By ROGER PETTERSON, Associated Press Writer Mon Nov 12, 3:54 PM ET
It isn't as old as Reno or as sprawling as Las Vegas, but Laughlin http://www.visitlaughlin.com/ has hotels, casinos and restaurants, with its own distinct personality. Looking for some desert excitement? The Laughlin Desert Challenge off-road race is coming up in late January and there's a rodeo in March. Looking for something a little goofier for fun while your neighbors back home are shoveling snow? Try Winter Break 2008 in late January, a festival for the "50+ age group" rather than Spring Break for college kids.
Take a glance at "About Laughlin" for a profile of this curious riverside community, including the sunny weather with temps ranging from the 60s in January to more than 100 in summer. Indoors, the "Shows & Events" calendar includes the Oak Ridge Boys in February and lots of poker tournaments. And if you have to take your clubs, click on "Attractions & Activities" for golf courses, plus "Water Attractions" for boat rentals and tours on the river.
Getting there by car is easy. It's 80 miles south of Las Vegas. From Los Angeles, instead of heading up Interstate 15 to Vegas, go east at Barstow on I-40 and hang a left at Needles. From the east, take I-40 across northern Arizona to Needles, or get off the four-lane at Kingman and take the scenic, direct route over the mountains.
You might want to make room reservations well in advance, since Laughlin has less than a dozen big hotels (plus an RV park with more than 700 spaces). If they're full, try the motels in Bullhead City, Ariz. http://www.bullheadchamber.com/ or http://www.bullheadcity.com/ a short ferry ride across the Colorado River. And you might try one of the Web reservation sites, such as Laughlin Discount Hotels http://reservations.laughlin-discounthotels.com/.
When you need a break from the casinos, get in your car and hit the road. But first, you could just stroll over to the Riverside Resort and Don Laughlin's Classic Car Collection http://tinyurl.com/e4bk2 and admire a collection of dazzling automobiles.
Cross the river to Arizona, head south a few miles and look for the signs to Oatman http://www.oatmangoldroad.com/ a one-time gold mining boom town sitting up in the hills that now is better known for shops and semiwild burros descended from miners' pack animals. Its main building is the Oatman Hotel http://tinyurl.com/2vxnkd where Clark Gable and Carole Lombard spent their wedding night. Some say the hotel is haunted. Before Interstate 40 bypassed Oatman, the town was one of the stops on a rugged stretch of historic Route 66.
Farther south on the Arizona side, Lake Havasu City http://www.golakehavasu.com/visitors.html is a winter resort and retirement area on the Lake Havasu section of the Colorado that also boasts a transplanted London Bridge (not THE London Bridge). Hit "Attractions & Recreation" to collect information on fishing, water sports, lake tours and golf courses.
East of Laughlin, Kingman, Ariz. http://kingmantourism.org/ celebrates its location on the longest surviving stretch of Route 66. It also serves as a jumping-off point for Grand Canyon Caverns and Grand Canyon National Park to the east, and for Hoover Dam to the north. Browse "To Do and See" for local attractions such as the walking tour of the historic downtown district. And if you couldn't find a room in Laughlin, Kingman has more places to stay.
About 20 miles north of Kingman, the one-time silver mining town of Chloride http://www.chlorideaz.com/ has a handful of businesses and a lot of wide-open desert scenery in the Cerbat Mountains. A century ago, it had almost 5,000 residents.
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