From Deseret News archives:

Frontier rider — Native Utahn trains for 350-mile endurance test in Alaska

Published: Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2008 12:27 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
"I slipped out the door at 12:31 a.m. and pedaled beneath the orange glow of suburban street lamps. Blasts of hard wind amplified the already tiny temperature, but only the crackle of rubber on ice betrayed a bewildering quiet. I rode toward the black mass of mountains that would swallow me for the night. I was consumed with the loneliness and awe of the conditions I was simulating. I had to keep reminding myself I was only a few blocks from my house."Jill Homer, Jan. 29

· · · · ·

Jill Homer has been called a lot of different things.

Strangers call her daring, yet crazy. Friends think she's bordering on insanity, but brave. Family members think she is amazing but worry openly for her safety.

But of all the adjectives Homer has heard to describe her, one fits best.

"I kind of like 'adventurous,'" the 28-year-old Alta High graduate said. "I think it defines doing crazy things without being crazy."

Homer, indeed, does some crazy things. The craziest, though, comes on Feb. 24 when she mounts her bicycle and embarks on a journey few would feel confident, or competent, enough to attempt.

On that chilly afternoon, the adventure-loving cyclist will leave the shores of Knik Lake near Anchorage, Alaska, on a 350-mile journey that will take her through the wilderness of the Last Frontier with little more than her backpack and bike to keep her company.

Story continues below
As one of only 50 participants in this year's Iditarod Trail Invitational, Homer will pedal mostly in solitude as she meanders her way to the Kuskokwim River and the tiny village of McGrath.

"When I tell people about it they all tell me they think she must be crazy to do something like that," her mother, Sheri Homer, said. "But I've grown to just accept it. In fact, there's a little part of me that really admires her.

"She loves to do things to the fullest."

Her story didn't start in Alaska and almost certainly will not end there. Homer, a University of Utah graduate and journalist working for the Juneau Empire newspaper, enjoyed long bike rides for years before heading off to the Land of the Midnight Sun. It's just that Alaska is now home to her greatest adventures.

"I never really raced my bike, but I used to take long rides out by Salt Lake," she said. "One summer, Geoff (Roes, her boyfriend) and I rode across the country. So I guess it isn't that weird that I like to ride for hours now."

Recent comments

Life up here is great!

AK Resident | Feb. 19, 2008 at 1:35 p.m.

Jill's story makes those here in Utah who are waiting for it to get...

Ron | Feb. 19, 2008 at 9:11 a.m.

GO JILL !!!

Jazz Fan | Feb. 19, 2008 at 7:08 a.m.

Image
Photo provided by Jill Homer

With bright sunshine in her face, Jill Homer rides across the frozen Mendenhall Lake on Jan. 10 in Juneau, Alaska.

previousnext

Latest comments

Hall reprimanded by MWC

Stop begging the question- there is BEER and other alcohol inside of...

Dr. Oz's words if I am reading them correctly, that acquired immunity to a...

Marriage definitions vary widely

["without religion, marriage would not exist. you can't seperate the two"]...

My brother lived in Toronto for 3 years and has horror stories about Canadian...

Are Ute fans really that sensive, I never would have guessed it... Maybe they...

Hall's pain reflects self-betrayal

Great article. Totally agree. Max has apologized (although it could have...

Ha ha big win against stanford again this year! yup you sure tore it up!...

Utes won't respond to Hall

Very mature. How did you ever think of "Maxipad?" I'll bet all your third...

Oil prices spike

@Nothing New Here: Another good reason to find a new energy source!

U. eyes bowl for redemption

I have been to RES and know for a fact that there is BEER there!!!!!...

Advertisements