning to the sound of rain. “Oh no!” I couldn’t believe that after all our hard and careful planning, mother nature once again decided to deal us a bad hand. Fortunately, we had faith in the weather forecast and right around our 11:00am kick off mother nature parted the clouds and left us with brilliant sunshine. Thank you to all our local artists who came out to help us paint dog houses. Check out some of the beautiful works of are below.

 

One of the houses Sarah Stokey decorated for during the dogsledding event in Seward, Alaska
One of the houses Sarah Stokey decorated for during the dogsledding event in Seward, Alaska

The even was so much fun. We grilled hot dogs and offered Glacier Brewhouse Rootbeer. Kids were also able to make rootbeer floats with vanilla icecream.

Beautiful Seward Dog Houses
A rainbow gets added to one of our beautiful new houses

We witnesses lots of creativity and passion. Everyone was excited to help us jazz up our dog yard.

beautiful-dog-yard-seward-houses
Poke-a-Dog Paradise

Everyone was full of smiles and enjoyed mixing paint and coming up with their own unique creations.

fun-painting-seward-doghouses
A beautiful sunset complete with jumping dolphin

Some houses got painted with several colors whereas other houses were simply back drops for other creations.

 

paining-dog-houses-seward-alaska
Look at all that color! Gorgeous!

There were even some creative uses of painters tape.

sled-dogs-fishing-house
Good Friend Jamie helps create an ocean themed dog house

Our friends created a nautical themed dog house because they come from family of fishmen.

sled-dog-housing
There’s always time for splatter paint!

We had several beautiful splatter paint houses.

turnin-heads-kennel-paint-a-pooloza-seward-alaska
The Tranquillity of the Ocean

 

painting-dog=houses-seward
All in all, I’d say the day was a great success. We gave several dog sled rides with both the kids and dogs equally enthusiastic.

Dog sled rides were lots of fun
Dog sled rides were lots of fun

Thank you to everyone who made us a part of their day!

Everything You Need To Know About Alaska Dog Sled Tours

Sarah · May 6, 2015 ·

Everything You

No trip to Alaska is complete without booking an Alaska dog sled tour. Dog  sledding is the apex of Alaskan Culture. A trip to Alaska that doesn’t include visiting a sled dog kennel or going for a dog sled tour would be like visiting Paris and skipping the Eiffel Tower – you just don’t do it.

But trying to figure out where to go dogsledding in Alaska can be really challenging, especially given how large Alaska is and how many dog sledding tours there to choose from. Although there are dozens of companies that offer dog sledding in Alaska, in the end, there are really three main types of dog sled tours you can choose from in the summer: a kennel tour and demonstration, a summer dog sled ride, and a glacier dog sledding tour.

A kennel tour and demonstration allows visitors the opportunity to visit a sled dog kennel and watch demonstrations of the sled dogs running. A summer dog sled ride consists of being on a wheeled sled that the dogs pull over dirt. A glacier dog sled tour requires flying in a helicopter up to high elevations where there is snow; this is generally what people imagine to be a dog sled tour but it comes with a hefty price tag.

Dog Sled Tour Availability Is Greatly Influenced By Location

It’s important to understand that although there are dog sled tours throughout Alaska, location plays the biggest factor in what type of dog sled tour is available. In the cooler parts of south central Alaska (Seward) and southeast Alaska (Juneau, Skagway), summer dog sled rides on dirt are possible. The mountainous regions of southeast and south central Alaska also make it perfect for glacier dog sled tours. In the interior part of Alaska (Denali, Fairbanks) the consistently high summer temperatures mean that dog sled rides cannot be offered – though kennel tours and demonstrations can.

Location also heavily influences price. Dog sled tours in Juneau and Skagway are generally more expensive than dog sled tours in Seward or dog sledding experiences in Denali or Fairbanks. Ironically, even though Juneau and Skagway have some of the highest volumes, most of their bookings come directly from the cruise ships. Cruise ships take a large commission out of each sale, forcing these companies to have higher prices so they can still cover their costs. Because of this, we haven’t worked with cruise ship companies. It means fewer visitors for us (we like small intimate tours anyways!) but better prices for our guests!

Alaska Dog Sled Tours Will Have Puppies

Many dog sled tours will have puppies for you to hold as it helps socialize them.
Many dog sled tours will have puppies for you to hold as it helps socialize them.

Although different companies will always offer differ experiences there are generally a few highlights that remain the same regardless of what kind of tour you choose to do or who you choose to do it with. Puppies are commonplace at almost any dog sled tour operation in the state. Mushers want their young dogs to be socialized and who better to socialize them then lots of young visitors? If, however, you find yourself visiting during the early part of May there many not be puppies simply because they haven’t been born!

Alaska Kennel Tour And Sled Dog Demonstration

A kennel tour and mushing demonstration is a great first introduction to mushing. Generally, these tours are designed around theatrical experiences that showcase the passion sled dogs have for running. What’s great about these operations is that they will keep you captivated from start to finish: there is no lull in the excitement.

Kennel tours also provide a great glimpse into how these dogs live day-in-and-day out as you get to experience the day-to-day life of a sled dog.

One of the most popular kennel tour’s in Alaska today is Jeff King’s Husky Homestead tour. Jeff King is a four-time Iditarod champion and has also received awards for great vet care. If you are visiting Denali National Park, his kennel is a great place to go to learn more about Iditarod and dog sledding.

Denali National Park also does a short sled dog demonstration to park visitors focused on the role of sled dogs in helping protect the park. It is not as an in depth as a full kennel tour and demonstration but it is perfect for those on a tight time schedule or budget.

Summer Alaska Dog Sled Rides

The summer dog sled ride is arguably the most popular dog sled tour in Alaska. It is affordable and still gives the dog mushing experience. In fact, as mushers, we spend a good chunk of our training season running our dogs without snow – so even though these tours are run on wheeled carts over dirt, they are still very authentic. From September to the end of November, mushers spend thousands of miles on ATVs training their sled dogs without snow.

Jane leading a dog sled tour
A dog sled ride at Turning Heads Kennel led by Iditarod musher Travis Beals

Summer dog sled rides range from 1 to 2 miles depending on the weather. Most of the bigger summer dog sled tour companies such as Alaska Excursions In Juneau and Skagway and Seavey’s Ididaride in Seward, Alaska can have as many as 250 visitors on a busy day. Because of the high volume, many of the tour guides are mushers in training.

What’s really exciting about going on a summer dog sled ride is seeing the dogs enthusiasm and witnessing their power. Did you know that a team of sled dogs can, quite easily, pull 8 full grown adults? It’s an amazing strength training program for the dogs to be in and its exciting for guests to be a part of it.

Our own dog sled ride is kept small. During a busy day, we may have 10 or 15 people visit our home who we get to introduce to dog mushing. Travis or I lead a majority of our dog sled tours, though we both believe in taking time off for ourselves too. When we do take time off, we hand them off our tours to our apprentices who’ve been training with us and have had time to learn the dogs and spend lots of time out on the trail.

Our tour requires experienced staff because our ride also serves as part of our lead dog training program. Every time we hook the dogs up, we believe they should be learning something or working towards our goal of being Iditarod champions. It’s really fun for us to share training with our guests! We are also continually making improvements to our kennel for our dogs and for our guests. We combine the best part of a kennel tour and demonstration with a dog sled ride!

Glacier Mushing: Alaska Dog Sled Tours

Glacier dog sled tours are an incredible experience if you can afford the hefty price tag. Glacier dog sledding is the apex of summer musing in Alaska. Take a helicopter to the top of a glacier, get out on the snow, and go dog mushing. It is a breathtaking experience from start to finish. Glacier dog sled tours range dramatically in price from $519 for our dog sled tour to $650 for some of the dog sledding tours in Juneau and Skagway.

After the run, our dogs wait happily to have their booties removed and their feet rubbed!

One of the biggest difference between operations in South Central Alaska and Southeast Alaska is scale. Glacier dogsledding tours in Juneau, such as Alaska Icefield Expeditions, and Temso Helicopters in Skagway receive tremendous amounts of volume due to the heavy traffic cruise ships bring. These camps are large and have approximately 200 dogs and 15 staff members on the ice at all times. It’s quite a sight to see. These tours are used to large volumes and do an excellent job of making you feel like you have your own private excursion.

We currently operate the smallest glacier dog sledding operation in Alaska with Seward Helicopter Tours. We generally have about 30 dogs up on the glacier. Unlike other operations which bring dogs in from all over the state, our kennel is located in Seward so if we need to give dogs rest days, we can easily swap dogs.

Glacier Dog Sledding Tours

When booking a glacier dog sledding trip, we always advise people to book it for the first part of their time in Seward as occasionally trips get cancelled due to weather.Our policy is to rebook if a client’s schedule allows at the earliest possible time that is convenient for them. If they cannot reschedule we give a full refund.

It’s also important to remember that glacier dog sledding requires good snow conditions. Many glacier dog sledding tours will advertise staying open until the end of August, only to close around the 15th or 20th of the month as snow conditions deteriorate.  We are fortunate that our dog sled tour on Godwin Glacier always has plenty of snow due to the local geography. Last year we closed mid-September and ended up taking bookings from other dog sled tour companies in Alaska who couldn’t fulfill their obligation.

Dog Sledding In Alaska Is A Must-Do

No matter what type of dog sled tour you choose to take in Alaska or who you choose to do it with, your trip will certainly be memorable experience. We hope that by taking a summer dog sled tour you will become interested in our sport.

Interested in learning more? Ask us your dog sledding questions on facebook or shoot us an info request.

Dog Of The Week: Mongoose

Sarah · May 4, 2015 ·

When I saw Mongoose training with the main team this fall after just turning a year old, I was reminded of myself growing up and playing soccer. I was a stand out goalkeeper and in 7th grade I made the varsity soccer team as starting goalkeeper. I felt proud being part of such an accomplished squad and happily took my uniform. Although I felt comfortable with my team on the field – helping us win our league championship in sudden overtime – off the field was an entirely different story.

I was 12 years old handing out with 17 and 18 year olds. My teammates talked about who-was-dating-who and what colleges they wanted to go to — but all I could think about was how to beat our big rival, Portsmouth Abbey. I was 100% soccer, all the time.

And that’s been Mongoose. When everyone else has bedded down and is ready for rest, there’s Mongoose ready to rock and roll. In the team, he moves flawlessly. In the dog yard, he’s less sure of himself. He’s good, he knows he’s good but yet he hasn’t quite found himself.

When we go into the dog yard to play, we invite the dogs to jump on us. It’s our form of a greeting. Not all our dogs do it, but most do and we enjoy it. Mongoose can never quite decide if he is comfortable with jumping up on us. He wants to jump on us but some inhibition generally stops him halfway and what results is usually an awkward mixture of him putting his paws on our shins and knees.

His youthful enthusiasm was key out on the trail and we look forward to this young dog, with the toothy grin, finding his way and gaining confidence in his abilities. Mongoose ran about 700 miles of this year’s race. Next year, we are certain will we see him at the finish line.

Thanks for all of your hard work this year Goose!

Dog Of The Week: Fidget

Sarah · April 27, 2015 ·

Fidget is a dog of humble beginnings who rose through sheer determination and will to be come one of the most outstanding dogs we have ever seen. Fidget came to our kennel at 7 months old the summer of 2011. At the time, she was shy and didn’t like people. She hid in her house and came out only to eat. We’d spend time in the dog yard taking extra care to stop at her house, even if she wouldn’t come out. We ate our lunches with Fidget and slowly, our little turtle came out of her shell. .

Over the next few years she slowly found her confidence in the team. In 2013 she was the 16th pick for Travis’ rookie Iditarod. By the time he had gotten to Nome, Fidget had proven herself more than once. The small shy girl who Travis had almost left behind stood out. “She was the best dog in my team,” Travis said when he got to Nome.Fidget in Nome after the 2015 Iditarod

That summer, Fidget worked in lead in our tours. Every tour she ran she was up front and the guests who visited us in the early parts of June truly got to experience the magic of training a lead dog with us. Today, she stands proud and tall at the front of the team and has become Travis’ go to race leader. This year, she single handedly led Travis 700 miles in the 2015 Iditarod to an impressive 11th place finish. It didn’t matter how short the rest was or how cold the temperatures got, Fidget always rallied the team behind her.

All three of her 3 puppies also ran this year: Wrangler, with Travis and Levi and Carhartt with Nic Petite.

We are excited about her future litters as this little dog is a champion in every sense of the word. We will be breeding her again this summer and are looking forward to raising her pups alongside her.

My Journey Through The Dark:

Battling Depression and Anxiety

Sarah · March 17, 2015 ·

If you asked me what and where I thought I’d be this summer, it wouldn’t be sitting at home in Seward listening to the rain fall eagerly awaiting Iditarod updates and watching Travis’ GPS steadily move down the Iditarod trail. I wouldn’t be writing this blog post or answering phone calls and emails. I certainly wouldn’t be on facebook! If you asked me what I was going to do this summer, I would have told you that Travis and I had a plan. The plan.

By early June we’d had things worked out for the two of us. This was the year, I told myself, this was the year I was going to be able to run THE IDITAROD! After all, that is why I moved here four and a half years ago. Travis and I had arranged to buy a piece of property with a small cabin on it up north. We had worked out a great owner financing set-up and we were finally going to be up in mushing country. Not just for one season — but indefinitely. We were going to leave snowless Seward behind:no more rain to deal with, just dogs and trails and finding the time to run and explore as much as we were able. And so, with that end goal in mind, I worked hard this summer.

For a little over five weeks I managed our 60 dog kennel and two businesses by myself while Travis was stuck on bed rest after getting severly sun burnt. When it looked like he would finally be back on his feet, he contracted shingles. Looking back now, I’m not entirely sure how I slogged through running tours, keeping guests happy, and managing the early part of our season without my partner. To be fair, we had a great crew and they willingly picked up whatever slack I couldn’t manage. We moved forward as a team and the summer of 2014 was gearing up to be a good one. Throughout the summer I often realized that I wasn’t happy. I never felt like my work was done and the long daylight hours Alaska offers us translated into long work hours. I routinely stayed up trying to tie up loose ends or figure out simply how to do something better. I was terrible at prioritizing, which left me feeling rushed and overwhelmed even at the day’s end.

But I slowly figured things out and it would be ok, I told myself, because I had a goal that I was working towards: Putting a downpayment on this cabin so that I could run dogs and still manage our business.  To me, that was the light at the end of a really long tunnel. When September finally got here and we were ready to close on the property, I almost couldn’t believe that THE PLAN was coming together. My hard work was paying off. I’d already started packing what I could and we were trying to figure out if we could rent our house in Seward out. I could envision myself training first on four wheelers, then sleds. I would stay busy with work but would also reconnect with the sport I was so passionate about but had felt so powerless to pursue these last two years as we tried to grow our business. If we were up north, I figured, I would be able to run our business and train. I had acknowledged the roadblock that was impeding me from moving forward and I was busting through.

That, of course, was when everything changed.

About two weeks from when we planned to move in, the sellers decided they wanted to keep the property. This couldn’t be happening, could it? A few days passed and finally, we realized, we needed a new plan.

The training runs at this point were short and our dogs had run tours all summer so were already in great condition. Travis and I began looking at real estate and, once again, found another piece of property. We talked with the sellers and began arranging our finances. It was slightly more expensive and we’d really have to stretch our budget but we wanted to live our dream! Wasn’t this the point, of, well everything? We finally figured out how we’d make things work and, after a lot of hard and careful thinking, made an offer.

Of course, someone beat us to it.

At this point, we started to get a little nervous. It was already the middle of October. Everything happens for a reason, I kept telling myself. Travis seemed less certain but still optimistic. It will happen, I kept telling myself, because it had to happen.

And then it all came together.

One night on craigslist, I found the dream property we’d been waiting for. This was why everything else had fallen through! We found 3 acres of property in prime mushing country, at a reasonable price. It didn’t have a house but had a small structure that we could make do with for the winter. We made an offer. It was accepted. The sense of relief and freedom I felt was so foreign to me after the constant stress of the last two years. Our hard work had payed off.

Travis went up to the property and began working. We’d signed preliminary papers and ok’ed it with the seller to put a dog yard in. It was starting to get cold and if we didn’t do it right away, we’d have no place to keep the dogs. There was no point in buying property if we couldn’t use it this season so Travis went up there, stopping at Home Depot and buying all the supplies we needed to put in a dog lot. Just a little while longer, I told myself. And I would be up there making things happen!

Travis called me from our new place. “I just drove the last post in!” He said. I could hear him smiling through the phone. Things never looked better.

Of course, that’s when the problems started.

As Travis drove the last of the posts into what would be our dog lot, a man on an ATV drove by with a chainsaw. Travis thought nothing of it. People in Seward cut dead trees up for firewood all the time and he assumed that’s what this man was doing. WRONG! It turns out he had gone down the trail with his chainsaw to cut trees into the trail so mushers couldn’t train. Apparently, our new neighbor was an anti-mushing zealot and he wasn’t afraid of starting a fight.

Being rational, we decided we would try to talk with him. My mom always tells me “you can’t make sanity from insanity” so I don’t know what we expected. The man was polite and he assured us that he had a family now and had moved on from that phase in his life. He’d come to accept mushing as a way of Alaskan culture and whoever cut those trees down it wasn’t him. He didn’t have time for that sort of nonsense anymore. We’d clearly worn out our welcome though. He didn’t want to chat and demanded we leave. The encounter left us feeling more than a little uneasy. But this was it! This was our spot in mushing country that we so desperately wanted! The man had said he wouldn’t be a problem and we took him at his word.

And for a three whole days he wasn’t a problem. On day four though he started hanging anti-mushing and anti-Iditarod signs up.  He posted nasty things with arrows pointing at our soon-to-be property. We asked the local authorities to intervene but they said he could write and hang whatever signs he wanted on his property. We asked them to act as mediators and they told us that wasn’t their job. We weren’t sure what to do, but he quickly made the decision easy for us. He began cutting down trees and other brush to block trails with a new tenacity, not just to prevent us from using the trail, but to prevent all the local mushers. It got so bad that Alaska Dispatch actually wrote an article about the guy.

So we did what any young, smart couple would do: we decided not to buy the property because this was supposed to be our haven, our get away. With a crazy neighbor, we figured it would be anything but that. Travis was devastated. Whatever is beyond devastation, that’s what I was. By this point, it was early November and as much as we’d worked training the dogs around property hunting, we now could no longer do both. There were no rentals available because, in the summer when we would have normally secured them, we had already thought we were set. Besides, who wants to rent a house to someone with 60 dogs?

Training with the dogs slowly began to intensify and runs started to take longer and longer. Up until the end of October we had almost always run our teams together, with me following his lead but one day we were splitting up dogs for the next run and he said, “I’m running now. You run in a few hours. You can’t train with me anymore.”

At the time, I was less than receptive. I was angry and confused. I couldn’t train with him? Who was he to tell me what to do? And why couldn’t I train with him? He clarified: “I’ve taught you everything I can. The rest you have to learn on your own. You can’t train your team for Iditarod with me. It just doesn’t work that way.”

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Now that I’m in a better place emotionally and can use my rationality, I understand why. At some point, you have to do things on your own. Mushing dogs is about being out on your own, knowing what to do, and having the confidence not just in yourself but also in your dogs that you can handle any situation that is thrown at you. It’s not that Travis didn’t want to spend time with me out on the trail. He was happy to do that. We love doing that. Travis simply wanted me to train my team. And when we went out together my team wasn’t getting trained — all they were doing was following his team around. Rather than creating my own independent unit, by following Travis around all the time my team and I were nothing more than an extension of his team. We weren’t on our own if we were out there with him and we weren’t going to learn how to do things on our own unless he cut the cord.

“Look, you will have problems. We all have problems. But you’ll manage. Have confidence. You are a problem solver!”

But this winter, it didn’t seem like I could solve any problems. I trained sporadically but without him as my safety net my worry often got the best of me. I got increasingly anxious about all the loose animals in our subdivision — chickens, turkeys, and small dogs — and my worry soon turned to paralysis. Eventually, I simply stopped training.

To top it off, we learned that our biggest vendor of the season was unable to pay us for the services we rendered that summer and we took a massive financial blow. I felt defeated on so many different fronts because, it turned out, nothing that I worked hard for had materialized — not even the money.

The constant rain that plagued Seward only added to my growing sense of disappointment and failure. A the end of November, a friend and mentor committed suicide and I was left with an even deeper sense of loss. Questions haunted me at night and kept me from sleep. Soon even getting out of bed became a challenge. More and more I found myself thinking of the Langston Hughes poem, Harlem.

What happens to a dream deferred?

Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore— And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over— like a syrupy sweet?
Maybe it just sags like a heavy load.
Or does it explode?

My life, it seemed, would try answering the question Hughes had asked almost 90 years prior.

I did a lot of writing. Looking back at my journals there are lots of statements like “it seems like every day is a fight and I’m barely making it through the rounds” and “I think I’m stuck in the same loops and cycles. Treadmilling myself into exhaustion. Why am I not making any progress?” I just couldn’t shake the feeling that no matter what I did, I wasn’t getting anywhere. All this work and there was nothing to show for it. All these things I had to do and yet I had no idea where to start.

Our financial situation only made things worse: Dog food. Mortage. Heat. Food. Gas. They added up quickly. Soon, my life became a precarious balancing act of figuring out when to pay what bill. It was ridiculous. I was sad. I was angry. Above all, I couldn’t believe any of this was happening because I had always worked to ensure that we would have enough money to feed our dogs. Suddenly, I was no longer sure. I was filled more and more with a growing sense of shame and failure. How could this have happened?

Travis could see me struggling. Through it all, he was there. We both made sacrifices. We worried less about the money. “I’ve always scraped by,” he said. And sure enough, so far, we have. In the good moments, we would joke about  me “going crazy” but then there were times when he would sit down with me, genuinely concerned trying to figure out what he could do. Sometimes it was as simple as a hug. Sometimes it was him leaving to train and giving me my space. Both at times were needed. On more than one occasion I was extremely jealous of him: how did his life have so much definition and structure and mine had none?

After one of his training trips though, Travis came back with a two-place snow machine trailer that I could put dog boxes on. He knew I would feel comfortable towing it with my truck. “So you can train,” he said. “When you’re ready.” His idea was, that when it was done, I’d go train my team with friends. I wouldn’t have as much anxiety about training because I wouldn’t be alone and I would see that I was more than capable to be out there by myself. In short, it was his way of trying to make me a more confident musher. He knew I had it in me, I just needed to see it for myself and running with other people would show me that.

I began working on the project immediately with a friend. Building and painting the boxes flew by but shortly before completion I stopped working. All I had to do was screw the doors on and put a few bolts in but I was in such a funk that I couldn’t find the motivation to even do that.

“You should finish your trailer,” Travis frequently repeated. “Then you could go have some fun and get of the rain.” But I let the trailer sit. Day after day after day. Suddenly, a month had passed. Where had the time gone? The dog boxes still weren’t done. What had I done during that time?

“Really?” Travis said to me one day with a mixture of disbelief, pity, and frustration. “You still haven’t finished it?” And so, late one night, Travis finished my trailer so that I could leave and go train too. After all, that’s what I wanted, wasn’t it?

Days passed after it was completed but I still hadn’t left. “You going to leave?” He asked. “I can watch the kennel.” But I’d make excuses as to why I couldn’t go. My friends would ask why I hadn’t left to see them after promising to come visit and train with them. Often, I’d tell them I wanted Travis to train or that I needed to watch the dogs but, in reality, I simply couldn’t muster the energy to do, well, anything.

Through it all, Travis kept encouraging me to get out of the house, to go do things, even if it wasn’t running dogs — but it seemed the more I stayed at home the more I wanted to stay at home. I watched him day after day work towards his goal of training a competitive dog team. How was he able to get so much done? And, more importantly, why couldn’t I?

To me, my life had become a series of meaningless tasks. Cleaning the house. Doing Laundry. “Background Chores” became the forefront of my life. I never tried to take on anything big. I couldn’t handle big. And not trying to work away at a big project made me feel useless, lazy, and unaccomplished. Because we own our own business, I didn’t even have the structure of a job to fall back on to define my life.

“What are you doing with all your time?” Travis would ask.

I could never seem to find a good answer. What was I doing?

So, when things started to get more difficult, Travis did what he does best. He silently supported me. In January he asked for my help training his team. He wanted me to drive his team. It was very important, he said, that I helped. He needed my advice. It wasn’t true but it got me in the dog truck heading north and it temporarily gave my life more definition than merely eating and sleeping.

We spent a fantastic week running dogs and I felt free. Out on the trail, there were no bills to pay, no phones to answer or emails to respond to. There were no problems that had to be dealt with. Out on the trail, there was just snow, dogs, and a beautiful full moon. Life out there, it seemed, was perfect. Why couldn’t it always be this easy?

Unfortunately, we had to return to the real word. I got back to rainy Seward and started worrying about Iditarod Food Drops. By this time, I’d known I wouldn’t be running — how could I, I hadn’t trained! — but there was still the problem of Travis’ food drops. When it’s all said and done, food drops cost around $10,000. We didn’t exactly have that type of money lying around — we were living off of the few scant tour gigs we could manage this snowless year. Fortunately, we got lucky and signed on to do some film work. We did a short gig for TLC and another for Chick-Fil-A which helped break up the monotony, gave my life some temporary focus, and helped us cover our expenses. The change of pace and constant barrage of new scenery also started to break up the funk I had found myself in since the fall.

Filming for TLC

Slowly, I started figuring things out. I knew that this  was not how I wanted to live my life yet I wasn’t making any effort to change. Here I was, with the person I love most in this world, living a life most people dream about and yet, I wasn’t living it. I was running from it. Why?

Something obviously needed to change.

For a long time, I couldn’t figure out why I was so unhappy. I loved our dogs. I loved Travis. I loved work. I had a lot of really great friends. From the outside, my life was perfect! Something, however, was amiss.

Slowly I came to the self-realization that I was overwhelmed by all that we had on our plate: two businesses, 60 dogs, and the logistics of Iditarod. I spent a lot of time worrying about what could happen and what we should do, rather than simply doing things. Worry had paralyzed me.

“I’m worried,” I finally admitted to Travis one night.
“About what?” Travis asked.
“About everything.”
“Everything?” He asked.
“Yes, everything.”
“Well. That’s not good.”

So the next morning I sat down and made a list of everything that worried me. “Are you still at it?” He asked. He knew what I was doing and somehow managed to shower and get dressed before I stopped writing. “Ok that’s enough give it to me,” he said taking the paper from me. “It’s not even 9:15. Why are there 47 items on this list?”

All of a sudden, he just started laughing, which, honestly, was the perfect response.

It was completely absurd for me to have all this on my mind!

“No wonder you feel stuck.” He looked down at the paper and begin reading the items. “God. You think about all this?” He shook his head. “Wow.”

I immediately started understanding why I felt like I couldn’t go anywhere or do anything. There was so much on my plate, I didn’t know where to begin!

Together we looked at the list. What were things that could wait? What weren’t? What on that list did I have no control over? What things on the list did I have some control over, but not entire control? And, most importantly, what on that list could we make disappear by simply saying today I will do this! Together, we found a few things we each could tackle that day to immediately shorten THE LIST.

So far, so good.

Slowly I figured it out. I started coming out of my funk. Travis, on top of training full time, started to take over some of the responsibilities in our business to lighten my load and I began realizing my own personal needs and wants. It seemed like ever since we started running our own business, I had put what I wanted on the back burner. I was living to work and not working to live. No wonder I was so unhappy — I wasn’t taking care of myself!

A little meditation never hurts!

So in the recent weeks I have set about changing. It hasn’t been easy and it’s been a lot of hard work climbing out of my hole. I’ve focused so long and so intently on working that, honestly, I’d forgotten what it’s like to have hobbies. I started sewing and began writing more. I made an effort to call friends I hadn’t spoken to in awhile and also challenged myself to simply get out of the house.

Travis started cooking more frequently — and by that I mean, he perfected the BLT and the fine art of frying bacon. He started relying on me less for little things and I started to rely on him more for big things. We took a mushing trip together. I remembered that I’ve always known what to do on the trail. Why worry? And more importantly, why let worry stop you?

 

Most of all, I’ve learned to cut myself a little bit more slack, to have fun, to put myself first, and not to worry. Life will always present challenges that push us and force us to grow. I’m choosing to remember my dark time as a period of rest and renewal that led to growth. It’s always dark inside a butterfly’s cocoon but a butterfly needs that darkness to shift and change and grow.

I am spreading my wings.

And by all accounts, so is Trav. I’m so excited for him. I really couldn’t be any prouder of Travis for the race he’s run up to this point. I don’t think any musher out there has had tougher training conditions this year than Travis. He’s had to travel any time he’s wanted to train the team.

Can you imagine doing 15000 miles worth of driving and STILL training for the Iditarod? That takes some serious dedication. And look where he’s at! He’s been around 20th position the whole time. Just imagine how he does when we are able to live in an area that has trails out our back door. I’m super excited.

I don’t care what position Travis finishes in. I just feel like, once again, we are going places.

We are taking flight.

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After realizing I needed to work less and worry less, we went on the final training trip before Iditarod to Alpine Creek Lodge and were rewarded with beautiful Northern Lights.

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