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Vegas and the Ride of a Lifetime
by: Caterina Christakos
Most people envision Las Vegas as one big casino. Admittedly I was
one of them, until I undertook the ride of a lifetime. Imagine
soaring hundreds of feet above canyons of red and orange, walking
over rocks that been sculpted by mother nature herself and floating
down a river of dreams. These are the images that I will carry with
me forever when I think of Las Vegas, Nevada.
After taking a break from about twelve hours of straight gambling,
my father and I looked at each other and thought there must be more
to Vegas than jangling slot machines and endless booze. So we asked
our friendly concierge, at the Mandalay Bay Resort, for some
suggestions and he arranged for the champagne lunch helicopter tour
to the Grand Canyon.
Wonderful we thought, it looked good in the movies, might as well
give it a shot. Neither of us was prepared for the adventure that
we were about to take.
The helicopter company sent a limo to pick us up at the hotel. The
ride lasted about five minutes then we were dropped off at the
helicopter launch. Fellow passengers from all over the world
chatted and waited for our journey to begin.
Moments later we took off for one of the waiting helicopters, with
our pilot leading the way. Attractive and intelligent, in a boy
next door kind of way, he quickly showed us how father and I ended
up in a helicopter of our own because several of the other
passengers decided to just fly over the canyon. The tour we chose
actually had us landing on the bottom.
We soared for about a half an hour over a canvas which included
every color imaginable painted by dessert, mountains and the
Colorado river. Within thirty minutes of smooth flying we were over
the canyon and able to see the landing pad, set in the middle of
tumbleweed, mountains and cacti. As we disembarked the pilot helped
us climb down the stone and dirt pathway to a little boat dock,
where we met a family from Britain that would be our companions on
our champagne lunch down the Colorado river.
The boat captain was a tiny oriental man with sparkling eyes and a
rich sense of humor. He handed out our picnic baskets and regaled
us with stories of how the Grand Canyon was created. He also had
the sense to stop periodically and help us get the most amazing
shots of the canyon. He seemed to know every rock and ridge and was
able to point out eagles and faces carved into the rock by millions
of years of erosion.
At the end of our Las Vegas helicopter tour we flew back to the
original launch and took our limo back to the hotel, content,
awestruck and absolutely certain that we would return to Las Vegas,
the Grand Canyon and our Las Vegas helicopter tour.
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