Marco,
the moose, is much like a “Flat Stanley”, but this moose belongs to the
students in Donna Morton’s fourth grade class. This year Marco has been touring
the world with the father of one of the students in the class. Kevin Day is a
pilot for UPS and travels internationally for work. He agreed to bring Marco
along.
“Marco
has been to 30 different international cities,” Day said. When Morton told him
the class was discussing the polar region and the Iditarod, Day was excited as
he had been to the race for the last four years and was planning to go again
this year. He suggested that the class make good luck cards to one male musher
and one female musher that he could hand deliver.
“What
I like is sometimes school and geography can be boring, but if you make it
personal and you bring a stuffed animal it makes it more personal,” he said.
This
year the students will be following Newton Marshall of the Jamaican Bobsled
Team and Anna and Kristy Berington, identical twins. Day had a friend take
video of him giving the racers the good luck card.
Day
compared the Iditarod to tailgating at a football game. “They’re out on Long
Lake with their snow machines and grills. It’s a carnival atmosphere,” he said.
There
were 70 teams registered and only 65 started the “officially” 1,049 mile race.
(It’s actually a little longer.)
“(The
class) gets very excited to see me. They have so many questions,” Day said.
“Mrs. Morton is over the top with excitment.”
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