Sunday, March 20, 2016

Grand Canyon, Valley of Fire, Las Vegas Part Two

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After a grand trip to the Canyon, we had scheduled a week in Las Vegas staying at the Las Vegas Blvd. Worldmark Resort by Wyndham.  Our timeshare home for the week was a one bedroom second level unit with kitchen, dining room, living room, master bedroom, full bath, and patio overlooking the lazy river pool.  Five Star accommodations.  
Liam Foster

Eleanor Foster

Our first full day in Vegas, Sunday, was family day.  It started with a breakfast at Egg Works with my sister and brother-in-law, my nephew Nathan and his wife and children.  The busy restaurant did a lovely job of taking care of all of us.  We said good-bye to Dee and Chuck (we’d see them later in the day) and followed Nathan, Jennilee, Liam, and Eleanor out to Spring Mountain Ranch State Park 


where the six of us hiked around a small lake—actually we sort of ran along behind Liam (8) and Eleanor (5)


—observing the wildlife (check the photo).  

The ranch house was once owned by Howard Hughes although he never lived there—he bought it for one of his wives.  


The park would be a nice spot for a family gathering or picnic and the history of the house added to the experience.  In the evening Anne and I drove toward Los Angeles on 15W.  We turned at Jean and drove a ways to Goodsprings and our dinner and music spot, the Pioneer Saloon.

Built in 1913 and now on the National Register of Historic Places, the saloon has quite a history as a film location and includes a small memorial to Clark Gable and Carole Lombard.  The saloon has also been featured on the TV show “Ghost Adventures” and is reported to be quite haunted.  We were there mainly to listen to my brother-in-law Chuck Foster play guitar and sing.
Chuck Foster on vocals and guitar

It was the first time we had heard him and we were quite impressed.  We enjoyed some good pub grub with my sister Dee while Chuck sang and played.  It was a good crowd in the saloon and they got louder and freer with tips and requests and Chuck just kept entertaining.  Dee showed us the bullet holes in the wall from a past altercation—this night’s crowd was definitely not that boisterous.  
The next two days were golf days for us.  This is a good time of year for golf in Las Vegas.  The temperatures are mild, 60s and 70s, and there are still decent prices to be found.  Certainly, you can find golf at $250-$350 a round at the upscale resort courses, but with some searching decent and relatively inexpensive golf can be found, especially using GolfNow.com or TeeOff.com for daily discounts.


This year we were two for three in our choices with our first golf, Black Mountain GC in Henderson, being the poor choice.  The course was in poor condition—dried out (when other courses weren’t), lots of divots, burnt out greens that were almost unputtable. The people we were paired with (a nice couple from BC Canada) almost walked off on the back nine.


The next day we played LasVegas National GC which was in much nicer condition for the same discounted price, proving that Black Mountain was a rip-off.
On Wednesday we took a break from golf and visited Henderson Bird Viewing Preserve.


Eight ponds set up with viewing stations form a sanctuary for hundreds of species of birds.

We saw a hummingbird feeding its young,


The ducks group together and swim in a circle creating a vortex which brings food to the surface.

several different species of duck, innumerable species of small birds, and a couple of Cooper’s hawks (aka marsh hawks).


It was actually more enjoyable than our evening show Cirque du Soleil KA at the MGM.  We had gone in earlier to pick up our free tickets (a premium from Worldmark for attending an owner’s workshop) for the evening performance.

While there we had lunch at Wolfgang Puck’s Cafe in the MGM.  Wow!  A 10” pizza (like a $5 frozen pizza at the store) for $16, a veg salad (with about $3 of fixings) for $15, and two small cokes for $9.  A total with tip of about $50.

The food was tasty, but the price left a sour taste for lunch.  Oh, well, it is Wolfgang Puck’s and it is the MGM Grand in Vegas.  The show in the evening was entertaining, but I’m glad I hadn’t paid the $70 a ticket (our free seats were in the next to the last row) for our seats.


Thursday we drove about fifty miles northeast of Las Vegas to the Valley of Fire State Park.

This is a great park if you like Native American history and/or geology.
Atlatl Rock

Petroglyphs


Spotted Lizard

Arch Rock


We hiked around several rock and canyons and took plenty of photos of both the rock formations and petroglyphs left by early American cultures such as the Anasazi (“ancient people” to the Navajo).
On the trail at Petroglyph Canyon.



A Native American newspaper.

A Chuckwalla; not a Gila Monster as one lady thought.

It’s intriguing to look at the petroglyphs and try to figure out what they represent, who might have left them, and what purpose they served in the culture.  I find the chipped figures fascinating.
Big Horn Sheep

In the evening we had a pleasant family dinner with the Fosters.  Our last day in Vegas was the last and best golf of the trip. 

Chimera GC at Tuscany (an exclusive gated-community in Henderson) is an upscale desert course which with discounts wasn’t any more expensive than either of the other two.

Again we played with a friendly couple (from Oklahoma) who were very encouraging and gushed a little too much over our good shots.  This is a course I’d go back to anytime.  
We flew back to Oregon the next day with a little tan, some of the money we’d planned to leave in the casinos [That makes us winners!], and some grand memories.
Coming into Portland

No wonder Portland's traffic is so bad--look at what's waiting out near the airport.

That’s just the way a road trip is supposed to be.


NEXT: Getting ready to return to Scotland.  

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