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Canyon
Ranch SpaClub at The Venetian in Las Vegas, Nevada
Julie Register visited
this hotel/day spa in October 1999
My
husband and I had been in Las Vegas for a few days and had quite a bit
of sensory overload. Las Vegas is a gaudy, loud, and exciting city - a
perfect place for the quiet contrast of a tranquil spa. Although we had
already visited a couple of other spas, my husband and I looked forward
to unwinding in the recently opened Canyon Ranch SpaClub at the Venetian
Resort Hotel & Casino. Canyon Ranch is a highly thought of spa "brand"
with their two destination spas usually in the top ranks of any spa preference
poll. Canyon Ranch Health Resort (the original - in Tucson, AZ) came in
#6 and Canyon Ranch In the Berkshires Health Resort (the second - in Lenox,
MA) came in #2 on Condé Nast Traveler's 1999 Readers' Choice Awards. Travel
& Leisure magazine's 1999 World's Best Awards, published in the September
issue, site Canyon Ranch as the best spa in the United States and overall
world's best spa based on accommodations, service, treatments, food and
value. Needless to say, we wanted to see what made everyone think so highly
of Canyon Ranch.
The first
thing we had to do was find it. The Venetian is huge. We walked through
the casino, saw the shopping mall that looks like Venice complete with
the grand canal under what appears to be the open sky, the then-future
site of the Canyon Ranch Living Essentials store, and the gondola rides.
We eventually found the right elevators to take us to the fourth floor
and the 65,000 square foot spa. The spa is found at the end of a long
hallway lined with rooms marked "Spa Suite." These rooms are
offered by the Venetian in conjunction with Canyon Ranch SpaClub services.
Guests of The Venetian have priority access to SpaClub services.
The
spa's reception area is large and bright decorated in pale earth tones
of tan and beige. It opens to the 40' climbing wall, the salon, the Canyon
Ranch Café, and the spa proper. Our appointments were for 2 pm. We arrived
in time for lunch at the Canyon Ranch Café which opened at noon. We had
a delicious and healthy lunch which included handmade chicken gyoza (165
cal, 2 g fat, 1 g fiber), grilled veggie sandwich (315, 11, 6), fruit
smoothie (210, 3, 1), and homemade chocolate chip cookies (145, 5, tr).
We
toured the large, supervised fitness facility which had the most inviting
weight rooms and gyms I've seen. Complimentary fitness classes run every
hour and include: Aerobics, Boxercise, Cardiocircuit, Meditation, Spinning,
Yoga, Tai Chi, Chi Gong, and Stretching. We were sorry we didn't come
earlier in the day to take better advantage of this great facility. But
it was time to go our separate ways - Jeff off to the Men's Spa to change
for a workout of weights and cycles and then to try the Canyon Stone Massage
(80 minutes) and I headed for the Women's' Spa to try the Ayurvedic Rejuvenation
(80 minutes).
I suspect
the same designer created all the spas we visited in Las Vegas. The layout
of the facilities are very similar and work quite well. The Women's Spa
opened to a waiting room and check-in desk. A young woman greeted me and
gave me a locker key and a quick tour of the area - vanity room for after
your treatment complete with lotions, hair spray, mousse, etc., showers,
locker room, wet room with large whirlpool, cold plunge pool (actually
luke warm), steam room, and sauna. From this room, you enter the waiting
room for spa treatments. I enjoyed a long soak in the whirlpool and time
in the steam room, showered, then headed to the waiting room. This large
high-ceilinged room, decorated in muted tones, held 16 chairs which
were mostly occupied. Therapists came out periodically and called the
name of the client. I felt more like I was in a doctor's waiting room
than a spa. The chairs were comfortable enough - but didn't allow me to
lean back, close my eyes and relax, so I spent most of the waiting time
trying to guess who would be called next. Perhaps I just left too much
time to wait in that room before my treatment. I also was terribly thirsty
and was dying for a drink of water. It was nowhere to be found. There
was a table set up in the waiting room that looked like it was supposed
to have it, but it had not been restocked.
My turn
finally arrived. I was led to a dimly-lit treatment room large enough
to lay out the floor mats they use for Thai Massage. I filled out a Ayurvedic
constitutional analysis form created by TARA Ayurveda (who also furnishes
all of the Ayurvedic supplies) and found out that my dominant dosha is
Kapha (Water & Earth). My therapist, Ted, who has treated Deepak Chopra,
prepared the appropriate treatment of essential oils and herbs to help
balance the doshas. He was quite informative about Ayurveda. The treatment
itself consisted of exfoliation with a dry brush and massage using the
prepared oils. When the massage was over, I was led to a chair and served
a cup of herbal tea. It was all quite pleasant and relaxing. However,
I felt a bit rushed drinking the tea. It would have been more efficient
to fill out the analysis form in the waiting room to allow more treatment
time in the treatment room.
Jeff's
experience somewhat mirrored my own. He also commented on the lack of
water to drink. I attribute the water issue to an operational glitch due
to being just recently opened. Jeff's treatment consisted of a massage
with heated smooth, round basalt rocks used with warm therapeutic essential
oils. The massage concentrated on the back, neck and feet.
We toured
the rest of the facility after our treatments and saw many things we would
like to return to try.
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The
Rasul chamber looked intriguing. It is an ornately tiled steam room
that intermittently steams and showers "rain" from a fiber
optic "night" sky. The Rasul Ceremony (50 minutes - $125)
involves self-applied mud, steam and rain followed by an application
of specially blended oils in a luxurious European enveloping bed.
The Rasul Ritual (110 minutes) involves dry brushing the skin, an
herbal soak, the Rasul Ceremony, and application of nourishing oils
coupled with a relaxing massage.
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The
Royal King's Bath looked inviting - a dry brushing followed by a soak
in a luxurious blend of frankincense or rose and sandalwood essential
oils, accented by fresh flower petals and candlelight, followed by
a relaxation massage. (80 minutes)
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There
were two Watsu® pools, each in its own separate room. Watsu®
(50 minutes) uses the support of the water to take weight off vertebrae
and relax the spin in ways not possible on land. Muscle tensions release
as the therapist floats and dances your body through calming water.
It uses a variation of pressure point therapy.
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There
were two private 1,000 square foot Spa Suites designed for couples.
Each three-room suite has two treatment tables, two treadmills, a
private bathroom, steam shower, soaking tub, lounge area with TV,
VCR and stereo, and a fireplace perfect for enjoying room service
from the Canyon Ranch Café. The Beautiful Beginnings package (4 hours)
includes a classic European deep cleansing and revitalizing facial,
a soak in the claw-footed bath for two, application of moisturizing
goat butter cream and a cocoon treatment in the German Envelopement
System, and an aromatherapy massage. What a way to spend half a day!
Canyon
Ranch SpaClub offers more than 120 services and activities and more than
30 health & wellness preventive care services, including nutritional
analysis, movement therapy, bone density scan, cardiac stress testing,
physical therapy assessment, sports injury treatments, women's health
consultations and full physical examinations. More than enough to keep
you busy for a short or extended visit. The facility itself is outstanding
and the therapists top notch. Even though it was somewhat impersonal,
Canyon Ranch SpaClub has the most complete fitness, well-being, and spa
treatment offerings of exceptional quality of any spa I have visited.
That is why the Canyon Ranch "brand" has its well-deserved reputation.
Photos courtesy of Canyon Ranch
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