Junior Member
Registered: 06-24-08
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I live 100 miles from Vegas so it's no big deal for us to go there; been there done that. Was first there in 1952 as a kid and actually ran into a snapshot of the original Flamingo that my mother took. It all depends on what you want to do. Sightsee (the Grand Canyon is 250 miles from Vegas, hardly a "sight to see" from there unless you have more than a couple of days there. The food is excellent in many hotels but in the larger, "name" ones, it's also very expensive. There are some shows that are worth seeing but again, expensive. As someone said, there are many free things to see and do there. Nobody mentioned going down to see Hoover Dam, about a 20 mile one way trip; a huge tourist area. Traffic on the strip is terrible and if you are a female alone or with a girlfriend, don't walk anywhere at night. Vegas has the highest crime rate in the country. Also, if you are flying in, don't believe the pilot when he gives you the local temperature. We were coming from Salt Lake City on a connecting flight from Seattle. The pilot gave 104 at the temp in Vegas and the whole plane, coming from cold weather country, cheered. It was 114! Those high temps scare the tourists off so they aren't given out to Nevadans or Californians. Living in the southwest since 1947 we're used to high temperatures, as the residents of Phoenix and along the Colorado River (116 today) are but it gets HOT in Vegas. We were there on a Thursday a couple of years ago and it was 125; the following Tuesday, in Bullhead City, AZ, along the Colorado River, it was 128. You never hear about these temperatures. So while everything is air condidtioned up there, you still have to go out in it at some time. Those temps were in July and "deals" are usually found during the hot summer months, both there, in Phoenix and in Laughin, NV, across the river from Bullhead. Laughlin is a mini Vegas with about a dozen or so hotel/casinos right on the river. So, if you can handle the heat (no humidity) go in the summer months, it's more expensive during the winter. The "name" hotels are worth walking through just because you don't see anything like them anywhere else. Fremont St. downtown "old" Vegas is also enclosed now with a dome "hallway" over the street. Wear walking shoes if you plan to walk the strip, or take the shuttle from hotel to hotel. Don't miss the water show at the Bellagio. The newer, larger hotels are something else, but you don't have to spend money there if you don't want to. Regular restaurants on the east/west streets are much cheaper. Friends from Canada invited us to lunch, their treat, but in the "hallway" between (I believe, it's been a couple of years) the Venetian and Wynn's, a simple sandwich was $12, coleslaw or potato salad a dollar extra, plus soft drinks. That bill had to have been over sixty bucks! It was their treat but we'd never do it on our own. So, if you go, go at least once, see all there is to see. If you like it, go back. If you don't at least you can say you've been there.
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