Gunnels said he normally takes his truck to First Fridays, festivals and schools. That’s a sentiment no doubt shared by Gene Gunnels, the Hot Diggity Dog truck’s owner and a veteran of 10 years in the business. “We’ve been going out, but it’s nice to actually see the food trucks out,” Malacas said. She said she had stopped to vote at the nearby community center and walked over with the kids when she saw the trucks. Ivy Malacas was ordering at Hot Diggity Dog with her children, Ari, 11, and Link, 9. All of the workers and most of the customers wore face coverings. It followed anti-coronavirus guidelines for social distancing, and no on-site dining was available. The event, sponsored by Clark County Parks and Recreation and Food Truck Frenzy, which organizes such outings, was the first of four planned this week. “I haven’t been really getting out much” during the coronavirus pandemic, he said. Still, O’Neill said he welcomed the chance for a bit of a foray. Spoon-a-Bowl owner Jonathan Bradley said a third truck had been scheduled but canceled at the last minute. “I thought there would be more than the two right here,” O’Neill said of the two trucks at Desert Breeze Community Center. Mark O’Neill said he read about the event online and stopped by because it was close to his house. Baskow/Las Vegas Review-Journal) inaugural Food Truck Frenzy Community Parking Lot Takeover on Tuesday was more like a partial occupation, but that didn’t seem to matter to those chowing down on food from Hot Diggity Dog and Spoon-a-Bowl. A customer awaits her dessert from the Spoon-a-Bowl food truck parked about the Desert Breeze Community Center on Monday, Jin Las Vegas.
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