Friday, June 26, 2026

How About Connecting The End Of .99 Mile Trail To State Route 159 Outside Summerlin As Temporary Move

 


I know Ron the Red Rock Loop toll collector quite well.

I check in with Ron at his window whenever I bike the Red Rock Scenic Drive and today Ron made a great point about the end of the .99 of a mile trail outside Summerlin along State Route 159.

"Why didn't they just connect the end of the trail to 159 with a spur trail,?" Ron asked me. "When they continue the trail they can just remove the temporary spur."


Ol' Ron read my mind.

I've been trying to figure that out, too.

The "spur" that Ron described is actually maybe only 40 or 50 feet or from the .99 of a mile trail to 159. It's kind of sad the first phase of the 17-mile Red Rock Legacy Trail is a mere .99 of a mile when the trail was supposed to go six miles down 159 to the Red Rock Loop exit in Phase 1.

But money being tight (for bicycle and pedestrian projects, I guess), Phase 1 funds could only .99 of a mile of paved trail from outside Summerlin to the first State Route 159 hill.

Here's a video of the start of the trail that I biked this morning as part of my 33-mile "Triangle" bike route, a newly-amended and shorter version of my 50-mile "Big Rectangle" bike ride. 

It's a good thing the contractor, Las Vegas Paving, installed the "Pavement Ends" sign because it's so hard to figure out the pavement ends.

It's at that point, after .99 of a mile, that I simply walk my bicycle the 40 feet or so from the .99 of  mile trail to the shoulder of State Route 159 to continue my trek home through Red Rock Canyon.

You have to wonder why there's no money to continue Phase 1 when the F1 car race tells us it brings in $1 billion a year in spending and the Raiders/Allegiant Stadium says they bring in $1 billion a year in spending and the LVCVA chief Steve Hill says the Super Bowl brings in $1 billion a year in spending. It seems $1 billion a year or per event is the default spending number used by the sports boosters in town.

F1 is all about using our PUBLIC roads for its Las Vegas Grand Prix, so how about F1 pay to build a real regional paved trail network so that Las Vegas can improve its 28 percentile ranking when it comes to Vegas ranked in bicycle networks. National bicycle advocacy group People For Bikes said Las Vegas ranked 2,171th out of 3,019 cities when it comes to its bicycle network. That's accurate because both Clark County and the City of Las Vegas have some bicycle infrastructure like bike lanes and a few paved trail here and there, but because the connectivity of the bike infrastructure is so awful Las Vegas ranks so low for its bicycle network system.

About two miles to the east on 159.Charleston Blvd., thank goodness Clark County is building a 215 beltway trail tunnel underneath busy Charleston because bicyclists and walkers have been trying to dodge car drivers and traffic when crossing Charleston at grade. The drivers are turning onto and off the 215 beltway ramps and often turning into crossing bicyclists who have the right of the way at the time.

Here's a video showing the tunnel construction during my bicycle ride this morning.


I don't understand why Las Vegas and Clark County just don't build infrastructure right the first time. Like, who would design a 215 trail crossing that not a trail bridge or a tunnel? Now, Clark County went back and did it right.

I have been complaining to the city and county about dangerous at-grade crossing for years. Kudos to Channel 8 in 2020 for doing a story on this horribly-designed trail crossing, which is in Clark County on one side and the city of Las Vegas on the other side.

I can't wait to bike in this tunnel to get from one side of Charleston to the other. I will be at this tunnel ribbon-cutting for sure!

 

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Lovell Canyon: Summer Relief Outside Las Vegas

 


Lovell Canyon gives you a taste of the Spring Mountains without launching into the big trip up the Kyle or Lee Canyon Roads.

It's over the Potosi Mountain peak on State Route 160 at the small town of Mountain Springs and about three miles down the big hill and there's the turn for Lovell Canyon.

I live out here near Blue Diamond, so it's only ten minutes down the road to park, unload a bicycle and start bicycling up the nine-mile U.S. Forest Service road where people can camp out for a maximum 14 days in a row.

It's a lovely setting with lots of green color shades and rolling landscape

It's a great escape in the summer.


Trying to bicycle Las Vegas, the outlier city of the United States

 


I have lived all around the U.S.

There was metro New York City, then South Florida and off to Denver. Then back to South Florida before moving to Seattle and then a path that found me eventually in Tampa before arriving here in Las Vegas in 2012.

It's taken 14 years to 2026 for me to finally accept that things like planning and road safety in Las Vegas and Clark County (the local government that oversees the Strip) are just different from everywhere else. And when I say different, I mean the standards are lower amid a loosey-goosey approach to doing things around here.

My perspective comes from my perch on a bicycle.



I love bicycling. It's the ultimate form of transportation. It gives you the ability to soak in details of life all around you while also going just fast enough to reach your destination in a reasonable time.

I see the Las Vegas METRO police "DUI stings" and enforcement numbers, but I rarely see police officers patrolling Las Vegas area roads.

I live outside the village of Blue Diamond off State Route 159, which is a state road. But the only time I see a state trooper on Sr 159 is when there's a bad crash. Like a few Sundays ago when I motorcyclist crashed. I saw a makeshift memorial with a cross, alcohol bottles and other items at the site of the crash off SR 159 near Blue Diamond.

Today, there was a back up of 18-wheelers and trailers at the gypsum mine entrance a half-mile from Blue Diamond. Some of the 18-wheelers took up part of the SR 159 travel lane, which is not exactly a safe move.



Speeding, illegal passing and general reckless driving are common on SR 159. Mix in the 18-wheeler gypsum mine and plant traffic, the casual speeders and the guys on crotch rockets zooning 100 mph and you have a nice brew of road chaos -- especially on the weekends.

I used to bike all over metro Vegas.

No more.

People drive dangerously and recklessly. There are no regional paved trails except for the trail along the 215 beltway -- and those trail crossings are awful with cars entering and coming off the 215 beltway, endangering trail bicyclists who have the right-of-way when crossing road like Flamingo, Sahara and Charleston. Kudos to County Commissioner Justin Jones for pushing for the trail tunnel being built underneath Charleston so that bicyclists will not have to face the dangers of trying to cross Charleston at the grade level.

I cover lots of news in the Strip corridor. to avoid traffic and parking problems, I often drive with my 1980s Raleigh beater bike to a mile or two from the trip, park on a quiet side street and take out the Raleigh to reach my destination. For example, only two weeks ago I biked to the A's stadium construction site for a tour. Here's the Raleigh at the site:



Many of the hotels on the Strip lack bike racks for the public, with Fontainebleau Las Vegas among the worst businesses I have encountered for bicyclists. They refused to allow me to lock my bike on bike racks used by employees.

I good shoutout to T-Mobile Arena, built with bike racks right outside the New York New York parking garage near the ticket windows off the plaza.



But most of the Strip corridor is horribly planned for bicycles. The Las Vegas Convention Center has no bike racks in front of its newly renovated main convention hall and there's a small bike rack for three bicycles at the $1 billion West Hall convention hidden away behind the building next to the truck bay.

The Las Vegas Reid Airport also has crappy bike racks at the Terminal 1 parking garage. The metal racks are the slotted types -- way out of date and difficult to use to lock your bike frame to. This is Las Vegas, which ranked 2,171th out of more than 3,000 cities in bicycle networks, according to a 2026 People For Bike city rankings report.

Metro Las Vegas does have some nice scenic places to ride a bicycle -- the River Mountains Trail Loop in Lake Mead National Recreation Area, the city of Henderson and Boulder; the Red Rock Scenic Drive and Valley of Fire State Park.


But the city of Las Vegas and Clark County don't control those bike places.

The local governments can make it so much more safer for bicyclists -- and walkers -- but building roads to move cars as fast as possible and not for bike safety is the priority in this town. There's a lot of lip service and talking. But let's see the paved trails and protected bike lanes in the work centers -- not just in the affluent development of Summerlin.