If you are planning a trip to Las Vegas in the next month, or if you live in Las Vegas and have always wanted to see Death Valley, spring is the best time to book a tour. Death Valley tours have to take on different tones throughout the year because of the very thing that makes Death Valley so famous, the heat. If you are unfamiliar with what we are referring to, Death Valley holds the record for the hottest air temperature ever recorded at 134 degrees. While this record is challenged by other areas claiming to hold it, and the methods of measurement when the record was set may have been less precise than the ones we have today, there is one consistent thing about Death Valley, it is really, really hot there in the summer. During the summer months you will usually see records be broken every year ranging from most consecutive days over 110 degrees and other heat-related records. Death Valley appears totally inhospitable, but nothing is further from the truth. There are many species of wildflowers and animals that call the area home, and have adapted to the heat and lack of water. Death Valley also holds the record for lowest point below sea level in the United States, and the strange thing about that point is that you can actually find ancient seashells from when it was under water. All of these strange features make the area unique and foreign looking, and worthy of exploration. In the summer heat, however it is quite difficult to stay outside for long enough to really get a sense as far as the real beauty of the area. In the summertime, Death Valley tours must maintain more of a "sightseeing" feel due to the fact that the heat will
If you are planning a trip to Las Vegas in the next month, or if you live in Las Vegas and have always wanted to