PAGE 8B THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN IDITAROD Sled dog racer flown to hospital with broken ankle ASSOCIATED PRESS ASSOCIATED PRESS Scott Janssen keeps control of his sled rounding the corner near Goose Lake during the ceremonial start for Iditarod 42 in Anchorage, Alaka, Saturday. Janssen was back home early Wednesday after he was flown to a hospital after a harrowing ordeal that included crashing his sled, hitting his head on a stump and later falling through ice and breaking his ankle. ANCHORAGE, Alaska — An Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race musher was flown to a hospital after a harrowing ordeal that included crashing his sled, hitting his head on a tree stump and getting knocked unconscious, and later falling through ice and breaking his ankle. Scott Janssen, 52, an Anchorage undertaker known as the Mushing Mortician, was back home early Wednesday after getting a cast for the broken bone he suffered on Tin Creek, about 40 miles from Nikolai. Treacherous trail conditions with little snow have marked the early part of this year's Iditarod, which started Sunday with 69 mushers. The nearly 1,000-mile race spans two mountain ranges, dangerous wilderness and the windwhipped Bering Sea coast. As he dismantled his broken seat, another musher came along. Janssen asked him the time, and couldn't believe an hour, if not two, had passed. "I made it through the worst part of the trail only to slip on the ice and break my foot," Janssen told The Associated Press on Wednesday as he recuperated from home. "I tripped over there, went full-speed and hit my head on that stump," he said he told the musher. "I think I went nightnight for awhile." Janssen's ordeal began Tuesday when he crashed his sled between the Rohn and Nikolai checkpoints, hitting his head after he said he bumped across rocks all along the trail. He lay unconscious for at least an hour and awoke to find his sled nearby and his dogs huddled next to him, covered in light snow. After caring for his dogs, Janssen fixed his sled and continued on. There's a lot of heaven to be seen along the Iditarod route. But, he said, "that part of the trail was all hell." He made it to Tin Creek and estimated he had only about 7 more miles of nasty trail until it turned good again. But one of his dogs, Hooper, got loose from the line and took off. Janssen said he loosely anchored his sled and tried to call Hooper as he crossed a frozen creek. But just as Hooper heeded the call and trotted back to his place in line, Janssen fell. "I had 15 dogs I have to take care of, no way I could responsibly mush in that pain I was in." SCOTT JANSSEN Iditarod racer "I slipped on the ice, and bang, that was it," he said. "Then I just laid there on the ice because I could not get back across the water to get back to my sled." He lay there for about 45 minutes before another musher, St. Anne, Jamaica, native Newton Mashall, came along. "I said, 'Help! Help,' and Newton comes walking up and said, 'Yeah, mn. How you doing?' I said, 'I'm just lying around, kicking back,'" Janssen said. into both. Janssen said hypothermia was setting in at that point. After that, Janssen said he encouraged Marshall to get back on the trial and keep racing, but Marshall wouldn't budge until help arrived. Mushers carry mandatory GPS units that have an emergency Marshall was able to retrieve a snowsuit and Janssen's sleeping bag from his sled, helping the injured musher "I had 15 dogs I have to take care of; no way I could responsibly mush in the pain I was in," he said. button on them, which Janssen said he pushed. Later, film crews for the Iditarod website came on the trail and stayed with Janssen until an Alaska Air National Guard helicopter arrived to fly him to an Anchorage hospital. + Janssen is among about a dozen mushers who have dropped out of this year's race. Iditarod officials also removed a Canadian musher because of injuries. snow when that decision was made but not when mushers arrived. He talked of bouncing off rocks on the trail, driving a team on gravel and going "across these rivers that were like smooth ice." UPCOMING PROGRAMS @ THE DOLE INSTITUTE 2014 Innovations Series: Drones This year the Dole Institute is launching the Innovations Series, which will focus on the crossroads between science, technology and public policy. Our inaugural event in the series is a two program series on drones. Join us to find out about the technology and many uses of drones – not just military, as well as ethical questions about their deployment. Co-sponsored by KU School of Engineering, KU's Engineering Student Council, Engineers without Borders and KU Robotics. "I'm very disappointed we didn't leave out of Fairbanks," he said, though he doesn't fault the trail, trailbreakers or Iditarod officials. NEW SERIES! Part I - Unmanned Drones: Soldiers without Uniforms 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 6, Dole Institute Retired Naval Admiral Timothy Beard and Scott Winship, both currently of global security company, Northrop Grumman, will discuss the technological development, military history, future capabilities and ethics of drones. Part II - Branching Out: Exploring New Uses for Drones 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 11, Dole Institute Drones are often associated with military procedures. But Dr. Kurt Barnhart, director for the Applied Aviation Research Center of Kansas State University, KU assistant profes sor of Aerospace Engineering, Shawn Keshmiri, and local entrepreneur, Bill Donovan, will discuss applications of drone use that range from disaster relief to search and rescue, environmental studies and agriculture. "It would have just been another race had we left out of Fairbanks." Janssen has lived in Alaska and been an active outdoorsman for nearly three decades, competing in three previous Iditarods. He hoped he never find himself in a situation where he had to be rescued. An Evening with Cindy McCain 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 25, Dole Institute Though best known publicly as wife of 708 Presidential contender, Sen. John McCain Cindy McCain is a very successful and strong leader in her own right. Find out about her experiences as Chair of Hensley & Company and her extensive work with a number of major charity organizations, as well as some stories from the campaign trail. DON'T MISS... All programs are free & open to the public. Janssen also had a frightening experience during the 2012 Iditarod. During that race, he had to give one of his dogs mouth-to-snout resuscitation after the animal collapsed while the team was going down a decline in the Dalzell Gorge. The dog survived. Dole Institute, University of Kartasas, 2350 Petefish Drive, Lawrence, KS 66045 www.DoleInstitute.org 785.864.4900 Facebook/Twitter But he said there's one consolation. Warm weather and light snow near the gorge led officials to briefly consider moving the start of this year's race from the Anchorage area hundreds of miles north to Fairbanks. However, the decision was made late last month to leave the start in Willow, because conditions had improved. "I can always wear the badge of honor that I made it over the pass on the worst year in the 42-year history of the Iditarod." Janssen said the area had MENTION THIS AD and RECEIVE 10% OFF THIS THURSDAY! MOM & POPS LIQUOR STORE 1906 MASS ST LAWRENCE, KS 66046 785-843-8186 (OFFER EXCLUDES 30 PACKS. SINGLE BEERS, AND DEEP DISCOUNTS) INSTITUTIONAL GRIT THE CRITICAL ROLE OF FLAGSHIP UNIVERSITIES IN AMERICAN SOCIETY Thomas Burish Provost of the University of Notre Dame and KU Alum 7 p.m. Thursday, March 6 Ballroom, Kansas Union Open to the public 864-4131 or psychology@ku.edu