Circus Circus Coin Slots

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Which are the best slots to play and is it better to play three coins all the time or rotate. Most slot machines usually offer an incentive to play the maximum coins. For example two coins may pay 2,000 on the jackpot but three coins will pay 5,000. Should I prefer to play at the Circus Circus and Reno airport because their. Check out our Classic Coin Machines -you can play $1 tokens in the Main Casino or try your luck on quarters! Magnificent 7's - These classic 97.4% payback $1.00 slots are the favorite among locals and regulars. With frequent Jackpots of $1,000, you can choose from the old fashioned coin payouts or Ticket in, Ticket out payouts. Play the Carousel - Las Vegas' only Circus Carousel, play your favorite penny slot. There are still a handful of casinos who offer vintage coin-operated video poker or slot machines. The vast majority of casino machine games have been modernized with the TITO (Ticket In Ticket Out) system. Coin-operated games are now so vintage that The D no longer offers them in their 2nd-floor vintage casino. Last year The D added vintage. Answer 1 of 5: Are the any slot machines that take coins in Reno? I really want to play on one. We will be staying at Harrah's and will be spending a lot of time at Circus Circus, but I am willing to go to another close by casino to play on a coin slot machine. The German artist Katrin Korfmann, who lives in Amsterdam, is the designer of the Beemster 5 Euro Coin. She also signed for the Schokland 5 Euro Coin, published in 2018. In the designs of both coins, she emphasizes the contrast between the free, organic form of the natural landscape and the sleek, constructed grid of the polder landscape.

Circus

17 members have voted

Doc

I could not detect one Dutch thing in Curacao, like a windmill or wooden shoes, anywhere.


Interesting choice of an example.... We have a curio cabinet in our condo, the contents of which include a number of trinkets my wife has picked up along our travels. The photos below show a pair of ceramic miniatures of wooden shoes. These are decorated with images of windmills and are marked as 'Delfts Holland', though my wife marked that she picked them up in Curaçao in 2009. In the cabinet, they serve as a storage place for a single 10 cent coin (that's 0.10 florin), from our visit to Aruba on the same trip.
DeMango
My uncle had an antique shop in Delft. Love that town. Six days older than dirt. Worth your while for a day trip.
When a rock is thrown into a pack of dogs, the one that yells the loudest is the one who got hit.
PokerGrinder

You guys need scratch-off maps:
Amazon link


That looks cool, I might have to get one. When I sent this to my sister who travels a lot too she sent me back a picture of one she has on her wall. She bought it in Geneva.
You can shear a sheep a hundred times, but you can skin it only once. — Amarillo Slim Preston
LostWages

LostWages, I'd be interested to hear about Saudi Arabia sometime.


My travel to Saudi Arabia has a few small memories. Certainly open gambling, liquor, and socializing with the opposite sex was as forbidden then as it is today.
Got to visit for a 2-night stay at a fine hotel (forget the name) near the airport at Riyadh in 1982 and enjoyed only one brief 'window tour' - that was fine with me, with outdoor temp in excess of 110 in the shade! Memories: when I checked in my room, I always collect hotel stationery - this one had my name printed in gold foil (?) on the note pad (I wonder if that practice continues today). The parts of town we saw were impeccably clean, always lots of armed soldiers on patrol, women always in burka - note the differences in degrees of head covering below
Mostly, this is what I recall seeing:
The extreme opposite of the burka memory was strolling through the gold souk (market) - stall upon stall of gold in every type and shape you could imagine! Bargaining is part of the charm!Circus
Should you consider travel, I would only do so with a friend familiar with the culture and the town.
Eat real food . . . and you won't need medicine (or a lot less!)
Wizard
Administrator

The photos below show a pair of ceramic miniatures of wooden shoes...


Well, you proved me wrong there. I guess I just didn't seem any of them on my visit to Curacao.
It's not whether you win or lose; it's whether or not you had a good bet.
Wizard
Administrator

My travel to Saudi Arabia has a few small memories. Certainly open gambling, liquor, and socializing with the opposite sex was as forbidden then as it is today.


Thanks. I find countries that are not very open to tourism the most interesting, for some reason. It is sort of on my bucket list to sneak into Mecca.
I know a guy here who used to work for the Air Force base in Saudi Arabia. He echoes the same things about not having access to any of the 'sinful' vices. He told a story that when he first got there some other soldiers were showing him around on one of his days off. He was evidently in a bad mood and said angrily '%$#@ M-------d.' (I don't even dare spell out the name in an open forum). He then said his fellow soldiers suddenly flipped into warfare mode as they were very afraid for what would happen next. Fortunately, no locals heard him and nothing happened. However, he got a strict lecturing that he could have received the death penalty for that outburst.
It's not whether you win or lose; it's whether or not you had a good bet.
LuckyPhow

Gibraltar - Spain


Deleted.LuckyPhow
Thanks for this post from:


Quote:

What purpose do the semi-circular canals serve? Were they for irrigation, transportation; or defense, like a moat?


Transportation mainly. The land is so flat there that it made sense to make canals instead of streets. I'm not sure why they did them in semi-circles, now that I think about it. I should have asked the guide of my canal tour. I assume it started with just one ring and they kept adding more as the population expanded.
Since no one has yet commented on this, I'll provide a lesson from my 1940 edition of Van Loon's Geography: The Story of the World. Hendrik Willem van Loon remains Holland's most famous geographer, and his is the only geography book ever to sell over 1 million copies. (His many other books are also fascinating reads, even today.)

The word 'Netherlands', which is only used on very official occasions, means exactly what it implies, a combination of 'low' localities situated from two to sixteen feet below the level of the sea. ... A great many of those canals are really drainage ditches, for one-quarter of the kingdom's territory is no land at all, in the usual sense of the word, but merely a piece of the bottom of the sea reclaimed from the fishes... .


He continues to describe how swampy lakes were turned into 'polders,' by building a dike around them. On the outside of the dike you dig a wide, deep canal that connects to the nearest river. You then construct windmills on top of the dikes with pumps (or small gasoline engines) to do the rest.
Quote: Van Loon's Geography

When all the water has been pumped out of the lake ... you dig a number of parallel ditches across your new 'polder' and, provided you keep your pumping mills ... pumping all the time, these canals will take care of the necessary drainage.


Canals are all part of the national drainage system for a country built on land taken from the North Sea.
LostWages

Thanks. I find countries that are not very open to tourism the most interesting, for some reason. It is sort of on my bucket list to sneak into Mecca.


Wiz,
Since you mentioned your KTB (Kick The Bucket) list, perhaps you would consider starting a poll or discussion thread along the lines of What are your top 7 KTB items? I wouldn't mind starting it, but the thread will definitely get more reading appeal if it had your name on it. Also, you are more intimately familiar with your membership.
In the meantime, here's some food for thoughts to add to your 'Mecca' search:
1. View Anthony Bourdain's No Reservations, Season 4, Episode 16.
'Danya Alhamrani was chosen to show off her hometown of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, to Tony. They explore the cuisine, culture and heritage of Saudi Arabia that few Westerners have ever seen.' Try Netflix, YouTube or The Travel Channel. If you have the time and attention, you can also search for blogs of travelers.
2. Consider reading 'The KIngdom' by Robert Lacey. I recommend read vs watching the movie or listening to cassette tape. https://www.amazon.com/Robert-Lacey-Kingdom-Arabia-American/dp/B004T37Y4O/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_14_t_2?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=EFCJHGYT9GZK7PY7SQ83
3. If you do go, See if a friend can bring you to observe the annual Hajj (pilgrimage). You would look swell in an Ihram (plain, long white robe). Be sure to get validated visa for the Hajj! http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/hajj-2016-date-when-is-it-mecca-who-goes-is-it-safe-islam-muslims-stampede-2015-a7209676.html
Eat real food . . . and you won't need medicine (or a lot less!)
LuckyPhow

It is sort of on my bucket list to sneak into Mecca.


Wiz,

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Pay attention to your buddy. Saudi's don't play around.Slots
A friend of mine taught architecture at a Saudi university, along with several other 'Western' nationals teaching various subjects. The non-Saudi's lived in their own, separate compound with zero opportunity to socialize with the (all male) student body outside class. Seems one of the British families had a still that fit into a closet, so they all had plenty of liquor. I don't recall him ever saying the Saudi's discovered it, but he did say this:
One day an American faculty member said or did something that somehow caused offense. Early that evening Saudi police served papers informing the family it had to depart the kingdom within the next 24 hours. Period. There was no explanation. My friend said the faculty member, his wife, and their children were on a plane the next afternoon. He and other American families had to pack up the family possessions and get them shipped to the family back in the United States.
Go ahead and try to sneak into Mecca. Especially during the hajj. You'll probably stand out like an elephant at a goat conference. Maybe they'll only cut off both your hands, because it's just your first offense. Listen to your buddy, OK? Circus circus free show

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Sheesh, why don't you consider doing something less dangerous. Go pet a lion or something.
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Do you ever get nostalgic for having filthy and germy hands when you’re playing slot machines? I don’t.

TITO (Ticket In Ticket Out) is one of the best inventions for the slot machine over the past 20 years. I don’t miss the days where I had to stick my hands in a pile of filthy coins to get paid from slots and video poker.

While TITO has replaced coins in most slot machines there are still 5 casinos in Vegas where you can play coin-in slot machines and get filthy while remembering the good ole days before indoor plumbing and cell phones. 🙂

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The Las Vegas Sun has an article on the transformation of the slot machine from coins to TITO if you’re feeling nostalgic. If you’re in Vegas you can head to the Golden Gate where they have about 5 slot machines like the one above from when they first opened. I’m not very nostalgic and even I think they’re cool.

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