Jessie Holmes, a former reality television star, won the longest-ever Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race in Alaska on Friday, celebrating with fist pumps to a cheering crowd and posing for photos with his two floral wreath-adorned head teammates, Hercules and Polar.
Holmes was first to the finish line in the Gold Rush town of Nome, on the Bering Sea coast. The race began March 3 in Fairbanks after a lack of snow forced changes to the route and starting point. At the finish line, Holmes was presented with a $57,200 check for his victory, theĀ Anchorage Daily News reported.
That made the normally 1,000-mile race a staggering 1,129 miles across the Alaska wilderness. Holmes finished in 10 days, 14 hours, 55 minutes and 41 seconds.
“It’s hard to put into words, but it’s a magical feeling,” Holmes said shortly after crossing the finish line. “It’s not about this moment now. It’s about all those moments along the trail.”
Kerry Tasker / REUTERS
Holmes, who was competing for the eighth time, previously finished in the top 10 five times, including third last year and in 2022. In his first Iditarod, in 2018, his seventh-place finish earned him Rookie of the Year honors.
Born and raised in Alabama, Holmes left at age 18 and worked as a carpenter in Montana for three years. He arrived in Alaska in 2004 and found adventure running dogs on a remote location of the Yukon River. He lived for many years in the town of Nenana and made friends with elders who had decades of mushing experience, according to the Anchorage Daily News.
“It’s been a truly amazing 10 days and I soaked in every part of it ā the lows, the highs, the in-betweens. … I’m really proud of these dogs and I love them. And they did it. They deserve all the credit,” Holmes said.
He gave a special salute to his two lead canines, Hercules, his half-sprint dog, and Polar, saying, “He’s the brains behind the operation.”
Holmes now lives in Nenana, where he works as a carpenter and lives a subsistence lifestyle. From 2015 through 2023, he was a cast member of “Life Below Zero,” a National Geographic program that documents the struggles of Alaskans living in remote parts of the state.
Besides the lack of snow north of the Alaska Range that forced the change of the starting point to Fairbanks, race organizers also had to make changes to the ceremonial start in Anchorage.
With snow trucked in to cover streets in the state’s largest city, the usual parade route there was shortened from 11 miles to under 2 miles, and the number of dogs was reduced.
Only 33 mushers started in Fairbanks, tied with 2023 for the smallest field ever. The drop in participants has raised concerns about the viability of the race, which has had to contend with inflation, climate change and pressure from animal rights groups.
One dog died in this year’s Iditarod: a pregnant female on the team of musher Daniel Klein, who under race rules scratched due to the death.
Nearly a third of the mushers quit early, including eight who scratched and two who were withdrawn for not being competitive.
In a profile published by CBS affiliate WIAT last year, Holmes talked about how he first fell in love with dog sled racing after meeting a neighbor who was involved in the sport while he was living in the Yukon.
“I just fell in love with the lifestyle,” Holmes said at the time. “I fell in love with the dogs out in the wilderness.”