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Bayfield student Kyra Wilson opens dog sled race with ‘Glamour’ magazine’s Woman of the Year

Junior mushers start Wyoming’s international, 300-mile race

FOREST LAKES – La Plata County resident Kyra Wilson, 13, will participate in the opening of a 300-mile dog sled race later this month in Wyoming as a junior dog musher with world-class, legally blind dog musher Rachael Scdoris.

As a junior musher, Wilson will run a short trip through Jackson, Wyoming, with Scdoris to launch the 25th annual International Pedigree Stage Stop Race Jan. 31. Scdoris is the first person with a disability to complete the Iditarod, a 1,000-mile race in Alaska, and formerly was named Glamour magazine’s Woman of the Year.

For Wilson, a two-time junior musher, it’s an exciting chance to interact with world-class racers.

“At the end, you get to see them place their dogs in their little trucks and you get to see how they dismantle everything,” Wilson said. “I thought that was fascinating.”

The junior musher stage stop is the 2-mile opener for the eight-stage race. The sled teams run on snow-covered streets through the city of Jackson in front of crowds of onlookers, before a fireworks show and ski parade. The next day, the world-class sled teams launch into the journey through Wyoming and Idaho.

Wilson will see Scdoris’ uniquely trained dog team in action. Because Scdoris has been legally blind and color blind since birth, she can’t see low-hanging branches or obstacles to give commands to her dogs.

Instead, her dog team is trained to follow the team ahead and stay on the trail without help from the musher. During races, a teammate in front of her calls out warnings. Using the special training, Scdoris and her dog team ran the Iditarod four times, finishing twice and placing 45th and 57th.

The Bayfield family launched a GoFundMe to help pay for travel to the race. Wilson, who started a small recycling program with her neighbors, is putting some of her savings toward the trip. The family raised $200 of its $800 goal as of Tuesday.

“I think it’s really exciting. ... It’s not something everyone does in their spare time,” Wilson said. “Dog sledding has a smaller community.”

Wilson has been around dog sledding her entire life.

The small dog sledding community in Oregon connected the Wilson family to the Scdoris family in the 2010s. Her parents, both involved with the sport, lived and worked with Scdoris when Wilson was a baby. In



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