April 2009 Archives

The Laughlin River Run is behind us

The 2009 Laughlin River Run is behind us and I hope that everyone made it home safely. It was another great event bit attendance appeared to be down a bit. Seems most a great deal of the locals in the surround area decided to make the trip on Saturday Morning and return home that night.


For this coming weekend, there are a few rides/events. If your butt can take it, the Ride for the Heart 1000 and the Iron Socks 500 begin.

On Saturday, there is the 1st Annual Skull Patrol Poker Run and on Sunday there is the Maydaze Poker Run along with the Custom Eyes Poker Run.

Red Rock Harley-Davidson is also having a Safety Day on Sunday with demo's from the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, they will be instructional speaks and then you have the ability to ride the course as well.

Laughlin River Run

The Laughlin River Run officially starts in 1 day!

Busy Weekend Coming Up!!!

This coming weekend is packed full! There are motorcycle events for everyone to enjoy and if you are not out riding this weekend, well I don't know what will get you out. Weather is going to be perfect, lots of events to choose from... you have no excuse!

Saturday April 18th:
  • Yuma Prison Run
  • Mr D's Bike Night 
  • 2nd Annual Car and Bike Show
  • Ride 4 Relay Kids Poker Run
  • Bandidos 6th Annual Benefit for St. Judes

Sunday April 19th:
  • Yuma Prison Run (continued)
  • Tinman Ride for Life
  • Wheels for Wheels Charity Poker Run
  • Tequila Cantina Bike Night
So thats eight events in one weekend! Details for any of these events can be found on the RideSinCity.com Event Calendar.

Hoover Dam, Nevada / Arizona : 38 Miles (one way)

Hoover Dam , Nevada / Arizona

Distance from Las Vegas : 38 Miles via Northshore Rd. or 33.5 Miles via US-93 (one way)
Time of year to visit : All Year
Gasoline Available : No, but gas is available nearby in Boulder City
Additional Info : NorthShore Rd. route requires a toll of 3$ motorcycles

Web Links :
Road Conditions : Nevada Department of Transportation
Tourist Information :
Nevada Commission on Tourism
Lake Mead National Recreation Area (U.S. National Park Service)
U.S. Dept. of the Interior - Bureau of Reclamation : Hoover Dam
Boulder City Museum and Historical Association

Hoover Dam History:
There is a tremendous amount of information available about Hoover Dam or Boulder Dam on the Internet than what I could possibly put there. Please use the links above or do some searches on the Internet for more information.

The information below was taken from the Arizona-Leisure wesite.

"Hoover Dam" or "Boulder Dam". Few know that Hoover Dam was originally named Boulder Dam. That's because the initial planned site was at Boulder Canyon about 10 miles north upriver from where it is now located at Black Canyon. An engineering reassessment moved the location from Boulder Canyon to its present location. The Herbert Hoover administration changed the name from Boulder Dam to Hoover Dam in 1930 as a political move. In 1933, the Franklin Roosevelt administration changed it back to Boulder Dam, and under Harry Truman, the permanent name of Hoover Dam was restored.

Six construction firms created a consortium call Six Company, Inc. to submit a competitive proposal to build Hoover Dam. As the lowest qualified bidder at $48,890,955, Six Company was awarded the contract. It was given incentive bonuses and would be fined for each day construction overran the assigned schedule. Thus began a furious pace of around the clock construction, which would result in completion of Hoover Dam almost two years ahead of schedule.

The Great Depression led to massive migration of the unemployed to Las Vegas in hopes of landing jobs building Hoover Dam. Men came from around the country, many bringing families and life's possessions hoping for employment. Living conditions were difficult and became substantially much worse when construction began, creating the shantytown known as Ragtown. Read more about the Men, Women and Children of Hoover Dam where life became a living hell. Life was particularly difficult for the few blacks that were hired as token to government mandate.

Hoover Dam required over 3,250,000 cubic yards of concrete plus another million for the power plant, intake towers and other support structures. Two batch plants onsite were created to produce the concrete that was transported on railcars in large four and eight cubic yard buckets. An overhead cableway system lifted the buckets and lowered them to the forms. At peak production, one bucket was delivered about every 78 seconds.

The base of Hoover Dam alone required 230 individual gigantic blocks of concrete. Five-foot tall blocks of varying width, ranging from 25 square feet on the downstream face to 60 square feet on the upstream face. Columns were linked together like a giant Lego set with a system of alternating vertical and horizontal schemes.

It is interesting to note that it would have taken about 100 years for the concrete to cool and properly cure without engineering intervention. The chemical heat generated by concrete setting was dissipated by imbedding over 582 miles of one-inch steel pipe through the interconnecting concrete blocks that circulated ice water. Its own ammonia refrigeration plant that cooled the water was capable of creating a gigantic 1000 pound ice block every day. The cooling pipes were subsequently back-filled with concrete to create added strength. As an arch-gravity dam, the massive water pressure of up to 45,000 pounds per square foot at the base of Hoover Dam, is held back by gravity. The arch-curved structure against the lake reservoir dissipates that pressure into the canyon walls equally on the Arizona and Nevada side.

It was the job of High Scalers to hang dangerously by rope above the canyon to blast and remove weakened and loose rocks from the face of the Black Canyon cliffs where the ends of Hoover Dam would join. Read more about these High Scalers that risked their lives not only performing their jobs, but also entertaining workers below with thrill-seeking and death-defying stunts along the cliff walls.


Directions via Northshore Rd. (Recomended Route) :
• Take E LAKE MEAD BLVD/NV-147. leaving Las Vegas for approx. 14 Miles.
• Turn RIGHT onto NV-147/NORTHSHORE RD for 3.1 Miles.
• Turn LEFT onto E LAKE MEAD PKWY. for 1.8 Miles then,
• E LAKE MEAD PKWY becomes LAKESHORE RD/NV-166., travel another 10.1 Miles.
• Turn LEFT onto US-93. and travel 4.3 Miles until you enter Hoover Dam.

Directions via US-95 :
• Take US-93 South for approx. 25 Miles.
• Turn LEFT onto US-93 and continue for 8 Miles until you reach Hoover Dam.

Overton / Valley of Fire Ride Cancelled

Weather is coming in from the north and is concentrating over Overton and Valley of Fire. No ride today.... enjoy your weekend and have a nice Easter.

Valley of Fire / Overton Run this Saturday Morning

For all the late night readers of the website, we will attempt a run up to Overton tomorrow morning with a run through Valley of Fire on the way back into Las Vegas.

If the weather holds, we will be meeting at the RoadRunner Saloon at 9am on Lake Mead Blvd. just past Hollywood as you leave the city. The address is 6910 E. Lake Mead Blvd., Las Vegas, NV 89156.

We will have breakfast at Roadrunner then enter the Lake Mead Recreation Area for a nice scenic ride into Overton, on the way back (or on the way there) we will make a trip through Valley of Fire from the east to the west end, then make a U-turn and come back through again.

If you have not rode with us before, our rides are loose and casual with long stops in between. We can... and usually do, drag out a ride that could only last a morning to the entire day. Needless to say, we do not ride on a schedule, we are no pressured to be somewhere at a certain time. We do what the group as a whole wants to do.

Remember, Lake Mead has a toll of $2 to enter and there is a toll to enter Valley of Fire as well.

Busy Weekend Approaching in 2 Weeks

The weekend of April 18th and 19th is becoming quite busy. We just added three more events to that weekend. You now have a choice of rides to keep you busy on one or both days.

New Flyers Are Out

We have some new flyers that are starting to be distributed around town. Pick some up where you see them and give them to your friends, they make great gifts!

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Easter Weekend

The All American Motorcycle Swap Meet is this Friday night out in Bonnie Springs from 6pm to midnight. On Saturday, Sober Riders is hosting the Run to the Hills 3 Poker Run. The run starts at Magoo's from 10am to 11am. Magoo's is located at 1817 N. Boulder Highway, Henderson, NV. Entry is $15.

Rock the Troops

The Academy of Country Music ride is this weekend but if you don't want to pay the $500 registration fee, the Rock the Troops V will do just fine. So get out there on Saturday and support Nevada troops!

Sunday is the 9th Annual Sinister Cycles Anniversary Party and the second event on sunday is the Bar Tour Poker Run. 

Details for all these events can be found on the Ride and Event Calendar.