Bet the real estate is cheap to rent, though.
Not going to say the obvious.I'll be at the Top of the Mark:
The year before, I did a whirlwind trip through Yellowstone one Saturday. I was already in Idaho Falls for some critical infrastructure work with DHS and Idaho National Labs, and decided, now or never. Being in West Yellowstone, Montana a week before Yellowstone shuts down for the winter was a bit bizarre, though souvenirs were really cheap...end of season clearance, of course. The radio scene is even more isolated than Winnemucca - basically, KWYS and that's it. Lots of ads aimed at tourists.When we did Grand Teton and Yellowstone in 2017, we came out through Cody, WY and went to the Buffalo Bill Museum. Had a great time, and Cody has a fairly charming historic downtown.
We will go back and this time take a more leisurely pace.
We had dinner there in September. Everything is family style. We were seated next to a couple who travel all the time between Sausalito and Boise to see their kinds, and to another couple and their kids who came from Elko for a high-school football game. Distances there are such that school football games are played in the late afternoon (and broadcast live on one of the Winnemucca radio stations). Good food and some rather astonishing architecture...for example, the men's restroom still has the original fixtures from the turn of the 20th century. Don't worry; it's clean.The best Basque food I've ever had was in Nevada---I've heard good things about The Martin Hotel in Winnemucca but haven't been.
The rush to beat the movers from Denver was an interesting trip, even with all the rushing around, but I'll have to say that Nevada was not especially intriguing. There's a whole lot of not much out there. I used to get itchy driving through eastern Monterey County on the way to Paso Robles; northern Nevada is far more bleak and isolated, I think.