To Plan A Trip (October 2000 | Volume: 51, Issue: 6)

To Plan A Trip

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October 2000 | Volume 51, Issue 6


THE BASICS

Anthropologists estimate that the Tucson area has been continually inhabited for more than 3,000 years. At about the time our nation’s forefathers were signing the Declaration of Independence, Spanish soldiers led by the Irish expatriate Hugo O’Conor were building a presidio that would one day grow into modern Tucson.

The city lies along Interstate 10, about two hours south of Phoenix. Its airport is deep on the city’s south side, and if you’re flying in, you’ll want to rent a car, because Tucson’s anemic public bus system has limited hours and struggles to keep up with the community’s ever-expanding boundaries. Summers are blistering and winters are mild, but springtime in Tucson is simply extraordinary. In February, jewelers, rock hounds, and meteorite hunters flood the city for the annual Gem, Mineral, and Fossil Showcase; March brings to town for spring training three major-league baseball teams: the Arizona Diamondbacks, the Chicago White Sox, and the Colorado Rockies. For details on these and all attractions, call the Metropolitan Tucson Convention and Visitors Bureau at 800-638-8350, or visit www.visittucson.org .

WHERE TO STAY

Tucson is surrounded by resorts offering luxurious getaways in the Sonoran Desert. In the Santa Catalina foothills, Loews Ventana Canyon Resort, 7000 North Resort Drive, tucks neatly into a rising mountainside, with a full-service spa, 36 holes of golf, and access to breathtaking hiking trails. Call 520-299-2020. Other outlying resort options include the Sheraton El Conquistador (10000 North Oracle Road; 520-544-5000) and the Westin La Paloma (3800 East Sunrise Drive; 520-742-6000). For a less extravagant foothills experience, consider Hacienda del Sol Guest Ranch Resort (5601 North Hacienda del Sol Road; 520-299-1501). A former girls’ prep school, the rustic lodge may not have all the modern amenities—you’ll find shuffleboard rather than golf—but makes up the difference with spectacular views and Old West charm.

Closer to the heart of the city, the venerable Arizona Inn, on an elegant 14-acre property at 2200 East Elm Street, was built in 1930 by Isabella Greenway, Arizona’s first U.S. congresswoman. The adobe-style hotel offers more than 80 rooms, clay tennis courts, and one of Tucson’s most beautiful swimming pools. Call 800-933-1093. Downtown, the Hotel Congress, 311 East Congress Street, built to serve railroad business in 1919, is the center of downtown cool. In the 1930s, John Dillinger was captured in Tucson after a fire at the Congress smoked his gang out of the hotel; these days, the stylishly refurbished place boasts the hip Cup Café, the Library of Congress cybercafé, and one of Tucson’s best-known nightclubs, the Club Congress. Rooms are spare, though, with no televisions, and the noise from the club has prevented many a guest from getting a good night’s sleep; earplugs are available at the front desk. Call 800-722-8848.

WHERE TO EAT

The town has an extraordinary array of Mexican restaurants. South Fourth Avenue alone has more good ones than you’ll