Current Issue: Artvoice v7n47, week of Thursday November 20 » back issues
AV Profile |
The Underdogby Buck Quigley |
|
|
Local dogsledder Rick Hillman hopes to run the Iditarod
He was sounding the deeps of his nature, and of the parts of his nature that were deeper than he, going back into the womb of Time.
—Jack London, The Call of the Wild
Suddenly, he was plummeting through the frigid wind at 100 miles an hour, thousands of feet above the rugged Alaskan interior near Fairbanks. His eyes traced the serpentine Chena River, taking in the cold, November landscape spreading out to the horizon beneath him. When his white silk chute opened, he was floating, along with 900 other members of the 82nd Airborne Division who had flown over 12 hours straight from Fort Bragg, North Carolina, 4,000 miles away. It was 1976, and the 19-year-old paratrooper from Niagara County landed on the slick, snowy ground at Eielson Air Force Base with a thud. His feet went out from under him, and he was sitting on top of the world.
It was his first experience with Alaska, the state still known as “The Last Frontier.” For the next three and a half months, Rick Hillman and his fellow airmen would live in the frozen wilderness, in tents, building fires and learning how to capture huge snowshoe rabbits in snares as part of survival training for the US Army. We were still in the midst of the Cold War, and from Alaska, the USSR was only 55 miles away across the Bering Strait. The adventure marked him for life. “It hit me one morning,” he explains, “that’s where I was supposed to be.”
The young soldier returned to Fort Bragg, met and married “a beautiful Southern doll,” and raised a family. Decades passed, and occasionally Hillman would return to Alaska—sometimes driving his blue pickup through subzero temperatures from Dawson Creek, British Columbia, up the rugged ALCAN Highway past Whitehorse, Yukon, passing moose and grizzlies at the roadside, and rolling under bald eagles as he traveled into the wild of our 49th state.
Along the way, he developed another obsession. Sled dogs.
Way up north
Dog mushing has been an emblem of Alaska since the days of the Klondike Gold Rush of the 1890s, when people from all walks of life began trickling, then flooding, north from across Canada and what was then the lower 45 states. In many parts of Alaska, the dogsled was the primary form of transportation, borrowed from the Native American tribes of the region that had domesticated the animals for that purpose at some distant point in the past.
Teams of dogs pulled sleds loaded with prospectors and supplies over great distances to rocky creeks where the hopeful had staked their claims. For the vast majority, dreams of a golden fortune simply didn’t pan out. Some proud Alaskans will tell you that those who remained were of the very toughest, most adventurous stock—qualities still highly prized in the rugged state.
If you had to single out the greatest of the many heroic dog-sledding stories, you would have to go back to 1925. In the dead of winter, the port of Nome is frozen. That December, there were roughly 1,500 people in the city that sits just below the Arctic Circle, with another 9,000 in the surrounding area. The one doctor and four nurses there were suddenly besieged by a number of Alaska native children with diphtheria—which, untreated, was usually fatal, especially among the Native Americans who’d never been exposed to the bacteria until the arrival of white men.
It was too late in the season to send the diphtheria antitoxin via boat or plane, so a group of 20 mushers and about 150 dogs engaged in a relay to transport a 20-pound package of serum from Nenana to Nome, a distance of 675 miles, through blizzard conditions and temperatures of 50 below zero. It was called the “Great Race of Mercy,” and the lead dog for the final leg of the run was named Balto. The media made him a national hero, and there is a statue of him in New York’s Central Park.
However, serious mushers today tell the legend of a 12-year-old Siberian husky named Togo, who not only led the pack on what was by far the longest and most dangerous leg of the famous relay, but also performed an act of heroism that would make Lassie blush.
The team and sled were trapped on drift ice in Norton Sound. Togo jumped a five-foot gap over the freezing water, attempting to pull the entire floe to shore. The harness broke, but Togo leapt into the water, took the severed traces in his teeth and pawed his way onto land. Then he pulled the huge sheet of ice toward him until it was safe for the rest of the team to make the jump. He didn’t get a statue in Central Park, but he and his musher Leonhard Seppala gained a measure of fame when they were subsequently featured in a Lucky Strike cigarette campaign. Seppala and Togo are revered today in the world of dog-sledding.
The last great race on Earth
The path these mushers traveled is now a section of the annual 1,161-mile Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race. Billed as the last great race on Earth, it has become an international symbol of stamina.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and other animal rights organizations consistently proclaim it to be an exercise in animal cruelty—but mushers face stiff penalties including disqualification and banishment if they are found guilty of ill-treatment of their dogs. Few such punishments have been handed down, but still on an average year a handful of dogs die during the race. It’s a startling figure that fires ongoing controversy.
On the other hand, according to a recent New York Times article, Iditarod sled dogs are being studied for their extreme resistance to fatigue. It appears the dogs have a “magical” ability to burn calories at a high level for long periods of time without tapping fat and glycogen reserves. It is hoped that the key to this ability can be discovered and applied to soldiers and others whose susceptibility to fatigue puts them at greater risk for illness and injury. The research may prove useful to human athletes as well.
Man’s best friends
Rick Hillman has always loved dogs, ever since he was a little kid. Today, he is a small bear of a man with a quick smile, and you can see him light up when he shows off his dogs, sleds, woodcarvings, and gold nuggets to youngsters. He’s helped raise over a hundred sled dogs—most of them like the Alaskan huskies he had on display recently at the Town of Cambria’s Bicentennial Celebration.
“It’s all about the dogs and the kids. I’d rather be around them than most people,” he says.
For over 15 years he’s been introducing kids to the sport by letting them interact with his huskies, who are all remarkably well trained. Sometimes, little ones will climb right on top of the resting animals, and the dogs never protest. He’s brought his enthusiasm into classrooms, where kids learn all about the bond that develops between musher and dog.
One elementary school developed an ongoing lesson plan where kids got to do all kinds of activities, from making the special booties that the dogs wear in harsh weather to mixing up the ingredients that go into the high-energy treats they eat. The students got interested in the Iditarod, and when the race got underway in March they would trace each team’s progress via a Web site, using their math skills to determine who was in the lead, and by how many hours, or days, in some cases.
Winners of the Iditarod annually spend more money on their dogs and equipment than the first-place prize money offsets. The real payout to the victor is in subsequent endorsement deals, books, appearances, and so on. Elite mushers do quite well running kennels and selling merchandise over their Web sites. For the majority of racers, it is a colossal labor of love. A challenge that, like Mount Everest, has to be met simply because it’s there.
Some kids would ask Hillman if he’d ever run in the great Alaskan race. “No,” he’d say, although he had participated in regional events. Tiny races by comparison, with comparatively little public following. Two years ago, he was the main promoter of a proposed race on Grand Island, but the weather didn’t cooperate. Despite a postponement, the snow never came and the dogs never ran. Even though it would have been great local publicity for a sport that seems natural to our winter climate, it wasn’t meant to be.
It was a big disappointment for a guy who’s really gotten into the sport. He lists some of the people he’s worked with in Alaska—raising and training their dogs, using their private trails, transporting their dogs. And while the names don’t ring a bell to those who don’t follow the sport, a few minutes on Google shows they are all serious mushers and Iditarod competitors. Several have won the race, and some have done it several times. Martin Buser, Linwood Fiedler, Jeff King, Lance Mackey, Bill Kornmuler, and the father-son team of Buddy and Terry Streeper. Why couldn’t a name like Rick Hillman mingle with theirs, as an Iditarod competitor? He’d helped train their dogs, after all.
North to Alaska
Hillman again returned to the kids, and told them stories about Alaska. He let them explore the sled, and let them play with the traces. He described how everyone should see the Alaska Highway in both the hot summer and howling winter, when it’s 40 below. The kids and the parents ate it up.
Witnessing their enthusiasm, a small voice began whispering in Hillman’s ear—or perhaps it came echoing down from the snowy peaks and frozen lakes of his memory. It has grown louder and more persistent in recent months. That’s why he’s heading back up to Alaska in a couple of weeks to begin training for the 2009 Iditarod. If he makes it through a grueling qualification process, he’ll be one of the few non-Alaskans to participate, and one of the only ones ever from Western New York, a place known globally for snow. To do so, he needs to be in Alaska to start late summer training in preparation for the 300-mile qualifier races he needs to complete in order to gain the opportunity to compete in the Iditarod next March.
Hillman, in his early 50s, acknowledges he’s not in the best shape of his life. “But that’ll all get going again, once I’m up there, and start training with all those guys,” he says. It’s interesting to note that while working on this story, I’d call Hillman on his cell phone, which requires an Alaska area code, even though he was at the time just 20 miles away from Buffalo.
He knows he’s less than a year, but still a continent away, from his goal. In Hillman’s case, his next step will be packing up and pressing down on the accelerator of the same blue pickup he’s driven to Alaska twice. “The whole thing’s been rebuilt, front to back,” he says with pride.
When he got out of the service all those years ago, he was built, he recalls, “like Rambo.” The experience of Alaska was fresh in his blood, and he cut down over a hundred pine trees and built a log cabin by himself out in the woods of North Carolina. It was back when he and his wife were first together.
He still talks like a soldier, peppering many of his responses with an earnest “Yes, sir,” for emphasis. Remembering those days, however, he switches quickly into a sweet impression of his wife’s drawl: “Hiya, Ree-uk. That’s how she used to say it, with her Southern accent…” His voice trails off into the distance, and he seems for a moment like a man lost in the wilderness, searching for that familiar trail that could lead him home.
Then he seems quickly pulled back by a force as heavy as fate, as strong as the gravity he felt when he stepped out of that plane 30 years ago, high above Fairbanks, falling into Alaska.
“If I could just make it,” he says, doing a take on another Sylvester Stallone character, “I’d feel like Rocky. If I could just cross that line…that line in Nome…I’d know I wasn’t just another bum from the neighborhood.”
Reader Comments
Jay Bradway 01 Aug 2008, 14:10
I have known Rick Hillman for many years through our local Dog Sledding
club "Canadian American Sledders". He is a true original: an iconoclast,
a rebel, a dreamer, a totally cool guy. His love of dogs and the outdoors
was a great idea for an article. Thank you for publishing something
"rural" and unique. Jay Bradway, Lakeview, NY
Rob Dennis 07 Aug 2008, 12:54
I have known Rick for his whole dog mushing career. Yes he is a DREAMER!
Most of what is written is in his dreams. I have no problem with Rick
dreaming but don't miss lead the public on your achievements it's not fair
to the rest of us out here who have worked so hard in the sport. To be a
dog musher in it's own right makes each one of us diffirent from everyday
people. So no need to lie on who what where and when you do something! Not
fair to the ones who have!!!! Thank You
Mr. John Calhounry 19 Aug 2008, 15:07
To all: "Dreams" are all there is in this life and Hillman is NO dreamer. I've known Mr. Hillman for most of his entire adult life and I find it extremely disappointing that Mr. Dennis, knowing the spirit of this man, knowing his love of dogs and their learning importance to kids both "normal" and handicapped, coming from someone who is supposed to support this sport and it's 'Mushers' as the president of the local CAN-AM dog-sledding org, to make such a comment. Fairly unbelievable and sour grapes. As I am told by locals and officials, Mr. Hillman arrived in Alaska last evening and is actually ON the Iditarod Trail in Wasilla, Alaska, even as I write this! SHAME on anyone making disparaging comments from WNY! How typical. Jealousy and meaness of spirit ARE NOT what this is all about and this is certainly NOT the spirit meant of the original run. BOO to Mr. Dennis! Sincerely, JC
Rob Dennis 21 Aug 2008, 14:58
Did you read what I wrote!!!? I have supported MR. Hillman through out his
dog mushing dreams, like NO Other! His very career started with me His
orginal dogs, from me His orginal leaders to help train his young dogs
given to him, by me! The truck he is driving to Alaska has a Transmission
rebuilt by me for the cost of the parts only. I,m not looking for any
awards or anything, I did those things because I believe in those dreams
for everyone out there! The problem is dropping names and accoplishments
effect other people and what they do or have done.The one person who has
sleddogs in Alaska that Rick trully knows is Bill Kornmuller a friend of
mine for many years which I went out of my way to hook Rick up with, twice!
I have no sour grapes about anything other than dropping names and saying
you helped anyone training there respected sleddogs when you know that is
not true. I don't know where you grew up but that is called a lie. I have
never ever been against anybody in this sport or in life trying to better
themselves in anyway but don't disrespect your fellow mushers in this case
for your personal gain. When you make yourself public about a topic make
sure you know what your talking about, back it up with facts then it's ok.
I hope Rick Hillman runs whatever race he thinks he can, I really do cause
when it's all said and done I can say theres a guy who took all the help
are club gave him and came threw!!! This club does not stand alone with one
person or one member nor does the sport, I say to anyone who cares to know
look into the facts of the sport thats all goodluck to all.
Rob Dennis 22 Aug 2008, 16:08
P.S. Iditrod is in March not August LOL! I just talked to Rick and he says
Buck the writer wrote these things about helping King, Mackey etc.. On his
own, I asked him to go to a computer and say that in his own words. Also
John he says he never heard of you before??? Funny makes alot of since to
me talk to Rick. Peace
Susie Rogan
25 Aug 2008, 11:55
Hmmm. This guy would have to be one lucky man to have trained the dogs of
Lance Mackey, Martin Buser and Jeff King - all multiple winners of the 1000
mile Iditarod. Not to mention that he trains sprint for a couple of the
best teams in the world too, Buddy and Terry Streeper. This would be on par with being Lance Armstrong's bike coach, Wayne Gretzky's hockey coach and Lennox Lewis boxing coach. Pretty amazing guy. I can't wait to meet him up here when he comes for the Iditarod. I live with a multiple champion of the Yukon Quest who has also won the World Championship in sprint, etc. etc. He's never quite managed to win the Iditarod. He's come in pretty close to the top, but maybe a chat with Bill will help him win! Looking forward to seeing you at the start line Bill. It's a small town up here and I really hope you make your qualifiers so I can meet you! Leave a Comment:
|
|
Issue Navigation> Issue Index > v7n31: Targeting Buffalo's Vacant Properties (7/31/08) > The Underdog This Week's Issue • Artvoice Daily • Events Calendar • Classifieds |
Artvoice Blog Headlines
Who Goes Where When Hillary Goes to State?posted November 19, 12:04 pm on Artvoice DailyCity Hall News has flow_chart that tracks who might replace who, from Hillary’s Senate seat on down (click to expand or follow the link—it’s an awkward shape): |
It’s Robert Rich Sr. All High Stadiumposted November 14, 5:05 pm on Artvoice DailyThese new signs properly label the structure. We’ve been reading recent stories in the Buffalo News about sportswriter Tom Borrelli’s terrible fall last week at the old All High Stadium. He’s currently battling life-threatening injuries... (more) |
CWM Fined for Violationsposted November 14, 2:41 pm on Artvoice DailyThis week Chemical Waste Management was fined $175,000 by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation for violating its permits and the state’s hazardous waste laws. I don’t have much to say about that, except it doesn’t seem to me like too much money... (more) |
Musical Chairsposted November 14, 12:51 pm on Artvoice DailyThe AP reports that Hillary Clinton met with Barack Obama in Chicago yesterday, adding fuel to speculation that she might be Obama’s choice for secretary of state. If that happens, it has long been rumored that Brian Higgins would be appointed to her Senate seat... (more) |
Paint the Townposted November 14, 11:06 am on Artvoice DailyLate last night, at the tail end of one of the few weeks in the past year in which we did not publish anything snarky about anybody, someone threw two gallons of paint on our front doors. Seems a waste; we hadn’t even earned it. Nonetheless, we were cleaning up all morning... (more) |
Old Editions Book Shopposted November 13, 1:58 pm on Artvoice DailyAV videographer Matt Quinn tours Old Editions, an often overlooked treasure at the corner of Oak and Huron Streets downtown: show enclosure (video/x-flv; 21.29 MB) |
This Is Not Today’s Newsposted November 12, 9:37 am on Artvoice DailyBut it would be nice if it were. Via the Data Stream, by way of Jon Winet. |
This Just In…posted November 11, 3:28 pm on Artvoice DailyAlways in the vanguard, researchers of the University at Buffalo’s Center of Human Capital have reached a bold conclusion, according to a statement disseminated this afternoon: Although no official determination has been made about whether New York State or the U... (more) |
Silver Lining: Edwards Remains a Good Guyposted November 11, 11:17 am on Artvoice DailyMarshawn Lynch Amid the anguished finger-pointing, plaintive wailing and resigned head-shaking sweeping the region following the Buffalo Bills’ third straight defeat, Season Ticket would like to apportion a minute sliver of credit. Quarterback Trent Edwards, by most quantitative and qualitative standards, failed miserably at New England on Sunday (not coincidentally, this was also his third consecutive regressive outing)... (more) |
Mazzariello’s Ristorante & Martini Barposted November 7, 4:30 pm on Chew on ThisPhoto taken by Rose Mattrey From Antipasti to Primi to Secondi, Mazzariello’s (114 Bloomfield Ave, Lancaster, 206.0561) has conquered the map of Italian cooking. Your palate will be exposed to an array of spices, herbs, and ingredients indigenous to Northern & Southern Italy... (more) |
Post Election Bits & Bytesposted November 7, 12:02 am on Tech VoiceElection ‘08 is now in the history books - so I figured it’s time to take a look backward, and a look forward at some relevant headlines. Hacking Democracy First, we’ll take a look at one of the best kept secrets of the campaign season, from both sides, care of a Newsweek article published just today... (more) |
BNMC Open Meeting Tonightposted November 6, 1:19 pm on Artvoice DailyTonight at 6pm in the auditorium of the downtown library, everyone is invited to attend a public hearing on the Buffalo-Niagara Medical Campus—North End Projects. Among the projects planned are a 300,000 square foot Medical Office Building to be owned and operated by Ciminelli Development Company, Inc... (more) |
That Pigeon Won’t Flyposted November 6, 10:05 am on Artvoice DailySteve Pigeon Here’s another example, this one two years old, of the way Steve Pigeon’s political committees are alleged to steer money to candidates illegally. On September 15, 2006, the Pigeon-controlled PAC Citizens for Fiscal Integrity paid “RUR Strategy Group” $9,000 in consulting fees, according to CFI’s campaign finance disclosure forms... (more) |
SeaBar’s Social Calendarposted November 5, 12:44 pm on Chew on ThisSeaBar will host live jazz and sushi nights starting Friday, November 21st at 8 p.m. (5235 Main Street, Wmsvl, 204.5283). A Cave Springs Riesling Tasting Event will take place at SeaBar’s suburban location on Wednesday, November 9th at 7 p.m... (more) |
Artvoice TV: Latest Additions » more on AVTV
Dr. Riyaz Hassanali: The effect Smoking has on your Skinposted November 21, 4:50 pm on channel Local Interest
|
Twilightposted November 19, 1:09 pm on channel Movie Trailers
|
The Boy in the Striped Pajamasposted November 19, 1:06 pm on channel Movie Trailers
|
Avi Takes Artvoice Shopping for the holidays @ Lexington food Co-opposted November 19, 11:52 am on channel Food
|
TRAIN DAY! @ the Buffalo Historical Societyposted November 17, 3:07 pm on channel Local Interest
|
Mass Appeal: Elmwood Fashion Eventposted November 15, 10:19 pm on channel Events
|
Buffalo Contemporay Danceposted November 15, 6:43 pm on channel Events
|
Old Editions Book Shopposted November 13, 11:42 am on channel Local Interest
|
Off Stage: Conversations with Anthony Chaseposted November 12, 4:50 pm on channel Theater
|
Happy Go Luckyposted November 12, 2:08 pm on channel Movie Trailers
|
Quantum of Solaceposted November 12, 2:01 pm on channel Movie Trailers
|
Flash Party at Essex St.posted November 9, 10:59 am on channel Events
|
Lakeview Effect at Nietzsche'sposted November 8, 4:54 pm on channel Music
|
Flatbed at Allen St. Hardwareposted November 8, 2:28 pm on channel Music
|
Obama's Nightposted November 6, 3:13 pm on channel Politics
|







Subscribe