A quiz I wrote a few weeks ago was so popular that I thought I would quiz you with more questions, but this time centered around what to do in the fall.
Community
Boulder City United Methodist Church’s new pastor is focused on ministry in everything from her personal life to the pulpit.
Nevada Southern Railway’s Santa Express is back this holiday season but with a few changes from previous years.
Q. Any ideas what is happening to my honeysuckle growing against my cement block wall? Looks like the water was turned off. The same thing happened last year. I cut it back and it grew nicely until now.
He didn’t stand 6 foot 6 inches, didn’t weigh 245, wasn’t a miner, but his name was John. And he is but one of a number of colorful characters to be found when searching Nevada’s Yesteryear.
Hali Bernstein Saylor/Boulder City Review
Be prepared to laugh out loud when Boulder City Chautauqua returns with a tribute to “Great American Humorists.”
Water is life — a well-known phrase most Americans take for granted. But for us folks living in the desert, we’re more sensitive to what life (or lack thereof) could look like without water. Visual cues like cracks in the desert floor, scorched grass and shrubbery and, most of all, the “bathtub ring” around Lake Mead are all constant reminders of drought.
The 2021 Trunk or Treat will again be a drive-thru affair at Veterans’ Memorial Park with children and their parents staying in their vehicles.
Call it returning the favor. Ever since they secretly watched their first monster/horror movies when they were young boys, frightening people has become a way of life for three scare actors and special effects artists at Tom Devlin’s Monster Museum, including its namesake.
Celia Shortt Goodyear/Boulder City Review
Art in the Park returns to Boulder City this weekend after a one-year hiatus caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
A local business owner is helping at the state level thanks to a recent board appointment by Gov. Steve Sisolak.
Boulder City is currently undergoing a crack and slurry seal project on our roadways. Asphalt patching started Sept. 13, followed by slurry sealing on Sept. 20 that should last about a month.
Hali Bernstein Saylor/Boulder City Review