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WORLDROVER
GUIDES
Towns & Nude Beaches
Allan Rogers Tries SOME
Holiday side bets in Las Vegas
.
Gambling
is not the only attraction, in Las Vegas where The Strip has become
the only ‘day and night, night and day’ scenic highway in the US.
Headliner shows and free performances means there is a lot to see
and do.
One big free ‘must see’ attraction is the Fremont Street Experience. It is a computer driven light and sound show that runs the length of the enclosed traffic free pedestrian mall. It comes alive every hour on the hour from 6 p.m. until midnight. Choreographed images are created with over two million lights and 540,000 watts of sound.
While waiting for the show to start we visited a small bar where the busy trade on the slot machine was fuelled by reasonably price drinks. We relaxed and had a good time as group played on piano, guitar and drums. Heading for the restroom to do what a mans gotta do, I found that there was no escaping the temptation of gambling. I was confronted with a slot machine. It puts a new spin on 'going to spend a penny
You may pass an army of slot machines and gaming tables en-route to your hotel room, but the money that stays behind, makes sure that hotels are comfortable and great value for money.
At
Caesars Palace my room was vast, certainly larger than the top floor
of the average house. After luxuriating in the big Jacuzzi I made the trek
across to the window to look down
24 floors to the sparkling blue swimming pool. It was surrounded by white
columns and statues crafted in Italian Marble. They had certainly captured
the feel of ‘the glory that was Rome’ although the pavilion that that served
hot dogs and bore the sign 'Snackus Maximus’ might have puzzled Emperor Nero.
It was a magic ‘Empire’ and downstairs beyond the casino tables we found the Appain Way, a wide boulevard paved with slabs of stone and lined with of luxury shops. In that artificial world, where traces of white clouds on the blue sky are painted on a distant ceiling, there is no night or day. It is so easy to loose track of time. We joined the crowd to watch the special fountain show. The computerised ‘dancing waters’ complete with lasers and robotic statues is just one of Vegas’s free attractions, (which is handy to know should ‘lady luck’ take a holiday.)
Other free events
include the marvellous ‘sea battle’ that takes place on the lagoon outside
the Treasure Island Hotel. The canons fire, each shot splashing spray
high into the air as a pirate ship does battle with a British galleon, sinking
it in flames before your eyes.
The assembled crowd then moves up the sidewalk to outside The Mirage Hotel
to watch the hourly eruption of a volcano. Steam and flames seem to cascade
down the huge waterfall. In Las Vegas.
they are certainly the masters of pyrotechnics and illusion
So suppose you have a little win what can you do? Well after the shows and fine dining you can always take a trip out to ‘The Fashion Outlet’ at Primm Valley some 35 miles south of Las Vegas. Designer merchandice and well-known branded goods are sold there at an attractive discount.
Do
well at he tables and you can go there in style.
For me a gleaming long white‘ Stretched Limo’ made our journey on the long desert highway a very pleasant affair.
We sunk back
into the soft leather upholstery and twiddled the knobs that changed the air-conditioned
climate and
the
interior lighting.
The soft neon trim cycled through pastel colours and pretty fibre optic
stars adorned the ceiling.
It all added to the enjoyment as the dead arid desert slipped by outside beyond
the dark tinted windows. Out there, only snakes and lizards survived in the
shade of the rocks. Naturally we made use of the champagne that was chilling
in the ice bucket.
We had heard
of a glass bottom boats on the Spanish Costa’s, but never of a glass bottom
helicopters. Las Vegas is just the place for them, particularly when the evening
skyline became a magical blaze of neon lights. Papillion Helicopters have
one that they use for tours of Las Vegas by night. Of course if you can’t
afford to lash out the dollars for that experience a cheaper alternative is
to visit the America’s tallest free-standing observation tower.
We took the ride up in the elevator at the Stratosphere. (After negotiating
the obligatory slot machines and the souvenir shops.)
It flew us up within forty seconds to the observation decks. It is possible
to dine there in The Top of The World’ an elegant restaurant that revolves
through 360 degrees 833 feet above the ground, but we just gorged on the view
The strip stretched out more than a thousand feet below us below us. The flashing neon signs and the lines of and car tail lamps seemed to merge like a cascading sparkle of jewels into the starry sky.
FACT FILE
Official Las Vegas Tourism Web Site www.lasvegas24hours.com
Las Vegas http://www.visitlasvegas.co.uk/
Caesars Palace http://www.vegas.com/resorts/caesars/
Fremont Street Experience http://www.vegasexperience.com/