Iditarod National Historic Trail Recreation Management Area | Alaska
The Iditarod National Historic Trail celebrates a 2,300-mile system of winter routes that first connected ancient Native Alaskan villages and later opened Alaska to the last great American gold rush.
The trail is still in use today with rural residents using it as an overland travel route between communities, muscle-powered competitors and motor-powered competitors using it in long-distance winter races, and modern-day adventurers testing their mettle in some of the most remote areas in North America.
BLM maintains two remote, long-distance segments interspersed with public shelter cabins that provide respite from the elements. The most practical way to explore the trail is in the winter, when the hundreds of miles of swamps crossed by the Trail are frozen, making for easy passage. While offering outstanding opportunities for solitude, the Trail demands a high degree of self-reliance by the user, proficiency in extreme winter camping and travel by ski, dog team, snowmobile, or fat tire bike.
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Iditarod National Historic Trail Recreation Management Area is in Alaska.
The Iditarod is a complex trail system, stretching from Seward in the south, to Nome on the Bering Sea. It crosses lands owned by several Native corporations, municipal governments and the State of Alaska as well as federal lands managed by the BLM, the U.S. Forest Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Department of Defense. In all there are 10 institutional land managers and numerous private owners.
