Americano Blue's musher/mushing chat thread

what type of mushing?

  • Distance

    Votes: 8 53.3%
  • sprint

    Votes: 3 20.0%
  • Rec

    Votes: 8 53.3%
  • Other

    Votes: 8 53.3%

  • Total voters
    15
I wanna see if I can buy a leader that knows the trail then I'd love to race! 


:D that would be awesome! There weren't too many technical parts of the trail. Where I took a wrong turn, it was pretty obvious. The other side of the trail was marked where we should have gone. The hills are what killed me. I definitely wasn't in shape enough; muscles I didn't even know I had were sore. XD

Aw geez man I am so happy for you that you were in it. Kinda sux that you made a left when you shoulda turned right.. Kinda jealous for myself tho LOL staying home and even missing The Pas Trappers Festival World & Manitoba Championship Dodsled Races.  I hear that Jessie Royer got first in the RTTS 300. I think that is so kooleos.
love to see your footage


Yep, Jessie won it. 2nd place was 4-5 minutes behind her. I would love to go watch The Pas. The mass start looks pretty over whelming though. :/ It was a great experience.
 
I would love to go RTTS, even just to be there to watch. ...or maybe even help out somehow.
Of course I would love so much to do the 300. But like I said before that would be a big expense for me. Also I have bad anxiety now. Geez, know what's weird? I usta go out, miles from the middle of no-where and not even know where I was much less a way of contacting any1 to let them know where I was. Now I go 20 miles and these darn fearful feelings start taking over. It even makes my heart go all weird. It's awful. I usta love being way into the wilderness away from every1 and everything....and now?....... I'm just wondering if it's because I have such a strong drive to be there for my kids and moreso my baby girl. What ever it is keeps me close to home. Maybe one day I'll get this crappy affliction out of me and I'll meet you all at RTTS. That'd be the coolest of cool. I think so anyways
 
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that would be awesome! There weren't too many technical parts of the trail. Where I took a wrong turn, it was pretty obvious. The other side of the trail was marked where we should have gone. The hills are what killed me. I definitely wasn't in shape enough; muscles I didn't even know I had were sore. XD
Yep, Jessie won it. 2nd place was 4-5 minutes behind her. I would love to go watch The Pas. The mass start looks pretty over whelming though.
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It was a great experience.
We train on the mountin snowmobile trails. We started using a sking trail where you can't go a mile without a hill. My friend was really excited about it.
 
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that would be awesome! There weren't too many technical parts of the trail. Where I took a wrong turn, it was pretty obvious. The other side of the trail was marked where we should have gone. The hills are what killed me. I definitely wasn't in shape enough; muscles I didn't even know I had were sore. XD
Yep, Jessie won it. 2nd place was 4-5 minutes behind her. I would love to go watch The Pas. The mass start looks pretty over whelming though.
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It was a great experience.
The Pas' mass start is
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FLIPPIN
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NUTS
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!!! I was there a cpl times. My wife has a lot of relatives so we were visiting there. I aint much for visiting for 2 weeks on end so I took a walk. Of course I heard the dogs from 2 miles away and when I got close I saw some transport units on trucks and trailers, ran into an old friend from Thompson, and VOILA, ended up catching The Gauntlet. OMG. the dogs yelling and screaming and jumping and lunging..... at that moment I wanted to go get 16 of Seeseep's (skinny mutt looking) dogs and jump in that lineup. It was so exhilarating. My heart was pounding like the sound in my ears. I felt the excitement of the dogs, the mushers' tension, the electricity in the air was practically something you could reach out and touch. Then it seemed like for a split second everything stopped, "POW" and most of the dog yelling was replaced by dogs grunting and gasping in effort to be running, skis "swishing" and the sound of clumps of snow whistling through the air to hit with soft thuds and smucks. Of course there was the very odd dog still kinda barking but still it was amazingly quiet for over a hundred dogs. I don't know how many teams were there but they were lines right across that starting area and it's about 2/3's mile or better across. That was the year old man Cook raced his last . He was ahead of his son at "5 mile to go" point with his son behind him by bout 3 mins. When we raced back to town to catch the "finish" Junior was ahead to claim his "5th in a row !st Place Championship". I still think the old man threw that race for his son. but that last part was in the bush so very few, if any1, saw what really happened.
Yes, I suppose it was a great experience wasn't it. I say that because I can relate to new experiences... in many areas but in this case particularly, MUSHING.
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I was going to run Eagle cap extreme, but I wasn't mentally or physically ready. The dogs could have done it, but we had some set backs that prevented me from meeting up with my mentor for training.

Oh. Thaz too bad. Woulda been cool.
Dang. If I were 16 again..........
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I wouldn't worry about cars and girls and most of the other stuff I had on my mind then. I would utilize my hard work ethics and work like the dickens and go mushing all over North America. We have the prettiest scenery in the world and awesome mushing weather and areas and races already set up. I would just build myself one of them dog transport units with human living quarters right on the same frame(like the ones on SDC), work out an itinerary and hit the road following a circuit all winter every year.
 
I was just on SDC. The Sled Dog Rendezvous is happening in Stanley, Id. I read the article that pops up when you click on the first pic. Here is a quote from that article that really hit home for me. This kid is gona go places.
“People think you just stand on the back of the sled and enjoy the view,” said Julia Larsen, a 17-year-old sled dog racer from Hailey. “But I’m out there running and kicking. I’m drenched in sweat by the end of a race. If I’m running six dogs, my goal is to be the seventh dog.”
Now, if only all us humans could get that frame of mind when it comes to staying home and doing only what needs to be done to raise kids in kind, gentle and respectful manner in a community setting this world would not be so overly concerned with material gain and world economics and tryna get what someone else has(in short "greed")
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