A8 OFF PAGE ONE Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, January 26, 2022 ECX: ‘For me, my dogs surprise me and amaze me all the time’ Continued from Page A1 included his training part- ner, Anderson, Fowler, Rex and Bryce Mumford and Jed Stephensen. Perry turned in a time of 38 hours, 31 min- utes. The Mumfords both crossed about an hour later with matching times of 39:46, with Rex in second and Bryce in third, accord- ing to the offi cial results. Stephensen placed fourth in 41:55, and Anderson took fi fth with a time of 45:31. Fowler scratched during the fi nal stretch. It’s the start of what Perry hopes will be a good 2022, with the goal in sight of try- ing to win the Rocky Moun- tain Triple Crown. The next race, the Idaho Sled Dog Challenge, begins Jan. 30, and following that is Mon- tana’s Race to the Sky in Perry’s home state. Lombardi wins 100-mile race in ECX debut Also claiming the fi rst leg of the triple crown was Nicole Lombardi, another Montana-based racer who was the victor of the 100- mile race in her fi rst time at the ECX. “I was a little nervous, but felt fully supported by the community, the race committee, veterinarians Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Jesika Reimer of Emigrant Gap, California, takes off at the start of the 31-mile competition Thursday, Jan. 20, 2022, in this year’s Eagle Cap Extreme Sled Dog Race. Reimer won her competition. and fellow mushers,” Lom- bardi said. She ran away from the four-team fi eld, complet- ing the 100-mile course in 18 hours, 7 minutes. Steve Madsen took second in 22:33 and Jane Devlin crossed in 22:47. The fourth racer, Kevin Daugherty, scratched during the race. Lombardi admitted she almost dropped from the race, worried the weather conditions would not bode well for her team. “I almost didn’t go. I was afraid of giving my dogs pneumonia,” she said. “Turned out to be a really nice trail for the dogs.” It was a race of fi rsts for Lombardi — not only was it her fi rst win at the ECX in her fi rst try, but it was “really the fi rst time I’ve raced 100 miles and the fi rst time rac- ing my own dogs,” she said. It’s also her fi rst year back in racing after close to a decade off building her own team. “Basically I needed to build my own kennel, and it took me 11 years to get to a place where I could balance work, breed dogs and get to the place where we could do something like this,” she said. She intended to do it a year ago, but the pandemic altered those plans. “We actually wanted to do it last year but every- thing was canceled due to COVID,” she said. Lombardi will be gear- ing up for the Idaho Sled Dog Race next week. She defi nitely plans to return to Joseph to race in the ECX, and said that while her career hinders it now, she would consider building up to the 200-mile race in the future. “I would love to some- day,” she said. Reimer takes 31-mile race Another fi rst-timer took the 31-mile, two-day race — California racer Jesika Reimer. “The plan was just to get my yearlings some expe- rience. All my adults have raced before,” Reimer said. “They just plowed up those hills and loved the downhills.” Reimer, who owns 12 dogs, had four of the younger dogs on her team. She said she ran two of the yearlings during her fi rst day, then switched to the others on the second day. “The fi rst day, because I hadn’t run the course before and it’s the upper limit in mileage in what we trained this year, Day 1 (plan) was to ride the brake, hold them back, run a conservative day,” she said. She let up on the reins the second day out. “Day 2 heading out, I knew they still had a lot of gas in the tank, so I have a lit- tle leader named Arrow, this little 38-pound black dog. I let her pick the pace on Day 2,” she said. “They really loved it. They hit the last fi ve miles and they started sprint- ing. It was a really fun ride into the fi nish line for sure.” Reimer fi nished in 6 hours, 22 minutes, just over an hour ahead of local racer Craig Anderson, who took second in 7:35. Chantelle Chase was third in 11:15, edging Kathy Miyoshi by eight minutes. Candace Sarkesian scratched just a couple hours after the start. Reimer said she was impressed at the perfor- mance of her team. “For me, my dogs sur- prise me and amaze me all the time,” she said. “I was amazed they were able to run those distances. They still had a ton of energy and were really happy. It was cool for me to see them have a good time and that they weren’t pushed too hard.” Reimer said she’ll run a couple more races this year, then plans to train her team up for the 100-mile race in 2023. “It was such a welcoming community and such a beau- tiful place to run our dogs,” she said. “We’re looking for- ward to coming back again.” The lone racer in the 22-mile junior race, Sofi e Kaaen of Baker City, com- pleted the fi rst day of the race, but scratched out of the second leg. Randy Greenshields, the race president and an Enter- prise veterinarian, said the fi eld was smaller than in recent years, as several rac- ers withdrew before the start. “There was some sick- ness. We had a couple that were not COVID, but they were sick and didn’t want to expose people,” Green- shields said. “Others didn’t get the training miles in this year.” Still, he said it was “another good year” for the race, and spoke highly of the ideal conditions for the mushers. “The snow conditions were the best I think I’ve ever seen,” he said. “The mushers really enjoyed the trails.”