FOUR-PAGE SPORTS PULLOUT INSIDE • B SECTION • FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 2021 THE REGION’S HUB FOR OUTDOOR ADVENTURES Each week in this section, you will find the area’s most complete guide of what’s open and closed; outdoor activities and events; top picks of places to explore; conditions of hiking and biking trails, fishing holes, water flows, camping spots, parks and more — as well as features from outdoor writers and field experts. Sled-dog team is pup and running Bend’s Rachael Scdoris leads her dog team along a trail. Submitted photo Bend musher Rafael Nelson is set to race in Wyoming with the help of former Iditarod racer Rachael Scdoris I BY MARK MORICAL The Bulletin n the sport of sled-dog rac- ing, it really is all about the dogs. Most mushers would agree with that. “The biggest thing is the dogs,” said Bend’s Rafael Nel- son, who is racing in the sev- en-day Stage Stop Race across western Wyoming starting Fri- day. “These dogs are just in- credible. They’re so friendly, and they’re always so excited about running and meet- ing people. They’re very well trained and intelligent. They make the best co-workers for sure.” Nelson works for the Ore- gon Trail of Dreams sled dog tours at Mt. Bachelor ski area, founded by renowned dog musher, Rachael Scdoris, and her father, Jerry Scdoris, both of Rafael Nelson, left, and Rachael Scdoris clip the nails and massage the paws of Richard, one of their sled dogs, in preparation for the Stage Stop Sled Dog Race, a seven-day race in Wyoming. Dean Guernsey/For The Bulletin Bend. Rachael Scdoris, 35, was the first legally blind musher to attempt the Iditarod, and she competed in the annual 1,000- mile race across Alaska four times, the last time in 2009. Nelson, 30, is taking the Sc- doris’ dog team to the Wyoming race for the second straight year, and Jerry Scdoris is go- ing along as support. Starting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, the Stage Stop race is a sprint stage race of about 30 miles per day on the Bridger-Teton, Shoshone and Caribou-Targhee national forests. Mushers will compete for $165,000 in prize money. Nelson finished 10th at the race last year in his first ever sled-dog race, but this time the dog team is more experienced. “The dogs are stronger, and I’m really excited to see what they can do,” Rachael Scdoris said. “Now that Rafael knows what to expect, and knows what these dogs are capable of — we’ll see.” At Oregon Trail of Dreams, Nelson, Rachael and her hus- band, Nick Salerno, take cus- tomers on hourlong sled dog rides along groomed trails near Mount Bachelor. The race in Wyoming will be much more intense than his day job, but Nelson said he plans to just focus on his dog team and not worry about the other com- petitors. “I don’t plan to look at the standings, maybe until the last day,” he said. “The forecast is for it to be pretty stormy and cold. That’s fine. But coming from Central Oregon, most of our dogs have been in warmish weather, relatively speaking. If it’s really cold, that might not work in our favor. But either way, we’ll make it happen.” Nelson compared the Stage Stop Race’s format to that of the Tour de France, in which racers travel to a new course each day and are able to sleep in hotels each night. The much longer Iditarod is more of a nonstop slog across Alaska, with occa- sional breaks for sleeping. “It’s a great tour of western Wyoming,” Nelson said of the Stage Stop Race. “Each stage is in a different place, with beauti- ful mountain scenery on every single stage.” See Dogs / B10 Counters show thousands more visits to Bend trails in 2020 The definition of a trail is “a path or track made across a Like many people, I’m a wild region, over rough coun- creature of habit. I’m a runner try or the like by the passage of who mostly chooses routes people or animals.” That’s pretty based on training dis- spot-on for most of tances or time dura- our trails in Bend, but I tion that I can squeeze would venture that our into my busy work- definition also needs ing mom schedule. to include our urban But I’m most relaxed and neighborhood ar- when I throw both of eas that are becoming TRAILS those self-imposed increasingly popular. requirements out the window With more than 80 miles of trail and explore a trail to keep me open to the public within the in the here and now. Based on city, and a couple dozen more some recent number crunch- planned over the next decade, ing I’m involved with in my Bend’s urban trail opportunities role at Bend Park & Recreation are rapidly expanding. District, I’m not alone among Over the past 10 months, Central Oregonians who ex- getting out of the house for plored new places in 2020. some respite has been a much- BY JULIE BROWN For The Bulletin needed outing for regular trail users and newcomers to the enjoyment of outdoor exer- cise. The park district uses trail counters across the commu- nity to glean data about use of trails. We have used the count- ers for the past several years, and before we pulled the 2020 year-end data, we suspected we might see an increase in use due to the pandemic. As my trail planner col- league Henry Stroud shared a few months ago in a column, Bendites and visitors to the area flock to national forest lands located right outside of the city limits to access hun- dreds of miles of natural sur- face trails and gravel roads. See Trails / B10 Submitted photo Visitors walk along a trail in Shevlin Park.