What Happened in Vegas… Or the Mojave Desert anyway.

I recently blogged about driving from Vegas to Los Angeles By-The-Sea.  Read it for a way to avoid the Angeles Smog.  The journey there was worth a story and has some tips for you if you’re thinking of doing the same drive.

It looks simple.  I mean, it’s a straight line and you’ve seen COUNTLESS film stars take it from The Hangover to Swingers.  Its not like you’re going purposely out the way through Death Valley, or via the Grand Canyon is it?  Its not like you’re going up to Yosemite and down to San Fransisco with the turns and changes that involves. No.  You’re keeping it simple, google maps says 4.5 hours, so off we go!

We left our hotel, The Golden Nugget at 10am – we thought we’ve avoid the rush hour – and thought we’d get there around 3.  We ended up taking 7 hours to do the trip, some of it for good reasons, some not so good.
 

Firstly, on your way out of Vegas you’ll start to climb.  You’ll see the highway stretch for miles to the horizon, bending upwards.  When we took the trip it was in July and there was a heatwave in Vegas. I’ll repeat that.  A HEATWAVE in VEGAS in JULY.  So the temperature was around 120 degrees to start with.  And that’s before we climbed that climb and realised we were in the Mojave desert.  On the way up you might see signs for ‘The Pioneer Saloon’.  There aren’t many signs once you leave the commercial capital of Vegas, but The Pioneer Inn has worked hard to make sure you know how many stops to go before you can visit them.  ‘Well, we haven’t had breakfast, lets stop along the way’. 

A turn off the highway and the sign tells you there’s six miles to drive before reaching the inn.  Screw it, lets do it. So five minutes later down a long desert mountain road there it was in a very small town with old tractors and rusting metal lying around.  The Pioneer Saloon.  Straight out of a John Wayne Western. 

“Sarah”, I said, “we may die here.

“Yes”, she said, “I agree”.

“The plan”, I said, “is to go in.  Just open the door.  You need the restroom so if its as scary as it looks, I’ll order a coke, and you go for a wee, then we’ll leave before they shoot us”.

“Deal”.

We opened the door to a bar that has been there for a long long time. The bar was empty, but the barmaid friendly, and so we got a breakfast menu.  Behind the bar the barmaid was watching a Western, which I loved.  But she put in a DVD and pressed play, and – reminding us we were still close to Vegas and its excellent PR skills, so began a show-reel of TV shows all featuring The Pioneer Inn.  Lots of ghost-hunting shows, history shows, more ghost-hunting shows. And much of it focussed around its two key selling points.

Clark Gable had stayed at the Inn, or at least drank at it, for a week, when his wife Carole Lombard died in a plane crash in the mountains nearby.  One of the documentaries even had people finding wreckage still a century later.

The other most exciting story is one of a man who gambled for a week, playing poker with the locals, and won every hand.  Then after a few days the locals shot him.  They say he had a hand of five aces, and so they flipped their lid.  The bullet holes behind his chair still remain in the wall.

Whether the man was cheating or not, and whether Clark was ‘never the same man again’ (as their website says) because of the death of his wife or the week of drinking, I don’t know.  What I do know is they served a lovely breakfast.  I also know that the spirit of the place is great.  The team who work there are lovely people, and the two rooms of the saloon with a courtyard of tables and barbeques outdoors, clearly are home to some great parties.  Long live the Pioneer Inn, and I hope you track it down some day and rest your boots there.

Back to the journey (and you’re beginning to see why we were late).  I began to feel very strange... I felt nautilus.  I badly needed the bathroom.  Lets put it honestly, I was in dire need of a monumental shit. Why?  I realised why when I saw the sign ‘Mojave, elevation 4000 meters’.  I was suffering a bout of altitude sickness mixed with jetlag and a full coffee fuelled breakfast. 

And here is the most important lesson of the story.  I pulled off desperate for the bathroom, about half na hour later when we finally saw a rest stop.  You’re in the desert for godsake what do you expect? And when I got to the gas station toilet, there was a large queue.  Standing in silence.  Two single toilets and a large queue who would hear every move you made.  It seems many others whilst in the desert, will track down a toilet because they are human beings and need a toilet.  Make sure you drink water when you can in the desert.  Take water.  Lots of it.  But also use every toilet you see because you never know when you’ll be caught short.

Anyway, I couldn’t do it.  I couldn’t a) face the wait of the queue and b) I couldn’t begin to inflict the theatre of what may come out of me on those waiting in the queue once I was in.


I got back in the car. “We need to find somewhere else”.

“WHY?!”

“I didn’t go”.

“WHY!?”

“Too many people”.

“You’re so British”.

“Sarah, now is not the time for criticism.  If I could’ve gone, nobody would be happier than me, and nobody is more annoyed than me that I haven’t.  Lets go”.

I screeched out of the car park and back on the highway, desperately looking around for another opportunity, and seeing rocks that may be an attractive alternative to hide behind…  Luckily another stop was on the horizon.  It was a subway.  God bless you subway.  One cubicle, terrible, but nobody in there.  YES. 

I had what can only be described as a spiritual experience. 

After some time I emerged.  Bought a coke.  Drank it.  Felt much better, and started towards LA.

There was then a stop at Barstow.  I noticed a sign for Amtrack and realised it would be great to avoid LA traffic and get on a train!  Sarah couldn’t believe it.  We drove around the town and found what I thought was the station – and literally WAS.  It WAS the station.  It is now a museum.  Wherever the Amtrack station is – and it IS there – it wasn’t where we were.  So, fill up with gas (the air conditioning had guzzled much of it), and off we went.


We got to LA just in time for rush hour, and we sat in basically a car park for four hours.  When it wasn’t a car park it was a terrifiying six lane violent aggressive testosterone filled ordeal, which – after the drive we’d had – I couldn’t handle.  Well, I clearly could, because we got across the city and went down towards the sea.  The beautiful Pacific.  The beautiful pacific and the beautiful Hermosa beach.  It was like we’d driven into a real life Abercrombie and Fitch.  Hollister.  Imagine those things without the annoyingness, just the fine designs and wooden buildings, beautiful views and palm trees.  Summed up by the absolutely perfect hotel on the beach aptly called The Beach House At Hermosa.  (Click and check out the pictures, then imagine its ten times greater than the pictures - over 9/10 in review scores!).  It is a glorious place. Made better by the journey.

I’ll admit that because we were going back to Vegas the next day I spent that night and the morning after stressing about the journey back.  Feeling a little sick with the memory of it all.  But the next day was a much better drive and we did it in half the time, largely because we didn’t stop so much and I knew what to expect. 

The lying on the beach, the swimming in the sea, the Sushi we ate, and the wine we drank were all made richer and tastier by that journey.  And the journey itself was full of stunning views across the Mojave, climbs up and down mountains, and truly a beautiful view.

My cousin told me that in his youth he did the same journey in a car with no air conditioning.  I cannot believe my cousin is still alive.
Do it.  But take water, use bathrooms, and visit The Pioneer Inn.

Why would you visit Los Angeles from Las Vegas? Why?

You can get too much of Vegas. In the city with a million things to do, by day 6 your feet can be throbbing and sore, your love of walking through the wonderful noises of casinos and shopping can start to wane, and your bank account more empty than you really expected when you first sat down on the Wizard of Oz machine…

You get back to your room into the peaceful tranquillity of your own little air conditioned space, and you fall onto the big comfy bed, and a little voice in your head says… ‘It WOULD be nice to see the ocean wouldn’t it?  A bit of sand?  A bit of sea breeze? That would be nice.

Now, of course there are options and I’ll write blogs on how you can get sand and water in Vegas, but lets deal with Los Angeles.

This time, we drove straight there.  Google maps said 4.5 hours.  It took us 7 hours. It was tough going.  And I’ll tell you why another time, but basically – set off so that you don’t hit Los Angeles rush hour traffic.  And rush hour in LA is about 4 hours long…

The first time we visited Los Angeles Sarah and I drove there from San Francisco down Highway 1.  A beautiful road.  The road to hell.  I hated it. A cloudy, smoggy, asshole of a place, when its at its worse.  This is the city where dreams are MADE.  Not where dreams EXIST.  That’s many people’s first impression.
The second time we visited we flew in from Hawaii on flights that cost us £8 (about 10 dollars) due to an beautiful air miles ‘find’. We landed at night.  This time I knew what to expect.  Landing and seeing the millions of lights of this huge city from above, and with the ‘Drive’ soundtrack in my head, I saw it as the industrial Mecca of entertainment that it is.  And I enjoyed looking at it for that reason.  But still, we just drove straight out and down to beautiful San Diego.

The third time, we hit the jackpot. We figured it out.  We went to Hermosa beach.  Hermosa is one of the beautiful California beaches you’ve seen on tv and film your entire life.  This is Baywatch.  This is Hollister.  This is the America that lives in your head.  The Virtual America writ large.  And it is beautiful.  The 350 days a year that the pacific breeze blows in, the smog is pushed in over the city to cover the places you visited when you thought LA was shitty – like the Hollywood Walk of Fame (ewwww). 

Hermosa, Venice, and Long and Malibu beaches are all part of the same, if quite different in personality, stretch of coast.  Hermosa is small avenues with boutique shops, fine restaurants, beach volleyball and a young nightlife of people ranging from the millionaires who can afford a property here, to the backpackers staying at the hostel by the pier.  Sitting and having a drink with the sun going down, outdoors because the breeze keeps it just cool enough, is a night and a world away from Vegas.


Driving back we set off to avoid the LA rush hour (i.e. anything after 2pm!), and it took us around 5 hours to get back, which is good going.  The views of Vegas approaching and the signs beginning to appear for the happy hours, shows, 5 dollar tables, all began to turn the stomach slightly.  Oh, how I wish we were having one more night on the beach.  Cut forward by one hour and we were sitting eating the BEST sushi we’d ever eaten and wondering why we ever left Vegas. 

 

In Britain we have a lot of places which have ‘by the sea’ added to their name.  I think when I recommend a daytrip to LA from now on I’ll add that.  Yes, do lots of Vegas, but you should take a great trip over to Los Angeles By-The-Sea.

 

The journey to Los Angeles was a story in itself involving the wild west, altitude sickness, and a subway.  I’ll release that next week, read it and make sure your life is saved.  Also check out other trip ideas from the Grand Canyon to San Francisco at trustedvegas.com/travelbeyond

A Short Rant about HUMANS (whilst on SFO to LAS)

 

I write this under cover of darkness, hoping the people sat next to me don't read it. Why? And why is it dark? The answer to both questions is this: because they have shut the window blind.

 

Why the feck to people do this? I understand if a) it is a red eye /night flight and the sun is due to come up and wake you, or b) because it's so hot you want to shut the heat out; fine. If you're sleeping or hot, close it. 

 

But in this case the flight is tiny-short: San Francisco to Las Vegas. I am on the aisle and two people are next to me toward the window. The man sitting in the middle is, I think, a nervous flier, and his wife seems to have closed her window to help with this. The effect being you can't see the horizon, and every bump and jolt caused by the air systems over the Nevada mountains is felt even more. If you get travel sick, look at the horizon! Otherwise you are basically giving your brain nothing to balance against. It would be like getting in a roller coaster an choosing to blindfold yourself: so much worse.

 

I also wonder, apart from sleep, why people ever shut the blinds anyway. And I think it's a basic human defence mechanism to stick our head in the sand. We cannot possibly comprehend how impressive, how wonderful, beautiful, and dangerous it is to be sitting inside a bullet shooting through the sky. That's what we're doing. We're doing something our species should never do. And whilst my pet rabbit is unable to comprehend what 'sitting in a car is' (she just thinks she's in a wobbly box of hell), we as humans are able to imagine. We are able to think and be in awe of what is happening to us - our relativity to other objects like the earth, or in this case….

 

The Golden Gate Bridge as you leave SFO or at the very least (depending on which side of the plane you are sitting) the Bay Bridge, San Fransisco Bay and the coast which hosts the most (Silicon Valley).  The edge of the beautiful Yosemite, the Sierra National Forrest, then up into the mountains- Mount Witney revealing the stark and stunning desert of Death Valley, in such contrast with the lush California mountains. Then, after the planes of Death Valley the rise again of the mountains surrounding Las Vegas – mount Charleston (where Sarah and I got married!) – before the air systems make the plane just a little bumpy and you drop along with the temperature down into the adult Disneyland in the middle of the desert.  There’re so many stunning things to see, how can it possibly be beaten?

Open The Blind.

Things to LOVE at Mandalay Bay

The point of TrustedVegas.com is to provide some specific ‘top’ bits of advice on where to stay.  The hotel blogs are designed to delve a little deeper if you are looking for more nuance.  For first time trips in need of the absolute ‘musts’ check out the website.

You probably know about the pool, and the clue is in the title, but there are lots of ways the Mandalay Bay helps you feel like you’re on holiday.

 

Firstly it smells of vanilla.  I think it’s vanilla.  It might be white orchid or something a fragrance person would correct me on, but I’m pretty sure it’s Vanilla.

Many of the hotels in Vegas have air conditioning with slightly different smells.  Side note:  I don’t actually know for a fact that it is in the air con, it may be a choice of cleaning fluid, or some other way of diffusing the air with lovely smells, but the Mandalay Bay Professional Stank is my absolute favourite.  It’s classy, smells lovely, and I’d recognise it in a blindfold hotel-sniffing test with a 100% success rate.

Similar to the smell, the décor of Mandalay Bay is also quite vanilla/white/cream.  The point is, it's bright.  It is bright and golden and has a luxury feel that isn’t as extreme as the opulent displays of The Wynn and Encore, opting to be a little more understated.

Wandering the casino, things feel spacious and the grounds of the hotel are huge. With the convention centre, as with many of the hotels, there are some long walks involved, but particularly the walk to the Aquarium which took me about 30 minutes from ‘room to shark’.

So the light colours, the space, the sharks, and relaxing smells all add up to being much closer to Hawaii in feel than the hectic areas of The Strip, and that’s all of course before we get to the actual beach.

The Mandalay Bay pool is set out as a beach, there are waves in the water, and rocks surrounding.  Your feet can rest in the sand and you’re only five minutes walk to the elevator to take you and your flip flops up to the room.  It really is the closest thing to a beach holiday in Vegas.  The beach isn’t as completely convincing as you’d hope – it’s great, I’m not doing it down, I just want to point out that the pool is only one part of why the Mandalay Bay works.

So yes, it sits at the end of the strip by the airport and we don’t place it as the centre of the action on trustedvegas.com but you really should consider it as a great place to stay, and if you chose it you won’t regret it.  Especially if this is your second or third trip to Vegas, the new perspective will please you.  Oh and speaking of perspectives, the views of The Strip from the rooms and the cocktail bar on the roof are the best of their kind in Vegas.

Prices at Mandalay Bay vary depending on the time of year, due to convention centre events and also the huge acts they have playing there, it's fun to search dates and see what price you could get a room for.  Click here if you, like me, find that kind of thing 'fun!.

The REAL TRUTH About Vegas

I’ve been a little cheeky with the title of this blog… Firstly, welcome to TrustedVegas.com, I’m Hywel (a Welsh name for a man born in Oxford 36 years ago…) and I run this site with my wife Sarah.  

We visited Vegas for the first time six years ago, planning to stay for two nights, and I expected to HATE it.  I thought it would be everything I am not.  I’m not a party animal, although party like an animal I can, I’ve never been part of the ‘in’ crowd, though I can be friends with most people, and I certainly would never have imagined myself shouting ‘VEGAS BABY’.  And I haven’t.  I don’t think.

For ‘little scared me’ I expected an imposing, vacuous, selfish city that was all about ‘sin’. And in many ways it is all of those things, but in a way I loved. Whenever there is a TV documentary, a newspaper article that isn’t for a travel promotion, or a radio feature about Vegas it is always entitled ‘The Dark Side of Vegas’ or something similar.  It delves to unearth THE TRUTH about the city that is seen as the adult playground of the world.  Well let’s try two things.


Firstly imagine a documentary about ANY playground.  The TRUTH about your local park.  The TRUTH about Disneyland, the TRUTH about your kid's primary school.  There will surely be some horrible things that happen in or around each of those things, and yes, journalists (my wife is a journalist) should spend their time unearthing these things.  It’s important.  All I’m saying is that the TRUTH about something that seems all about entertainment, perfection, glitz or glamour is a much more attractive programme or story to make or write.  If you live in a city, or you think about your nearest city, you’ll know that there is a dark side to that city.  

There are homeless people.  There are deprived areas.  There are shocking things that happen that are in need of exposing.  Vegas is held to a much higher standard because it is Vegas.  So here are the downsides to that city.  There are people with gambling addictions who spend their pension on fun instead of important things like food and medicine.  There are homeless people who live out of sight, including in the storm drains which run under the city.  Vegas is the first city to have tried to OUTLAW giving food to the homeless (in order to make them go to government organised shelters).  This last one never got anywhere thankfully.   But the other side of Vegas is that it is one of the rare places in the world where adults can go and have fun.  Lots of fun.