Black Desert has been a great addition to our community. I've noticed that they are the premier sponsor of both Tuacahn and the southwest symphony. I am a big fan of people supporting the arts and I plan on paying them back for their support of our community by attending the PGA event and getting out there to golf myself.
@@AbramTaylor-pw9gs hopefully the update is that they realized how bad of an idea it is, and they’re going to tear it up and return it to its natural state and bring back the unobstructed views. I’d give that a thumbs up!
st. george is in the mojave desert (same as las vegas). palm trees were imported but they do well here. the winter here is cold but like 55-60 degrees cold with below freezing at night occasionally. so if it does end up snowing a lot of trees die and then they bring them up from arizona but that brings bark scorpions which are not the native scorpion species here.
I know they have a pretty advanced water reycle system on property, bigger than red mountain resorts. If you read up on it they actually worked heavily on making sure the water wasn't wasted as much as possible. I went in to it mad out the gate and pulled up permits and info and by the time i was done reading i realized they actually were putting the work in and i respect it.
The myth doesn’t come from nowhere. The workers see it, and the quality of the building is low due to rushing this thing so much. I do hope it’s ready for them.
Destroyed? What are you looking at.? That looks way better than it’s ever has. God destroyed it a long time ago with all that lava there. Now it finally looks great.
Agreed. Having a lava flow in your city is such an unusual feature, it’s sad that we want to rip everything up. Our growth obsession is so short-sighted and materialistic
I get what you are saying, I think it's clearly evident by now that this area is past the point of return. What I mean by that, is they've allowed so much residential, commercial, and industrial construction to this area that there will never be a point they reach, where they are like OH, let's hit the brakes and just stop allowing construction in St. George and surrounding areas. The good ol' boys who wanted to keep this area small, simple, and quaint are not in charge anymore. I've come to accept this, just because there really isn't anything I can do about it for that matter. That leaves the people who live here with two choices. You can choose to continue to live here, or you can leave. We see what's going on around us for better or worse, we are past any point of turning back or slowing down, so it is what it is. I am glad this channel exist because I do want to know what's going on, and what's being built even if I don't plan on every going to that place. Also, he just reports on what is happening, he does not control any of it. He does a good job at it, and I don't see anyone trying to do a better job at it than he does, so that's why I watch.
@@petef.4361 we can definitely contain our growth to within our current footprint. We don’t have to keep sprawling, especially by getting our senators to transfer adjacent public land/open space to the cities for more sprawl.
Black Desert has been a great addition to our community. I've noticed that they are the premier sponsor of both Tuacahn and the southwest symphony. I am a big fan of people supporting the arts and I plan on paying them back for their support of our community by attending the PGA event and getting out there to golf myself.
On point and a great update - as always. Thanks!
Crazy to see that lush green in the middle of that hot dry lava rock.
Can’t wait to check out those new restaurants!
Me too!
It's looking great!
Passed by this place on the way to tuachan and it is huge
How close is the air port to this gold course?
20 miles - about 25ish minutes give or take depending on the time of day
Please do an update for Sentierre
@@AbramTaylor-pw9gs hopefully the update is that they realized how bad of an idea it is, and they’re going to tear it up and return it to its natural state and bring back the unobstructed views. I’d give that a thumbs up!
There 🌴 in Utah ?
just down here in southern utah. they are everywhere.
Like every street corner and yard haha. Multiple species of palm trees thrive down here.
@@kyliedeet I didn’t know Utah had them seems too cold
st. george is in the mojave desert (same as las vegas). palm trees were imported but they do well here. the winter here is cold but like 55-60 degrees cold with below freezing at night occasionally. so if it does end up snowing a lot of trees die and then they bring them up from arizona but that brings bark scorpions which are not the native scorpion species here.
Imported from Cali, along with our (unnative) scorpions.
(I prefer the palms to the arachnid 🤣)
Can you eat now without golfing?
Love it cheap golf win win just say bob dillan get 15 buck green fees
So much for a water “shortage”.
"Shortage for thee -- not for me"
I know they have a pretty advanced water reycle system on property, bigger than red mountain resorts. If you read up on it they actually worked heavily on making sure the water wasn't wasted as much as possible. I went in to it mad out the gate and pulled up permits and info and by the time i was done reading i realized they actually were putting the work in and i respect it.
The myth doesn’t come from nowhere.
The workers see it, and the quality of the building is low due to rushing this thing so much. I do hope it’s ready for them.
So very sad seeing this area destroyed 😢
Destroyed? What are you looking at.? That looks way better than it’s ever has. God destroyed it a long time ago with all that lava there. Now it finally looks great.
@@santsmartinez7513 Totally, it looks awesome
Agreed. Having a lava flow in your city is such an unusual feature, it’s sad that we want to rip everything up. Our growth obsession is so short-sighted and materialistic
I get what you are saying, I think it's clearly evident by now that this area is past the point of return. What I mean by that, is they've allowed so much residential, commercial, and industrial construction to this area that there will never be a point they reach, where they are like OH, let's hit the brakes and just stop allowing construction in St. George and surrounding areas. The good ol' boys who wanted to keep this area small, simple, and quaint are not in charge anymore. I've come to accept this, just because there really isn't anything I can do about it for that matter. That leaves the people who live here with two choices. You can choose to continue to live here, or you can leave. We see what's going on around us for better or worse, we are past any point of turning back or slowing down, so it is what it is. I am glad this channel exist because I do want to know what's going on, and what's being built even if I don't plan on every going to that place. Also, he just reports on what is happening, he does not control any of it. He does a good job at it, and I don't see anyone trying to do a better job at it than he does, so that's why I watch.
@@petef.4361 we can definitely contain our growth to within our current footprint. We don’t have to keep sprawling, especially by getting our senators to transfer adjacent public land/open space to the cities for more sprawl.
So it wont be fully done for the FedEx cup tournament in October… Rumors are correct
Boardwalk and family villages were never said to be done before the tournament
@@macraeheppler sad
So sad to see this area being taken over by commercialism..
ye not really. there isn't shit for shopping because there are maybe 4 strip malls in the whole city. all it is is houses
This will end up like the Randall Park Mall