(It's also the only free drive-thru holiday attraction in the Valley.) The display is visible from miles away, owing to their house being on a small hill surrounded by farmland. Best part: Everything's arranged along the Taskers' circular driveway, so you can roll through without leaving your car. There's also an animated undersea display and a flock of zoo animals made from lights. During the holidays, the couple dresses up their sprawling Laveen Village home with more than 300,000 lights and several hundred hand-painted wooden cutouts of cartoon, comic book, and video game characters. When it comes to Christmas spirit, the Whos of Whoville ain't got nothing on Mel and Patti Tasker. Same outcome: inner peace via the Sky Train. By the time we arrived at Terminal 4, our forehead sweat had dried and our spirits had lifted. It even offers modest views - the mountains to the south, the city to the north. This dinky little vessel travels along an elevated track, dipping and twisting gently, like a slow-motion roller coaster. We were sweaty and tense about flying during a pandemic, but for about five minutes on the Sky Train, standing up and clutching a pole, a calm fell over us. After a long walk from the 44th Street stop, you must board the PHX Sky Train, which ferries you to your terminal. But with Uber prices surging one afternoon this year ($35 from the Garfield neighborhood to Sky Harbor, are you kidding?), we trudged with our suitcase to the closest stop and boarded the train. We tend to be too hurried to get to our flight on time to add another transportation variable into the mix. But we don't often think to take it to the airport, even though it stops there. We like the light rail we're glad it's there, it's good for the city, etc.
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