Yesterday was a big day, and here at ITI update HQ, we’re pretty good at celebrating the big days. Meanwhile Thomas has been quietly making his way north, under the radar but getting the job done. Thomas currently lives in Edmonton, Canada, but is from Salt Lake City, Utah. When asked by his father what he’d like for his 50th birthday, Thomas pondered it for a few months and set his sights on the Fat Pursuit (FP).
“The Fat Pursuit is a 60k or 200k human-powered winter race on a network of groomed snowmobile trails in Island Park, Idaho.” Sound a little tame to you? It did to me, groomed trails, bah, easy peasy right? That was where I, and many others attempting the FP, tend to go wrong. It’s actually a difficult race, on trails that aren’t always freshly groomed, with heaps of climbing, surprisingly cold temperatures and few checkpoints. Locals tag the ITI as a qualifier for FP. They’re not wrong, I watched a lot of former ITI finishers, including myself, scratch from FP this year.
Thomas went to Fat Camp - a winter camp put on by the Fat Pursuit - in January 2020. Camp went well so he started the 200 mile race just a few days later. There was a huge snow storm and 12 of 13 starters did not finish. Do you need to guess who did finish? With a time of 65 hours Thomas was the only 200 mile finisher that year. This began a love affair with a difficult race in which he has never scratched. This year he was one of only five finishers in the 200k FP, another year with an unusually high scratch rate. Sound familiar? It should, he’s also never scratched from the ITI. Thomas completed the 350 in 2022 and 2023, this year is his first time to Nome. After riding with him a little bit at FP I’m not surprised that 22 days after the start he's now just a few miles from Nome.
We reached out to Janice Tower, Thomas’s coach, and she had this to say. “...his nickname is Thomas the Tank. He’s not fast, but nothing stops him. He relentlessly keeps moving forward and doesn’t let bad weather get to him.” As I’m writing this he’s left Safety and will be in Nome in just a few hours.
The trail has been busy today between Koyuk and Golovin. Leah, Ryan, Asbjoern and Gavan have all spent the day along the Norton Bay coast. From what we can tell the going hasn’t been easy for this group, Leah’s description of the ice crossing was “Day 1 the only work I have is apocalyptic. Super windy and cold, almost all walking. Little Mountain cabin was a welcome respite but not anywhere you’d want to stay long…” She describes heating up the cabin to freezing temperatures using white gas stoves and by burning trash in the woodstove.
Jan, Beat and Christof have been traversing the shoreline of Kwiniuk Inlet, Moses Point cabin is not too far ahead of them. Jan reported that when “he got back to the shore, the wind came so strong that he cried with happiness when he got to the checkpoint”. According to Jill Homer, beyond Shaktoolik, the cabins are all privately owned by native villages. They are not as well maintained as the BLM cabins, but she believes most have working stoves now (not the case in 2016). In these cabins there’s often no wood, which comes only if a previous visitor leaves some, or if lucky enough to find driftwood from along the coast.
Faye and Jeff made the crossing from Shaktoolik today and now sit safely in Koyuk, while Brandon is more than ½ way across. Thanks to staying at Foothills cabin, which was just okay, they’ve missed some of the poor weather others have encountered. We received some messages from both of them, and understand that they had the “best crossing weather”. Faye had some things to say about Little Mountain that were similar to Leah, not great but better than outside.
Approaching Shaktoolik are Hendra, Mark and Joshua. Mark reports that the trail and weather are getting harder now, “almost too perilous to describe”, he’s concerned about 30 day time cutoff. Joshua was waiting in Unalakleet for a replacement pair of boots to arrive, but alas they did not make in time. He described his existing boots as “duct taped/damaged”.
Petr is having pizza (we hope) in Unalakleet, and Sunny should be joining him soon, she’s nine miles out. Sunny reported that the Tripod Flats cabin, where she stayed last night, had been freshly stocked with wood!
Author: Amber Crawford
Photo Credit Thomas Miller