Monday, Jan 23…
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last dunes of DV |
With a wistful farewell to the Valley
we follow State Line Road into Nevada and pass through the interesting
metropolis of Parumph. (Funny how reality kicks you in the teeth sometimes. Despite
its unusual name, I didn’t find the town very impressive; hence, “interesting
metropolis” was meant to be tongue-in-cheek. But when I googled it I found some
truly interesting info.) The name is derived from the Paiute pah-rimpi or “water rock,” a reference
to the abundance of artesian wells in the area that enabled the white settlers of the late 1800s to develop large ranches and raise cotton, alfalfa and livestock. Jumping ahead almost a century, Pahrump grew almost exponentially from
1980-2010, and is considered an archetypal example of an exurb (you can look that up yourself 😃). And, most
surprising (or maybe not at all), in 2008 Michael
Jackson bought a home and briefly home-schooled his three children here. Who knew?
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More than meets the eye (including the Chicken Ranch, which does not raise chickens) |
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somewhere in western Nevada |
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bypassing Vegas |
After settling in at the Boulder City Elks
Club, we unhitched the car, cleaned the windows so we could drive (cringing at
the dirt left everywhere else), and headed for Hoover Dam. I’ll let photos tell
the rest…
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pedestrian walkway on bypass |
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Hoover Dam Bypass, opened 2010 |
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view from the bypass |
Fast
Facts:
- The base of
the dam is 660’ thick (that’s 2 football fields!)
- The
dam is 726 feet tall – almost 200’ taller than the Washington Monument.
- During
peak periods of electrical demands, enough water runs through the
generators to fill 15 average-size swimming pools in one second.
- There’s
enough concrete in the dam to build a four-foot-wide sidewalk around
the Earth at the Equator.
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view of the bypass |
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sculpture honoring the dam's builders |
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That "moon" is really the street light! |
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Driving on the dam. |
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(If you look closely, you can still see part of the dam's electric grid at the back.)
BlogThoughts... Frustration! When I preview this page, I see that the layout is a MESS in the middle. And, as happens repeatedly, you must wonder why I've used such a small image when there's plenty of space for a larger one. Plenty of space in the preview/publish version, but not on my working page. I finally gave up trying to fix the bullet list. (It is slightly better than the original, which was ludicrous.)
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I looked up exurb. And Parumph. And those facts about Hoover Dam are fascinating. Now I have to look that up, too, because I don't know why/when Hoover Dam was built. :+)
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