answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

A bib visible from the safety checkpoint

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is the musher required to wear from Safety Checkpoint to Nome?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

When is the musher requied to wear the bib in a visible manner?

From Safety Checkpoint to Nome.


In the iditarod what does a musher required to wear from safety to nome?

heavy coats and gloves


Who was the musher who got the serum to Nome?

Chuck Norris


What does the last musher to reach Nome win?

a dick


How many mandatory stops rests must a musher make?

Three total... 1.) A 24-hour layover, to be taken at any checkpoint, 2.) An 8 hour layover, taken at any checkpoint on the Yukon River 3.) An 8 hour stop at White Mountain, 77 miles from Nome.


Restart of the 2010 Iditarod is what checkpoint?

The Iditarod race begins in Anchorage, Alaska. The race ends in Nome, Alaska. The race takes place in the beginning of March.


What is the red lanteren award?

The Red Lantern Award is given to the last musher to cross the finish line in Nome.


What is the iditarod widow's lantern?

The Red Lantern Award is an award given to the last musher to cross the finish line in Nome.


What is a musher in the Iditarod?

It is a person who leads a pack of dogs pulling a sled in the famous state race that moves from Anchorage all the way down treacherous territory to Nome, Alaska.


Who is Melissa Owens?

Melissa Owens is an Alaskan musher who is running in the iditarod she lives in nome Alaska she is still in high shcool she completed four jr. iditarod races and was the 2005 champion


What are the checkpoints on the Iditarod?

i dont know you a hole if you don't have an real answer then don't answer at all. What happens at a Iditarod checkpoint is: Every single checkpoint that the race goes through has a team of vets available and ready to evaluate and treat injured dogs. The vets partners with the mushers to go over every team when they enter a checkpoint, evaluating individual dogs and answering any questions the musher may have. Likewise a musher can "drop" a tired or injured dog at any checkpoint, meaning they sign the dog over to the Iditarod vets and volunteers to care for and transport the dog back to Anchorage. Dogs, especially any injured dogs, are top transport priorities, and bump everything else...including humans. The "Iditarod Air Force" a highly skilled team of the cream of the Alaskan bush pilots, will make priority transports of injured dogs from the checkpoints anywhere along the race back to Anchorage and advanced medical care if needed. Most dogs simply need rest, and are transported back to Anchorage and picked up by the musher's designated local contact person. If more treatment is required, the dogs are taken directly to advanced veterinary clinics to have that performed. The health and safety of the dogs is the top priority for the mushers as well as the vets and trail volunteers. After all, the musher can't travel without them. I know someone who dropped 2 dogs in Ruby, a little over half-way through the race, because of sore shoulders -- it was in their best interest, even though they still wanted to go. By the time they got to Anchorage and their handler picked them up back there, they were bouncing around looking for the party...they're gotten enough rest to heal, which is the one thing he couldn't give them enough of on the trail.


What happened in the 1925 Iditarod?

Something historic happened