Category Archives: THE WEST

Air bnbs in Utah and Wyoming: Pros and a few cons

SLC air bnb 1st street

SLC air bnb 1st street

This was our first trip relying on air bnb lodging and overall, a very positive experience. Kind of takes me back to staying at B and Bs in England in the early 1980s, when they were an affordable spare room in someone’s house rather than a pricey  inn experience with sometimes uncomfortable shared breakfast dining with other guests.

At their best, the air bnbs are not only affordable and interesting accommodation but offer a slight glimpse into how life is lived in the place you’re visiting, which is what I like the most about them. You get to talk to people, find out what life is like, the politics, schools, neighborhood concerns. And you get great tips on where to hike and eat and shop,  what to see.

SLC 1901 bnb

SLC 1901 bnb

The two places we stayed in Salt Lake City were each run by attractive single women who each seemed to have helpful boyfriends and a strong fixer upper mentality and design sense  (which may be a functioning of what I look for when thumbing through the listings). Both were in leafy old neighborhoods revived by young people, in early 1900’s homes, with old wood, glass, brick,  but also contemporary art and furnishings (except for the claw foot tubes, which are charming but tricky for older folks in particular to get in and out of.) Both were about the same price $84/$75 for a room for two. WHile the first one had lots of antiques and walls filled with paintings (the owner paints) the second one was very spare with mostly white walls, muslin curtains, earth-toned nubby hall liners, very Scandinavian (the owner is from Sweden). The first one gave us free reign of her kitchen and refrigerator for breakfast; the second one didn’t offer any food  (but there was a good coffee house, the red moose, a block away.) With each, we had lots of freedom and no overbearing hosts, just the opposite. It was sort of amazing that both hosts left while we were there. pretty trusting considering that we were total strangers. (Although I guess we didn’t look too dodgy, and “discriminating” hosts can decline guests, which I gather can cause discrimination issues and charges of racism, sexism, other isms.)

Kelly air bnb

Kelly air bnb

A few downsides: for older or physically limited travelers, hauling suitcases up steep wooden staircases can be challenging; then there is the aforementioned claw foot bathtubs. And at our second SLC bnb, there was a rather dangerous (in the dark) sheer drop staircase at the end of the hall next to the bathroom. One false step during an evening bathroom run could lead to a tumble. (I would have been particularly worried if Traveling with a young child.)

Kelly deck

Kelly deck

Our third experience in Kelly was a whole other ballgame, since we rented an entire house for a family vacation rather than a room for two. It wasn’t particularly cheap and was not unlike other rentals we have done through VRBO and HomeAway and way back in the widespread pre-Internet 1990s, through newspaper classified listings. But we got to know the owners and their kids and they had tons of great suggestions and when we left, we felt like we were saying goodbye to friends (unlike the SLC digs where we never really said goodbye, we just let ourselves out in the morning and left the key behind).

Leave a comment

Filed under LODGING, Salt Lake City, Wyoming

Kelly Wyoming: gros ventre road, deli, Jenny Lake, Kelly warm spring

gros ventre road

gros ventre road

Still in paradise and blogging from the rooftop deck of our cottage, with green pastures and sun still shining strong at 6:39 pm above the jagged, snow-capped Tetons. YEsterday we took a scenic drive conveniently located just outside Kelly along gros ventre road, stopping at Kelly Warm Spring which unlike most of the bodies of water here is warm enough to wade into (although there is a little E. coli risk we learned), then drove up and up a rustic road past dude ranches and forests and red rocks the reminded us of Sedona, stopping at lower slide and upper slide lake overlooks. Stunning views. We turned around awhile after the road turned to gravel.  We had excellent sandwiches at the one business in Kelly, a deli and coffees shop called Kelly at the Gros Ventre, one of three cabins (the other two are the post office and the home of the deli owners, who are very cheerful welcoming folks.

gros ventre road

gros ventre road

dirck and I wandered into Jackson to pick up provisions, stopping for brioche at Persephone Bakery and at Pearl street Bagels and Smiths grocery store.  It stays light so late in the day that we had time for a walk along the roaring river behind Kelly, accompanied by Grace, the sweet dog. we grilled out for dinner and the teenagers who live here gave our “kids” a tour of their treehouse. THis place has been an incredible find – owned by Amber and Michael Hoover. ITs also very easy to get to the airport, which is even closer from here than from Jackson (although you’d never know it.)

After returning to paved road near Antelope Flats

After returning to paved road near Antelope Flats

We had a great day exploring Grand Teton Park although it start d on a somewhat nerve wracking note when we found ourselves driving on a very rutted gravel road, paralleling the Teton range. We were very happy to return to paved road, finally. WE took the boat across Jenny Lake and hiked 2.5 hours up past inspiration point and onto Cascade Canyon. One of the best hikes I’ve done, not only because of the alpine scenery but the thoroughly pleasant weather. 79s, sunny, breezy, no humidity. it started a bit uphill but nothing too steep, and the trail went across and along a rushing torrent of aqua ice blue water into a canyon lined with vast craggy mountains, some with waterfalls spilling down from crevices.

Ansel Adams photo site (with people and via cellphone)

Ansel Adams photo site (with people and via cellphone)

After a return boat ride, we took the pretty wooded two lane moose Wilson road to Teton village and had a late lunch at tthe Mangey Moose, overlooking the ski slopes and tram. I am glad I decided not to stay in a condo there. our place is much more charming. We drove back north onto highway 191 and passed two famous overlooks, one where Ansel Adams took his iconic photo of the snake river snaking in front of the Teton range. And we finally saw some wildlife– buffalo, antelopes, but no moose. Next time. And I hope there is a next time.

Cascade Canyon above Jenny Lake

Cascade Canyon above Jenny Lake

Leave a comment

Filed under Wyoming

Morning in Kelly, Wyoming – recap of wedding and drive from Salt Lake

Blue sky, green pastures, snow capped jagged mountains pushing up against this tiny town, about 20 minutes north of Jackson Hole. That’s the view from the second floor deck of the rustic “cottage” we are staying in for a few days. it is very different from the Amangani, the fanciest place we have ever stayed. But it’s just as spectacular in its own way. I cannot get enough of the landscape here or the cool, clear air. Or the alpine vegetation, the shimmering Aspen leaves, the meadows with yellow, blue and purple flowers.

A rooster is crowing outside but otherwise it’s quiet. A few chickens are scurrying around and a dog running free. We are on a little compound in this cottage filled with Afghani rungs, animal pellets, wood walls, ceramic tiles…tasteful , warm, the castoffs of a wanderer (in this case, a wildlife photographer who used to be a hot journalist in far away places). Cannot wait to explore the tiny town and the mountains, lakes and hot springs nearby.

For future reference: places we’ve been in the last three days: Salt Lake City (Mormon Temple at night, Mazza for middle eastern food) Natalie’s Airbnb on 1st between N and M Streets; 4.5 hour drive to Jackson from Salt Lake on 89 off I 15 thru Logan (home of Utah state), Garden City, Utah (LaBeau’s of Bear Lake) for raspberry shakes and even better, a reunification n with my niece Lucy and her parents), turquoise blue waters of Bear Lake, a little Caribbean in the Rockies, driving through northeast Utah into southeast Idaho past some tiny real towns as opposed to tourist towns) like Montpelier and then into Wyoming through Afton (thru the antler archway and past the ticky tacky log cabin motel where Lolita, of Nabokov fame, holed up with her creepy old man) and then onto Jackson (the amazingly elegant Amangani Resort, nearby Spring Creek Ranch, dancing to great bands and djs, swimming with Dirck in a long stone pool at night under a full moon with stars, hiking north of Wilson on the ski lake trail) huevos rancheros at Nora’s Fish Creek, a float on the snake river, the Million Dollar Cowboy Bar.)

Today I’d like to see a moose.

 

 

 

Leave a comment

Filed under Utah, Wyoming

Car-less in Colorado

Today’s guest blog is from Francine, my London chum, who had a fabulous trip in Boulder. Her precise prose will put mine to shame!

 

 

This summer, Russell and I  decided to spend our annual holiday in the USA and take up Betsy’s challenge to come to Iowa and ride Ragbrai 2014 with her and Dirck. That is another blog. This one is about going Green and why you don’t need to rent a car to have a fabulous time in Colorado.

Before plopping down in Des Moines, to prepare ourselves for the insanity of cycling 418 miles across Iowa, we decided to go to Boulder, Colorado.   Betsy recommended that we stay in a wonderful place called Chautauqua on the outskirts of Boulder. As anybody knows who reads her blogs regularly, Betsy’s picks are the best. However, how on earth were we going to get there once we had landed in Denver?  Betsy automatically assumed we would rent a car as did everybody else we knew. We thought we would too. After all, we needed to get to Boulder which is about an hour away from Denver International Airport (DIA). We had a lot of luggage which included amongst other things, our cycling gear, my beloved sheepskin saddle cover and gifts from London. To cap it all, we were arriving late into the evening. We wanted to go to the Rocky Mountains National Park. A car was essential right? Well actually no. Boulder is one of the greenest cities in the USA we had heard. Practically everyone has a bicycle. There had to be a way to do this without emitting more carbon into the atmosphere.  So we thought we would give it a go.

We arrived at DIA at about 11.30pm, after our flight had been delayed for nearly 3 hours at London Heathrow airport. So it was just as well, I had booked a budget hotel on the perimeter of the airport overnight. We were too knackered to push a luggage trolley, let alone drive a car in a strange city on the wrong side of the road. Our hotel had a free courtesy bus immediately outside the terminal which ran every half hour. We could have also taken a taxi at around $25 but there were long queues. As Betsy would say, the airport was a bit “zooey” despite the lateness of the hour. Within 20 minutes of taking the bus, we had checked in, showered and collapsed into bed.

On the porch at the cottage in Chautauqua

On the porch at the cottage in Chautauqua

The next morning, we hopped on the courtesy bus back to the airport and picked up a small shuttle van to take us to Boulder. The shuttle is operated by Green Ride www.greenrideboulder.com  a company, based in Boulder We were dropped in Chautauqua, a fascinating historical district of Boulder, in just over an hour. On the way, we delivered a fellow passenger to Eldorado Springs, giving us our first close up view of the wonderful Flatiron Mountains.

Once we got settled in to our delightful cottage, built in the 1920s and managed by the Colorado Chautauqua Association www.chautauqua.com  we decided to explore Boulder. We asked the pleasant young woman in the Accommodation Office how to get into town and she started to give us driving directions. She was rather surprised and then thrilled when we said we did not have a car and intended to walk or get a bus downtown. She told us the best way to get to the center of Boulder was to walk down 9th  Street opposite the main entrance to the Chautauqua Park. This would take us to the famous Pearl Street Mall where we would find shops, bars and restaurants galore.   The walk is a brisk 20-25 minutes downhill and takes you through a leafy residential area, past a well maintained cemetery and then over a bridge across Boulder Creek.  The walk is approximately 1.5 miles but is slightly more strenuous on the way back as it’s up hill. There is a circular bus  about halfway down 9th Street at College Avenue. It goes clockwise and anti-clockwise as far as Twenty Ninth Street Mall. The bus goes through downtown, past the RDT bus terminal and appears to continue until quite late into the evening. We jumped on it once and ended up going the wrong direction. We didn’t mind. It gave us an opportunity to see the huge campus of the University of Colorado. The bus turns round at the newish looking  Mall which looks as if it has been sympathetically designed to meet the sensibilities of the good people of Boulder.

We were lucky to be in Chautauqua in the summer which meant that there are usually nightly concerts in the Association’s splendid old Auditorium throughout July and August. The city of Boulder provides a free shuttle bus (The Hop) from Pearl Street Mall starting in the late afternoon so people can get a ride up the hill to Chautauqua, have a drink or meal on the verandah of the Dining Hall or picnic on the grass before the concert. The buses take people back to Pearl Street after the concert is over.  We took this free bus a couple of times when we found ourselves in town. We also went to excellent concert. I can recommend the Carolina Chocolate Drops www.carolinachocolatedrops.com  an eclectic band from North Carolina who entertained the audience with variety of folk songs, jigs and jazzy blues.

But if you come to this part of the world, you have to get on a bike at some point. We also needed to get some training in before Ragbrai. There are some great bicycle shops in Boulder where you can buy the latest tight fitting jersey or bike shorts.  We rented bikes for two days from Full Cycle www.fullcyclebikes.com at a cost of $45 dollars each. The staff were very helpful and the bikes were well maintained. We cycled west along the Boulder Creek bike path towards the mountains and then east across the city to Valmont Park, scattering manic prairie dogs in our wake. The next day we headed north to Wonderland Lake Park where we were greeted with warning signs about rattle-snakes although we didn’t see any!  On the way back, we stopped at an unpretentious vegan café, Julia’s Kitchen, 3980 Broadway http://juliaskitchenboulder.wordpress.com/  and enjoyed a plate of delicious hummus and crackers. Boulder has an incredible network of car-free bike paths and designated routes to explore. Pick up a free bicycle path map from the tourist information booth in Pearl Street Mall.

We were worried that our desire to go car-less  would be defeated by our determination to also  visit the spectacular Rocky Mountains National Park which is about 50 or so miles away from Boulder. There is no public bus from Boulder and the private charter sightseeing tours are expensive.  We discovered a company that shuttles between Denver International Airport, Boulder and Estes Park www.estesparkshuttle.com   which picked us up outside the RDT bus terminal in Boulder in the morning and deposited us back in the evening. The cost was $85 round trip per person. The journey takes about an hour and we travelled along a now repaired highway which had been virtually destroyed by serious flooding in 2013. Most houses along the road have been rebuilt but huge trees remain upturned and some homes are sadly abandoned.

The shuttle drops  people  off either in the town of Estes Park or  in the park itself. We got off at Beaver Meadows Visitors Centre, which is in the park and transferred to a free “Hikers Shuttle”. This took us to a Park and Ride car park where we found yet another free shuttle bus service going to either Bear Lake or Moraine Park. Both spots offer a number of spectacular trails. Although, we returned to Boulder on the same day, avid hikers could decide to stay in Estes Park for longer and use the town’s network of no less than 5 free shuttle buses to explore the Rocky Mountains National Park and surrounding area more thoroughly.

We spent the last couple of days in in what Mike, the Estes Park shuttle bus driver, dubbed “The People’s Republic of Boulder” using the best form of transport at our disposal, our legs!  Following clearly marked trails, we walked into the mountains relishing the pure air and wild flowers of the Flatirons. At the end of our 6 day stay, Green Ride shuttled us back to Denver airport. We were sad to leave but also delighted to have minimized our carbon footprint, saved money, upped our fitness levels and supported the community.  The best bit was meeting local people on buses, shuttles and bike shops, all of whom were very pleased that we were making such an effort to use their services. Going Car-less in Colorado is not only possible, it’s also great fun.  I think  we did Betsy proud!

Francine and Russell Selfie

Francine and Russell Selfie

 

1 Comment

Filed under Colorado

Good news and not for our Brits vacationing in Boulder this week

 

 

 

Two items about Boulder/thereabouts in the paper today

1) 2nd day in a row lighting has been blamed in the death of a visitor at Rocky Mountain National park – parks’ first lightning fatalities since 2000. ( Didn’t even know this could happen)
 2) on a more cheerful note: Boulder cited as “best bike-friendly city”  “from family friendly paths to leg-searing climbs, Boulder has more than 200 miles of bike paths, lanes and roads with shoulders. The Boulder Creek Path (which we went on…) meanders 5 miles along scenic Boulder Creek (and ends up not far from the veggie burger I mentioned in an earlier email – or at least I think it did.). The reportedly largest free urban bike park in the U.S. is the 40 -acre Valmont Bike Park.”
xox,b

Leave a comment

Filed under bike trails, biking, Colorado

Travel tips for Boulder – a bit old but better than nothing….

I’m sending friends from London to Boulder to stay at the Chatauqua compound there and realized I haven’t offered many suggestions here on what to do. So here’s some suggestions I sent to other friends back in 2011 when they went there (and had a great time!)

INFO: BOULDER

Activities

 

–        Hike Chautauqua grounds (6.9 mile mesa trail, flatirons)

–       Bike on Boulder Creek Path (details below) Good bike rental in town. We biked to the veggie burger place mentioned below.

–         day trip to Rocky Mountain national Park and lodge for lunch/dinner at Grand Lake nearby!

–        Pearl Street (Friday sidewalk sale)

–        Concerts (Shakespeare Tuesday or Friday; music festival m,w, thur; free at couthouse lawn)

–        Celestial seasonings Tea tour. (izee, white wave tofu, moosehead brew)

–        U of Colorado

–        Swim at Scott carpenter pool

–        Tubing at creek downtown (but dangerous, beware)

 Shops:

–        Common threads, 2707 spruce, consignment

–        Pear street: Six persimmisons, face stuff;Two hands papery, Parsec time and distance – runner.

–        Also on pearl: Outdoor divas,Boulder arts and crafts cooperative, tonic

–      Good farmers market downtown

To eat: we went to highlighted ones.

–        Dushanbe Teahouse, 1770 13th st., – curries, tea, sat. brunch,

–        Sherpa’s Adventures Rest. And bar, 825 walnut; veggie, inidan/tebeta, nepl. (lunch 11-3)

–        VG burger, organic burgers (veggie)

–        Burnt toast (1236 penn. Ave) – breakfast (cold coffee/surley servie)

–        Amante coffee, 4580 broadway

–        Mountain Sub Pub/brewery – pearl st., Sunday night rock, Colorado kind ale.

–        West end, pearl street – breakfast etc.

–        Rhumba, pearl street, live reggae/acoustic sun night.

–        Walnut café, 3037 walnut, breakfast, great view

DENVER: redrock,  art museum

Day trips: (from my friend Thea)

http://www.getboulder.com/things_todo/todo_child.html Scott Carpenter Pool

Rocky Mountain National Park is about 45 minutes away by car from Boulder.  It really is stunning and you can drive around a lot of it – Estes Park, the town just outside the park has a lot of great shops – some very touristy – but some good http://www.estes-park.com/

http://www.rockymountainnp.com/

There is the Central City Opera – an old opera house in what used to be a mining town – and is now a big gambling town – but still fun – I’ve never been there – but it’s supposed to be good http://www.centralcityopera.org/index.cgi?CONTENT_ID=3

Dairy Center is the local arts center        http://www.thedairy.org/

Bounder County Fair    http://www.bouldercountyfair.org

Butterly Pavilion    http://www.butterflies.org/

http://www.coloradoshakes.org/  (shakespeare festival )

http://www.schmap.com/boulder/activities_daytrips/

##

 Boulder Creek Path Parallels Arapahoe Avenue Boulder, CO 80302 Tel: +1 303 441 3200 Morganka@ci.boulder.co.us

www.ci.boulder.co.us

This paved path, free of motorized vehicles, brings walkers, bikers and inline skaters from the eastern edge of Boulder proper to the mountains. Winding along Boulder Creek, the trail accesses shady, grassy picnic areas and trout ponds. Eventually the pathway meanders through a large park and playground, perfect for kids and dogs. On the trail’s western fringe, just before it wanders into the foothills, kayakers and inner-tubers can negotiate a series of small waterfalls. A section of the path is just a few blocks west of the Pearl Street Mall, and makes for an easy diversion from shopping and a refreshing side trip into nature.

Boulder Falls

Canyon Blvd

Boulder, CO 80302

Fed by mountain snow melt from North Boulder Creek this cascading chute of white water is a true spectacle. Located in a shaded canyon, just minutes west of Boulder, it provides a nice haven from the heat during the height of summer. However, be forewarned that the spot can get crowded. From the intersection of Canyon Boulevard and Ninth Street follow Canyon west for 7.2 miles. The falls are on the right. The site is heavily marked, and there is plenty of parking.

Flagstaff Mountain

Flagstaff Mountain Road

Boulder, CO 80302

Tel: +1 303 441 3408

This meandering mountain road frequented by drivers, bicyclists and ambitious inline skaters offers stunning daytime and nighttime views of Boulder, Denver and the mountains. Attractions include picnic areas, mountain bike trails and the Summit Nature Center, which is open weekends from May to August. The Flagstaff House, one of Boulder’s more romantic dining destinations, is also situated along this scenic road. To get here, follow Baseline Road west; it winds and hairpins more than 1,600 feet to the summit.

               University of Colorado

University Avenue and Broadway

Boulder, CO 80309

Tel: +1 303 492 1411

www.colorado.edu

A visit to Boulder is not complete without a stroll or bike ride through the historic main campus of the University of Colorado. Established in 1876, the year Colorado became a state and Denver became a capital, the university reflects visions of the past while keeping with the growing technological age. The Red Rural Italian Renaissance architecture, implemented on buildings erected after 1912, lush landscaping and gorgeous views of the Flatirons (The) make this one of the most attractive campuses in the nation. Guided tours are available.

Flatirons

3198 Broadway (Parks Department)

Boulder, CO 80302

These giant, Pennsylvanian red sandstone slabs rise as a dramatic backdrop to south Boulder and are the town’s best-known geological landmarks. The alluvial deposits thrust upward into jagged peaks almost 70 million years ago, during the birth of the Rocky Mountains. Today, residents and visitors alike enjoy hiking around the base and climbing the front face of The Flatirons. Towering 1400 feet above Boulder, the Third Flatiron is one of the most popular climbing routes in North America.

 

DAY TRIPS:

–        Peak to peak highway – links estes park with central city – through mountain towns like Meeker Park, allenspark, Raymond and ward (old silver gold camps) and ghost towns like caribou, hiking in Indian peaks area.

–        From Estes Park, the highway climbs into the mountains of southwest Larimer County and skirts the east side of Rocky Mountain National Park, providing the closest vehicle approach to the popular trailhead to the summit of Longs Peak. At the community of Raymond, it turns to the east and follows the St. Vrain River downstream onto the piedmont at Lyons, where it intersects U.S. Highway 36 (the Peak-to-Peak Scenic Byway continues south from Raymond as Colorado State Highway 72). South of Lyons it is concurrent with U.S. 36 along the base of the foothills to Boulder (this section is signed only as U.S. 36).Boulder Falls NEDERLAND!

–        Situated on Colorado’s oldest and one of its most scenic byways, Ward is the ideal Front Range escape. The village is just one highlight along the 55-mile Peak to Peak Byway, just an hour from Denver. Other attractions along the popular circuit include Rocky Mountain National Park, Golden Gate Canyon State Park, Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests, ghost towns, the Indian Peaks Wilderness Area, and Eldora Ski Resort. The historic town of Ward, like many villages in Colorado, was founded on silver. It was once the richest town in the state. When the railroad reached town and the byway grew as a popular tourist route, Ward became a small center of commerce. Ravaged twice by fires, many of the town’s structures were damaged or destroyed. However numerous historic buildings still remain and will make for an interesting self-guided tour.

##

Leave a comment

Filed under Colorado

Where to stay in the Badlands – Cedar Pass Lodge.

Badlands View 5, SD: ThinkStock
Over the years, people have asked where we stayed during a long ago trip to the Badlands of South Dakota – so I’m posting it here for future reference (and so I don’t have to keep searching for it elsewhere.)
It’s the  Cedar Pass Lodge and it looks like it’s been spruced up since we visited some 8 years ago. I remember individual cabins, that is was  very affordable and a great location, right IN the Badlands so you’d get up in the morning, go out the cabin door and there they were!  I also remember dining was an issue – and we ate at a little cafe right outside the park gates. I think it was the A&M Cafe (in Interior, S.D.) but not sure it’s around anymore. I did find a woodenknife cafe but that appears to have closed too. I recall the Lodge’s cafe didn’t have a good rep but maybe that’s improved too.
I also remember great free guided tours of the Badlands, by day and night (focused on night animals, which I recall was sort of scary sitting in the actual Badlands hearing about all the beasts lurking near by…we did spot a rattlesnake, fortunately during the day.) It rattled! And we were rattled.

Leave a comment

Filed under South Dakota

Joys of the Burbank Airport

Terminal building at Bob Hope Airport

A week ago we were wending our way home from green and sunny Los Angeles (now we’ve got snow again in Iowa grrrr) and appreciating the ease of traveling through the Burbank “Bob Hope” Airport. It cost considerably more to fly home from Burbank rather than LAX but man was it worth it – considering that we had a 3 p.m. flight (rather than the early morning flights available from LAX) and the airport is about 10 minutes from my brother’s house in Burbank. It’s a surprisingly tiny, pokey place – reminds me of Des Moines’ airport before it got bigger and busier. (Oddly our plane from Burbank to Denver was much smaller than the plane from Denver to Des Moines. )

One other tip: it pays to ask when you’re dealing with a tight connection in Denver. We chanced a 35-40 minute connection between United flights in Denver and even though our flight left almost on time from Burbank (10 minutes late technically), making our connecting flight was touch-and-go. The connecting flight was in the same Terminal B but about 60 gates away. I ended up asking an airport employee standing behind a desk with a disabled sign on it how long it would take to get to that far-away gate and without batting an eyelash, he offered to drive us in his cart – which saved the day. We got to the gate as people were boarding. (He did accept a tip – we weren’t sure of the protocol.)

Boarding from Terminal B

 

Leave a comment

Filed under airfare, California, Colorado, Los Angeles

when next in Omaha/council bluffs …where to eat

State of Nebraska
Flag of Nebraska State seal of Nebraska
Flag Seal
Nickname(s): Cornhusker State
Motto(s): Equality Before the Law
Map of the United States with Nebraska highlighted
Official language English
Demonym Nebraskan

Will Forte, a star of the new film “Nebraska” had some interesting restaurant suggestions  after shooting the film in Omaha. So for the record, he told the NYTimes he liked The Boiler Room in Omaha and Dixie Quicks for breakfast in Council Bluffs. He liked staying at the Magnolia Hotel in Omaha and also recommended the Occidental Hotel in buffalo, Wyoming which we also liked when we stayed there (it is supposedly where Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid stayed when in town…Will didn’t mention another good place in Buffalo…Tom’s Main Street Diner on, you guessed it, Main Street.

Leave a comment

Filed under DINING, Iowa, LODGING, Omaha, Wyoming

Tips on flying Southwest out of Des Moines

Southwest Airlines Logo.png
IATA
WN
ICAO
SWA
Callsign
SOUTHWEST
Founded March 16, 1967

As word comes from today’s DMRegister that there’ s talk of trying to expand the selection of direct Southwest flights out of Des Moines (Orlando and St. Louis but no promises and would happen, at the earliest next summer), I’ve been thinking about advice I’d give to people flying Southwest out of DSM right now – based on my first trial run earlier this month. And here it is:

– Although Southwest offers no fee to check your luggage (how refreshing), I am glad I didn’t check mine because if I had I wouldn’t have been able to switch flights in Las Vegas at the last minute after my LAX flight was delayed and I hopped aboard a Burbank flight. Or so I gather. The first question the counter agent asked me after I inquired about switching was whether I’d checked my luggage. I hadn’t and miraculously I was en route to Burbank minutes later. When I got to Burbank, I received another update on my original LAX flight. It still hadn’t left Vegas, delayed over 2 hours and counting…

– Paying the extra $12 or so to get priority boarding was definitely worth it!! Otherwise it is essential to check in as close as possible to exactly 24 hours before flight time so you get a good position in line, preferably A group or failing that B group but NOT C group. Those folks get the middle seats and there’s less likelihood, if the plane is booked, of getting an overhead spot to stow their luggage. The one flight I didn’t take and pay the extra $12 I got an A44 number in line – not bad. And I ended up with a good aisle seat close to the front of the plane (so I could exit quickly and make my connection).

– Speaking of connections, in Las Vegas my flight arrived in the C terminal and I had to haul a** to make my connecting flight in the B terminal, which seemed like miles away (with only a few moveable walkways). The slot machines strewed in the corridors didn’t help as I had knots of people to get around while dragging my suitcase. I don’t know if this is always the case on the DSM-Vegas-LA flight. (The one I took was at noon on a Friday out of DSM.)

– My connection at Chicago’s Midway was much much better – the Seattle-Midway flight landed in a gate only three gates away from the Midway-Des Moines flight. Yippee!! (This was on the 2:30 Wednesday flight from Seattle to Midway and the 9:30 pm flight from midway to dsm.)

Leave a comment

Filed under airfare, Chicago, Des Moines, Los Angeles, Nevada, Seattle