Alaska Mountain Wilderness Classic
The Alaska Mountain Wilderness Classic (sometimes called the Alaska Wilderness Classic) is an adventure race that espouses purity of style. Started in 1982 as a 150-mile (240 km) wilderness footrace, the Classic has crossed various mountain ranges throughout Alaska with some routes covering nearly 250 miles (400 km). Traditionally, the same route has been used for three years in a row.
The rules are simple: start to finish with no outside support, requiring that racers carry all food and equipment; human-powered; leave no trace; and rescue is up to the individual to resolve. The most common form of transportation is by foot and packraft, although bicycles, skis, and paragliders have been used by intrepid racers. Beginning in 2004, racers have been required to carry satellite phones to facilitate emergency rescues.
The organization of the race is grass-roots, having no affiliation to any organization or group, while generally fewer than 50 people enter in any one year. Its influence on American adventure racing, backcountry use of the packraft, and ultralight hiking is significant. In addition to the summer race, there is an even more low-key winter event, the Alaska Mountain Wilderness Ski Race, which has taken place every year since 1987 with races through the Chugach Mountains, Alaska Range, Brooks Range, and Wrangell-St. Elias.
Routes and winners
1982–1984
Hope to Homer (Kenai Peninsula), 150 miles (240 km)
- 1982 – Roman Dial
- 1983 – Roman Dial and Jim Lokken
- 1984 – David Manzer (course record: 3 days 12 hours)
1985–1987
Mentasta to Denali National Park (Alaska Range), 235 miles (378 km)
- 1985 – Hank Timm
- 1986 – Hank Timm
- 1987 – Hank Timm and Randy Pitney (course record: 4 days 18 hours 27 minutes)
1988–1990
Nabesna to McCarthy (Wrangell – Saint Elias Wilderness), 150 miles (240 km)
- 1988 – Roman Dial
- 1989 – David Manzer, Adrian Crane and Tom Possert
- 1990 – Brant McGee and Jeff Gedney
1991–1993
Gates of the Arctic Wilderness (Brooks Range), 130 miles (210 km)
- 1991 – Brant McGee and Adrian Crane (course record: 2 days 6 hours 18 minutes)
- 1992 – Brant McGee and Dave Dixon
- 1993 – Gordy Vernon
1994–1996
Donnelly to McKinley Village (Alaska Range), 140 miles (230 km)
- 1994 – Frazier Miller
- 1995 – Clark Saunders (course record: 2 days 12 hours 20 minutes)
- 1996 – Steve Reifenstuhl and Rocky Reifenstuhl
1997–1999
Hope to Homer (Kenai Peninsula), 150 miles (240 km)
- 1997 – Gordy Vernon and Thai Verzone
- 1998 – Gordy Vernon
- 1999 – Jim Jaegar and Laura McDonough
2000–2002
Nabesna to McCarthy (Wrangell – Saint Elias Wilderness), 150 miles (240 km)
- 2000 – Steve Reifenstuhl and Rocky Reifenstuhl
- 2001 – Steve Reifenstuhl and Rocky Reifenstuhl
- 2002 – Roman Dial (course record: 2 days 4 hours 24 minutes)
2003–2005
Eureka to Talkeetna (Talkeetna Mountains), 160 miles (260 km)
- 2003 – Hans Neidig, Chris Robertson and Paul Hanis
- 2004 – Gordy Vernon and Thai Verzone
- 2005 – Robert Schnell, Jason Geck, Tyler Johnson and Rory Stark (course record: 1 day 23 hours 29 minutes)
2006–2008
Chicken to Central (Tanana-Yukon Uplands), 180 miles (290 km)
- 2006 – Robert Schnell and Chris Robertson (course record: 4 days 10 hours 42 minutes)
- 2007 – Robert Schnell and Chris Robertson
- 2008 – Butch Allen, Jim McDonough, Tyler Johnson and Craig "Chunk" Barnard
2009–2011
Gerstle River/Donnelly to McKinley Village (Alaska Range), 180 miles (290 km)
- 2009 – Robert Schnell, Chris Robertson and Andrew Skurka (course record: 3 days 17 hours 54 minutes)
- 2010 – Robert Schnell, Chris Robertson, Todd Kasteler and Danny Powers
- 2011 – Tyler Johnson, Todd Kasteler, Luc Mehl and John Sykes
2012–2014
Thompson Pass to Lakina River Bridge (Chugach Mountains, Wrangell – Saint Elias Wilderness), 120 miles (190 km) - 180 miles (290 km)
- 2012 – Luc Mehl, Josh Mumm (3d 22.5h, Bremner Route)
- 2013 – Lee Helzer, Steve Duby, Len Jenkins (Slowest 1st place finish: 7 days, 8 hours, 44 minutes)
- 2014 – Gerard Ganey, Todd Tumolo (course record: 3d 10h, Ice Route)
2015
Peters Hills to Red Shirt Lake via Rohn (Western Alaska Range, Susitna Valley), 280 miles (450 km)
- 2015 - Josh Mumm (course record: 5 days, 21 hours, 40 minutes)
Records
- Most entrants: 1984 Hope to Homer
- Lowest Finishers:Entrants Ratio: 1:7.5 -- 2015 Peters Hills to Red Shirt Lake via Rohn (26 scratched)
- Highest Finishers:Entrants Ratio:: 1:1 -- 1995 Donnelly to McKinley Village (everybody finished)
- Fastest finish: Jason Geck, Robert Schnell, Tyler Johnson and Rory Stark: 1 day, 23 hours, 30 minutes -- 2005 Eureka to Talkeetna
- Slowest 1st place finish: Lee Helzer, Steve Duby, Len Jenkins: 7 days, 8 hours, 44 minutes -- 2013 Thompson Pass to Lakina River Bridge
- Fastest solo finish: Bjorn Flora: 2 days, 1 hour, 20 minutes -- 2005 Eureka to Talkeetna
- Fastest female finish: Peggy Dial: 3 days, 3 hours, 40 minutes -- 1993 Gates of the Arctic
- Oldest finisher: Dick Griffith: 78 years old --- 2004 Eureka to Talkeetna
- Oldest finisher in 'Master's Division': Dick Griffith -- 81 years old --2008 Chicken to Central
- Youngest finisher: Cody Dial: 17 years old -- 2004 Eureka to Talkeetna
- Most finishes: Tie: Dick Griffith and John Lapkass: 17 finishes
- First use of a packraft: Dick Griffith -- 1982 Hope to Homer
- First use of a packraft and skis: Roman Dial and Jim Lokken -- 1983 Hope to Homer
- First use of a mountain bike: Hank Timm and Randy Pitney -- 1987 Mentasta to McKinley
- First use of a paraglider: Chuck Comstock -- 1988 Nabesna to McCarthy
- First 'Master's Division' finish: Dick Griffith -- 2008 Chicken to Central
References
- Alaska Mountain Wilderness Classic Race reports
- "Across the Talkeetna Mountains"
- 2004 Alaska Mountain Wilderness Classic
- Wilderness Classic Blog and Information
- Video of the 2009 race by Roman Dial
- 2009 Race Report by Andrew Skurka