From Deseret News archives:

Bike trip: Border to Dinosaur

Published: Wednesday, June 25, 2008 12:30 a.m. MDT
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Editor's note: Columnist Lee Benson is spending the week bicycling across Utah, from the Nevada line to the Colorado line. His columns will reflect what he sees, hears and experiences along the way.

BORDER — Two years ago, the first annual see-the-great-state-of-Utah-and-get-out-of-the-office-for-free bicycle tour went from south to north, along Highway 89, from the Arizona border to the Idaho border.

Last year's ride traversed Utah's five national parks — Arches, Canyonlands, Capitol Reef, Bryce Canyon and Zion.

That means west to east is still wide open.

And what better place to begin the summer of 2008 West-meets-East Bike Tour than the Border Inn, an establishment that seamlessly straddles the well-known and quite extreme diversity of longtime unlikely neighbors Nevada and Utah.

And we're using "straddles" here quite literally.

The 27-room motel and gas pumps are on the Utah side of the line.

The casino, bar, liquor store, restaurant and RV park are on the Nevada side of the line.

Welcome to wherever, whenever and whatever.

To avoid any allegiance or identity crisis issues, the Border Inn doesn't have an actual address. It gets its mail at a P.O. box in nearby Baker, Nev., and UPS sends packages from nearby Garrison, Utah.

Story continues below
"We know where we're at," says Stacy Vanetta, the front desk clerk, with a self-assured shrug.

They're at the intersection of Highway 50 and Highway 159.

The biggest attraction around is 13 miles to the southeast in Nevada at Great Basin National Park, a 77,000-acre preserve that joined the national park system in 1986 and is still something of a hidden jewel. Of the 58 national parks in America, it ranked 54th in attendance last year with just 81,364 recorded visits — about 2.5 million fewer, by way of comparison, than Zion National Park.

But it is not for a lack of things to see and do. The park features 13,063-foot Wheeler Peak, the famed limestone Lehman Caves and a bristlecone pine forest with trees more than 4,000 years old — the oldest known single living organisms on Earth. These trees are so old their graffiti has graffiti. If they could talk they could tell us why the Fremont Indians picked up and left in such a hurry. They could tell us what Father Escalante looked like — and if we have to worry about global warming.

The national park serves as a centerpiece for its namesake, the massive 200,000-square-mile Great Basin, which comprises virtually all of Nevada, parts of California, Oregon, Wyoming, Idaho and the western half of Utah.

Recent comments

Ditto. Lee, you're my inspiration for riding to and from the U of U...

John K. | June 26, 2008 at 8:37 a.m.

Being an avid cyclist, I loved this feature last time. Looking...

twlilly | June 25, 2008 at 11:38 a.m.

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