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#87695 - 03/07/07 10:27 PM Re: Practice scenario: Leaving Las Vegas [Re: Susan]
benjammin Offline
Rapscallion
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 02/06/04
Posts: 4020
Loc: Anchorage AK
Yep, used to be if you were lucky you could get a job at the Kher McGee (sp) plant just outside of town. Otherwise a young fella worked the conventions like a roadie, or mowed a lot of lawns, or dug ditches for the new cable service going in all over, at least that was Vegas for me in the 80's baby.

I won a free week at the Luxor right after it opened back in 93-94. That was a hoot. I don't gamble, but that place and the Excaliber and the old new MGM (when the big orthagonal lion's head was still outside the main entrance) were all a series of amusement parks it seemed. You could go on rides and stuff all day, then go catch a show at night. In between you could go get stuffed at the buffet.

I do miss the old 99 cent breakfasts while heading into town from Henderson, and the $6.00 prime rib buffet, and the 99 cent shrimp cocktails, and the free drinks if you were dropping quarters or better in the slots (okay, maybe not so free after all). At least you could eat well if you had some pocket change.

In Vegas you can still pack heat, so I guess that does improve it some over other places, like NYC, or DC.
_________________________
The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools.
-- Herbert Spencer, English Philosopher (1820-1903)

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#87728 - 03/08/07 05:11 AM Re: Practice scenario: Leaving Las Vegas [Re: AROTC]
OldBaldGuy Offline
Geezer

Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
"...Just a flat out high speed burn through Baker, Barstow and Berdoo..."

Obviously you have never tried to drive that route on a Sunday afternoon. Slow and slower all the way, at least to Barstow. Probably a lot worse if everyone is trying to get outta Dodge...
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#87730 - 03/08/07 05:21 AM Re: Practice scenario: Leaving Las Vegas [Re: Susan]
OldBaldGuy Offline
Geezer

Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
"...I'm not sure that Amtrak still stops there. And you don't get a berth without buying a ticket 4-6 wks ahead of need..."

Rats, another brilliant plan ruined...
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#87732 - 03/08/07 06:06 AM Re: Practice scenario: Leaving Las Vegas [Re: OldBaldGuy]
Susan Offline
Geezer

Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 5163
Loc: W. WA
I'm wrong, Amtrak still stops there. But the last time I tried to get a berth in the sleeping car, she just laughed.

I went from Eugene, OR to LA, CA, which is approx. 900 miles and it took 24 hrs. That's an average speed of 37.5 mph. My 22-yr-old car can go faster than that backwards.

Sue

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#87735 - 03/08/07 06:28 AM Re: Practice scenario: Leaving Las Vegas [Re: Susan]
OldBaldGuy Offline
Geezer

Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
"...That's an average speed of 37.5 mph..."

I guess things haven't changed all that much. Last time I was on a train, I went from Chicago to an AF base about 60 miles south. Took almost six hours, making me late getting back. Sgts don't like it when you are late getting back...
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#87750 - 03/08/07 02:45 PM Re: Practice scenario: Leaving Las Vegas [Re: Misanthrope]
BrianTexas Offline
Ordinary Average Guy
Enthusiast

Registered: 04/26/06
Posts: 304
Loc: North Central Texas, USA
Misanthrope wrote:

Oh, come on.. Chicago in January builds character. Besides, after driving through a Chicago winter, you could teach your fellow Southerners how to drive. Lessons such as:


Goodness, someone needs their caffine fix. wink

Actually, I grew up in the snowbelt near Cleveland, Ohio (22 years), spent 3 years in Bowling Green, Ohio (a/k/a Blowing Greeen, a testament to the actic winds that would race down from Canada) and 5 1/2 years in the snowbelt known as South Bend, IN. I'm not concerned about Chicago, I'm concerned about the trek through the Rockies and Great Plains should an "Alberta Clipper" slide down and provide a January blizzard. The interstates may be closed and the back roads useless if that happens. In that case, I would have to alter the plans a bit, perhaps choose to go south through Arizona and New Mexico before jogging back up towards Chi-town. Perhaps even stop in DFW to pick up some BBQ and tex-mex to keep me warm for the remainder of the road trip!

Besides, with anti-lock brakes one has to counter their years of training and remember to punch down the brakes and hold rather than pumping the brakes (yes, I too learned the Old School method in the 70's and 80's.

Ooops, forgot the time. Have to stop, drink my caffinated beverage of choice and put my "London Calling" LP on the Hi-Fi, but only after removing "The Good, The Bad and The E-Street Shuffle"

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Also known as BrianEagle. I just remembered my old password!

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#87756 - 03/08/07 03:39 PM Re: Practice scenario: Leaving Las Vegas [Re: OldBaldGuy]
AROTC Offline
Addict

Registered: 05/06/04
Posts: 604
Loc: Manhattan
Yeah well, its been over thirty years since that book was written. Though it doesn't seem like Vegas has changed much. Just gotten bigger.
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A gentleman should always be able to break his fast in the manner of a gentleman where so ever he may find himself.--Good Omens

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#87759 - 03/08/07 03:50 PM Re: Practice scenario: Leaving Las Vegas [Re: AROTC]
OldBaldGuy Offline
Geezer

Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
It has indeed gotten bigger. In not all that many years ago, coming from the Baker side, you would go thru the last cut, see a sign saying Vegas was something like 18 miles away, and you could barely see a wide spot in the road off in the distance. Go thru that cut today, the sign is still the same, but the houses and businesses are right there!!! It used to seem like a pretty good drive to the airport, or waaayyyy out to Henderson, now the airport is surrounded by the town, and it is solid buildings to Henderson and beyond. Go to earthseach.com, or one of the other satellite views, and take a look at the place, it is amazing...
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#87766 - 03/08/07 04:23 PM Re: Practice scenario: Leaving Las Vegas [Re: benjammin]
MartinFocazio Offline

Pooh-Bah

Registered: 01/21/03
Posts: 2203
Loc: Bucks County PA
Originally Posted By: benjammin
In Vegas you can still pack heat, so I guess that does improve it some over other places, like NYC, or DC.


Not so fast!

Read this: http://www.gmj.com/pdf/GunRegistration.pdf

and this:

Clark County (where Las Vegas is) has some special laws:

12.04.200 Registration of firearms capable of being concealed. It is unlawful for any person to own or have in his possession, within the unincorporated area of Clark County, a gun, pistol, revolver, or other firearm capable of being concealed, unless the same has first been registered with the sheriff or with a police department of any of the incorporated cities of Clark County.

12.04.210 Unlawful transfer of firearms capable of being concealed. It is unlawful for any person to sell, give away or permanently pass possession to another person of any pistol, revolver or other firearm capable of being concealed, unless the transferor thereof first registers, or causes the weapon to be registered to the transferee and new owner thereof, either with the sheriff, or with a police department of one of the incorporated cities of Clark

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#87778 - 03/08/07 05:42 PM Re: Practice scenario: Leaving Las Vegas [Re: teacher]
Lono Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 10/19/06
Posts: 1013
Loc: Pacific NW, USA
First, shame on me for travelling without a credit card, double shame for travelling with a child without sufficient cash or cards. Hopefully I remembered to bring my cell phone - even the most cash-strapped traveller these days seems to have a cell phone.

Big box store (modulo size of crowds, their mood, and the severity of the event): you're in a desert, obvious buy is water and/or containers, based on availability and whether uncontaminated water could be expected from the tap nearby. 6-9 gallons if you can get it, or equivalent containers if you cannot (consider empty 5 gallon buckets from hardware or housewares since they may not be flying off the shelves as fast as the 24 packs of Dasani and diet Coke). In a pinch, a couple garbage bags one inside the other and a sturdy scavenged cardboard box will hold lots of water in your car. 2 days inexpensive, non-perishable food for the road, if you can get it. No phone card - public pay phones are scarce in every direction out of town. If no cell phone, consider the cheapest TracPhone and 100 minutes. You probably won't be able to charge and activate it until you get out of Dodge, however. A knapsack to carry water if you find yourself on foot might be extravagant, a poly-cotton sheet to fold into slings or some cord to hoist water carriers a bit cheaper.

If the big box store has been beseiged by long lines and/or angry mobs, leave as unobtrusively as possible. Your ultimate destination is irrelevant, your first vector is towards safety, resources, communication and assistance. I'd scavenge or grovel the trash bags/boxes at an eatery, fill with water, then hit the road and head for St George Utah. On less than a tank of gas you'll get there, or be able to stop at one of a few oases where you might gas up and regroup. And under normal circumstances the route is well patrolled by Nevada and Utah highway patrol, well-travelled, if you had to stop you wouldn't be alone.

I'm with some of the other responders - unless you live in a total, resourceless vacuum or your family and friends are caught in their own event, you reach out to them from St George or on the road from Vegas. Let them know your route and ETA, that you'll need money wired there, accomodations at the Holiday Inn if they can get it, and a Delta feeder flight out of St George if possible. They can watch CNN and the Internet to assess your possible progress, call you back on your TracPhone when in range, and add minutes to it. They might as well start the process of adding you to their own credit card and ATM card so it can be mailed to them and sent to you. You may not be home for a while.

Lots of folks will head to LA, but lots are going to be headed in the same direction as you. Depending on the event there may be water/gas trucks positioned, and refugee shelters set up along the way at the AFBs - but don't count on it. Regardless you'll have plenty of company in St George, but there will be resources and there should be a supply line going in there sometime after you arrive. fwiw the people I've met in St George are some of the friendliest people on the planet, you can expect general compassion for any person protecting a minor child.

Side-thought: if my employer had *any* presence in Vegas, I'd try to call there or visit if reasonable and safe before leaving town and see if they could offer shelter or assistance. My employer does happen to have a Vegas sales office, unless the event closes it, odds are good they or a call to the main office would get me on a short list of people they want to help get to safety.

If you were really running on $250, driving straight through to any of these final destinations may not be feasible (20mpg doesn't account for hours of air conditioned idle time in stalled traffic, gas shortages and price escalations en route, weather or desert-inspired car troubles etc). Your ability to maneuver a rental Saturn sedan on anything unpaved is questionable and not advised anyway in desert conditions. Don't panic.

No one on these boards wants to admit it, but in this scenario you are a relatively unequipped and child-burdened refugee when you leave Las Vegas, and you should be at least partly prepared to live like one. Yes, if you actually beat the crowds you might gear up on the cheap at the big box and Rambo yourself along neglected paths to distant cities, you might even get moving out of town before cars begin to block the highway and slow you down. I contend your main job is to equip yourself and your young friend with food and water and get the kid to safety - wherever your best sense of the situation tells you that is. It might be Red Cross, it might be National Guard bussing you to a base refugee center. If you successfully self-evacuate, you may be in St George for a while and reach your destination only after the event response kicks in. Then you can be FEMA evacuated to home. Pride goeth before the fall. Its the kid that matters. I would only feel defeated by relying on the authorities if I had headed down to Vegas as well-equipped as I am closer to home.

Cheers,
Lono

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