YUKON
RIVER QUEST 2007
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 2, 2007
Biggest
field ever expected for Yukon River
Quest
More women’s teams needed for
‘Race to the Midnight Sun’
WHITEHORSE,
YUKON – Registrations for the
ninth annual Yukon River Quest, the
longest annual canoe and kayak race
in the world, reached the 75-team mark
at the end of March, ensuring another
record field.
This
year’s race will be run on June
27 to July 1, 2007. The 740-kilometer
(460-mile) wilderness adventure paddling
marathon is held on the Yukon River
from Whitehorse to Dawson City in Canada's
Yukon Territory. Entry forms and other
information can be found on the race
website, www.yukonriverquest.com.
Final
deadline for entries is May 26, 2007,
but the new limit of 85 canoe and kayak
teams will likely be reached by the
end of April. The YRQ allows voyageur
teams above the 85-team limit, and thus
far three are registered. Most categories
have a full complement of teams, but
there is a need for more women’s
tandem kayak and canoe teams, as well
as more teams in a new five-team experimental
solo canoe class. A 25-team solo kayak
limit was reached just two months after
the registration period opened in October.
The
YRQ will have an international flavor
again this year, with teams coming from
Great Britain, Australia, Israel, Austria,
and South Africa, as well as from all
across Canada and the United States.
Entry
fees are $700 (CAD) for tandem canoes
and kayaks, $400 for solo canoes and
kayaks, and $200 per person for voyageur
canoe teams of six or more paddlers.
Each team also must post a refundable
$200 rescue deposit in the event that
they, along with their gear, have to
be evacuated by safety boat.
The
total 2007 race purse has been set at
$26,500 (CAD).
Also
new for this year’s race is an
expanded canoe class that allows faster
standard canoes up to 18’ 6”
in length, but with waterline width
restrictions to ensure safe passage
on Lake Laberge and through Five Finger
Rapids. The YRQ has its own measuring
system for canoes and kayaks which can
be found in the FAQs on the website.
Additional
safety measures have been put in place
as well for the 2007 race.
“We
have ramped up our mandatory gear list,”
said Jeff Brady, president of YRMPA.
“With the wet, chilly weather
last year, we found that quite a few
teams did not have additional changes
of clothing, so we’ve moved that
from a suggested item to a mandatory
item. Teams also must carry a backpack-type
stove and pot for heating water. We
hope this will cut down on the number
of teams that scratch early, like we
had last year. If they can stop and
warm up, and then carry on, then everyone’s
happy – they are able to finish
and we have fewer teams to rescue. Still,
we’ll have the usual complement
of safety boats out there to help those
who need it.”
Volunteers
are the cornerstone of the event, Brady
added, but more are needed to help as
the race grows. “We have great
safety boats and great checkpoint crews,
but we will need more bodies to help
make the event run smoothly,”
he said.
If
anyone is interested in helping with
the event, please contact the race organization
at info@yukonriverquest.com
or call 867-33FLOAT.
The
Yukon River Quest is one of the premier
events in the north and the paddling
world. It has been featured on the BBC,
CBC and in numerous paddling and adventure
magazines. Last year, the National Film
Board followed the Yukon Paddlers Abreast
team, which will be featured in an upcoming
film called “River of Life”
which is expected to be released this
summer.
After
a LeMans-style start in downtown Whitehorse,
teams paddle round-the-clock under the
midnight sun, stopping for just two
mandatory rests at Carmacks (7 hours)
and Kirkman Creek (3 hours). It is a
grueling wilderness adventure race that
tests the stamina of both professional
and recreational paddlers from around
the globe. The prize, for many, is just
finishing the event in world-famous
Dawson City, site of the Klondike Gold
Rush of 1897-1898.
In
2006 74 teams started the event, while
57 finished. It was the second straight
high-water year, and six category records
were broken, including the new course
record of 40:37:05 set by the tandem
kayak team of David Kelly and Brandon
Nelson.
For
more information about results, how
to enter, and preparation for the event,
visit the race website.
The
race is organized by the Yukon River
Marathon Paddling Association, based
in Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada. Major
logo-level sponsors are the Whitehorse
Star, Canadian Rangers, Yukon Emergency
Measures Organization – Whitehorse
and Faro SAR branches, Air North-Yukon’s
Airline, Kanoe People-Clipper Canoes,
PR Services-yukoninfo.com, Northland
Beverages-Aquafina Water, Integraphics,
and Cranberry Bistro-Bold Rush.
MEDIA
CONTACT:
Jeff Brady, YRMPA president., info@yukonriverquest.com