Welcome to the Tiki Central 2.0 Beta. Read the announcement
Celebrating classic and modern Polynesian Pop

Tiki Central / Locating Tiki

Dug's West Indies, Carson City, NV (restaurant)

Pages: 1 23 replies

Name:Dug's West Indies
Type:restaurant
Street:3439 North Carson Street
City:Carson City
State:NV
Zip:89701
country:USA
Phone:
Status:defunct

Description:
"On the Million Dollar Mile. Home of the Original Blue Mai Tai. The Best of Polynesian Drinks. Chinese/American Dining till Midnight. Old Ships Anchors and Hatchboards Identify This Unique Establishment. Visit Our Shark Infested Men's Room."

It's always fun discovering a tiki bar I've never heard of before. I bought this postcard at a garage sale this weekend. Has anyone ever heard of this old tiki joint in the middle of Carson City, Nevada? Is there even the remote possiblity that any part of it might still exist?

P
Paipo posted on Wed, Oct 31, 2007 3:27 AM

I had some time to kill and had a dig for Dug. The more I dug, the more I found, and it was all very interesting so I kept going. Captain Dug Picking sounds like a classic character - an archetypal sailor/beachcomber/tiki entrepreneur:

Welcome to the best little decanter collection in Alamo Collective
Oakland Tribune, Aug 25, 2007 by Joan Morris

SAM TULLIS is the first to admit that his collection is not what you'd call run-of-the-mill.

While others find joy in endlessly collecting stamps or coins, china dolls or figurines, stuffed bears or even doorknobs, Tullis' collection is limited, finite and provocative.

Tullis, who lives in Alamo, collects brothel decanters made by Captain Dug. The miniature decanters, which when originally sold contained the Captain's "famous" blue mai tai mix, celebrate the legal brothels of Nevada. Each features winsome, curvy figures of women, a map locating the brothel and little doubt about what profession the decanters depict.

Grinning, Tullis tries to explain his attraction for the small, cork-stoppered bottles. There is a beauty to them, Tullis says. And then there's the Wild West romanticism of the world's oldest profession.

"The brothel aspect intrigues me," says Tullis, who has his collection displayed in a built-in wall unit. "We go hunting in Wyoming and as we drive through Nevada, you can hear them on the CBs, trying to talk the truckers into stopping."

While he finds each decanter attractive in its detail and design, he is more drawn by the hunt for the rare, unique bottles.

The decanters were made from 1976 to 2000 by Dug Picking, a sailor turned Nevada restaurateur. Picking was born in Estonia, but began traveling the world on the high seas at a young age. In 1954, Picking settled in Nevada, where he worked in restaurants, bars and casinos. In the late 1960s, he opened his own place, Dug's West Indies in Carson City, specializing in Polynesian Chinese cuisine.

His first two decanters, made in 1974 and 1975, featured nautical themes and were sold at his restaurant. The following year, the owner of the nearby Moonlight Ranch brothel asked him to make one for the ranch.

The decanters were so popular, other brothels began asking to have their establishments immortalized by Captain Dug. He eventually made 47 brothel decanters and a few unrelated bottles. The numbers produced, however, were small. Some had as a few as 700; others as many as 1,500.

The designs and the limited numbers have combined to make the decanters rare and, in recent months, extremely valuable. A bottle in mint condition recently sold for $700.

Brothel decanter with mai tai mix label:

Full brothel decanter collection here - the guy who runs this site also sells on ebay where he mentions that "Captain Dug recently passed away in February 2007, just shy of 82 years old." He seems to be in the know and may have more info to share?

Here are the two nautical decanters from Dug's West Indies. Seems odd that many of the brothel decanters contained Mai Tai mix, but Dug's ships were filled with bourbon :-?

Dug's West Indies Clipper Decanter and box:


Dug's Outrigger Decanter:

More decanter info:

Dug's West Indies Decanter Collection. There were only two styles commissioned as seen in this lot. Both in original box. The first is of a schooner 6 x 8 inches. The second is of an sail-powered outrigger with a man and a woman on board. 6 x 6 inches. Both have on the reverse "On Carson City's Million Dollar Mile, Doug's West Indies, Home of the Original Blue Mai Tai, Polynesian - American - Cantonese Cuisine, 3439 North Carson Street, Carson City, Nevada, Largest Collection of Authentic Maritime Antiques in Nevada, First (Second) of a Series of Limited Editions, 1974 (1975)." Both are full with Cyrus Noble Whiskey and the seals are unbroken.

Found another postcard on ebay with an interior shot, and going by the pic at the top of my post, a young Captain Dug?

An old-timer reminisces:

Dug's West Indies, again on North Carson Street, was one of the best Polynesian restaurants you could ever hope to find. His exotic drinks were works of art (although he did short-pour the rum once in awhile) and his selections and quality were outstanding. As much as I'm a fan of John Ascuaga's, his Trader Dick's could never quite equal the consistency of Dug's West Indies.

There is also a newspaper clipping in the Nevada State Library and Archives on "Dug's Windjammer" at Carson City. Other than that, I found some old licensing board minutes that mentioned a couple of subsequent business names (1988-The Barn, 1991 Guadalajara De Noche) at the same address, but after that nothing more. Looks like the building might still be there?


[ Edited by: Paipo 2007-10-31 03:34 ]

SAbu that place looks totally cool! from the picture of the outside, it would look like it would fall down in the first major wind storm!

Paipo - Great sleuthing! you really found a ton of cool information.

thanks for sharing, I enjoyed the read.

Hey there,

It's a real "blast-from-the-past" seeing pictures of Dug's place and some of his inimitable creations.

I worked at Dug's... (Now that's funny. After over 30 years I instantly lapsed into calling it "Dug's" and not "The West Indies.) Anyway, I worked for Dug during my high school years, starting in the back as a busboy and then apprenticed to chef George Lim, perhaps the most cantankerous, short-fused man alive. He was also a chef whose creations were stuff of local legend. I would put him up against the kitchen at Trader Vic's anytime.

A few things that I remember...

Dug would address all adult males, "Governor".

He loved telling stories to the clientele, and I remember them bellying-up to the bar just to hear a good story. I never heard him repeat one. He did have a little fun with the tipsy, "know-it-all" clientele: he kept a bridge compass near the middle of the bar area and a nautical map behind the counter. He would bait and bet the uninitiated by telling him that Carson City was farther West than Los Angeles. (He explained to me later that, since Los Angeles is actually on the Pacific and Carson City is east of the Sierras, we create a spatial error. I know. I did it too!) After a few flabbergasting moments, out would come that map and the incredulous client would have to buy rounds or some such.

My experience with Dug was that his personality set the mood of the entire restaurant. He was equally cheerful with a restaurant full on a Summer's evening or on a sparse, snow-jammed Winter night. This may sound like a gush, but who would deny Dug a little hero-worship?

He said that he and Victor Bergeron went "way back," and told ever-growing, ever more embellished stories of their years of carousing and drinking their way around the Pacific Rim, and how he got the best of Victor sometimes and sometimes not.

I got to watch Dug earning his fame with his "Blue Mai Tai," from-scratch Pina Coladas, grogs and flourish drinks (he cheerfully did five and seven-layered Pousse cafes on-demand.) He didn't water-down or scrimp on anything for the guests. Nothing in the place was inexpensive, and, conversely, nothing was cheap. ...except for the endless tape loop of Hawaiian music that he had wafting through the place every night.

One thing that I found remarkable was that he did great business in spite of being in Casinoland (where good food and alcohol are extremely inexpensive), and the restaurant was out on the far edge of town.

George, Dug's cranky chef, could make magic with his huge fried prawns, perfectly cut and broiled New York Strips, broiled and buttered lobster on that side of the Sierras. His best-sellers were his Polynesian pork, sweet & sour shrimp, stir-frys and several other Polynesian/continental-influenced cuisine...but George could be volatile. He'd cuss like a street urchin from Hong Kong (which he was, as I discovered, during long hours in the kitchen with him.)

Dug sold the restaurant to a man named Heinz (and his wife Inga). He lost 1/2 of the kitchen staff the day that happened.
The place began to list to one side after that. Heinz was an active and surprisingly functional alcoholic and was drunk every time that I saw him, no matter what time or day it was. He definitely didn't have Dug's personality or drive.

I saw your note about "Dug's Windjammer." Unfortunately, that scheme never materialized. When he announced the sale of the restaurant, he said he was working hard to open a new restaurant, the Windjammer, on the other end of town. All of the staff promised that they would jump ship the moment he opened the new place. It didn't happen, and now, the only thing left is the little house that was behind the restaurant. And to me, that's sad.

I'm grateful for having the unique opportunity of knowing and working for Dug. and, by the way, I'd put him up against "The World's Most Interesting Man" anytime! :wink:

Yak (Donald)

Thank you for adding to this thread, it is always great to get first-hand descriptions of people and places connected to the objects and paper ephemera shown on TC. Together with Paipo's research, we really have a unique slice of life here concerning a pretty interesting personality of Polynesian pop.

Loved reading this thread, Wendy

YakRider,

Great info on Dug, thanks for sharing that. Here is a better scan of the postcard that Paipo posted.

Is that a young Dug behind the bar?

Or could it be Tofu Joe's dad???

I have one of the Outrigger Decanters.

Dug also made a promotional postcard for the decanter.

You just have to love the independent characters of Tiki's past.

DC

Haaa, that likeness is funny! Thanks for your expert zoom-ins AGAIN, DC. It made me notice that Dug had quite a collection of liquor decanters on his back bar shelves, he obviously was a collector of them first, and then got into designing them - very Tiki revival-like!

Themed liquor decanters are so much a symbol of the times of Tiki and its generation, there is a mind-boggling array of them out there. There used to be great liquor store in Las Vegas that used to carry them...now they are a thing of the past. They are such "bad taste", nobody's wife would allow them around the house! :lol: ...maybe I should do a book about them.

P.S.: Also just noticed, behind chef George on the left, an almost empty bottle of Dagger rum. Obviously an ingredient in the Blue Mai Tai. That Blue Mai Tai concept is a scary one, we don't even accept red ones! :)

[ Edited by: bigbrotiki 2012-09-16 23:40 ]

Astute observation Bigbro, Dug served Dagger Rum for the Blue Mai Tai!

I picked up a new postcard from Dug's with a wider view of the exterior.

Close up of the sign.

And another Tiki.

Now the back of the card is cool.

The note at the bottom states that the author of the postcard was a partner in the bar, with the car in the photo. How cool is that!

DC

T

I picked up one of these a week ago...

It always makes me wonder how this stuff moves across the country to a small town for us to find. Dustycajun has at least one of everything so I thought I'd show that it's possible for others to find stuff :wink:. So I dug around a little and found this...

Dug's looks a bit abandoned, isn't that a tiki lying down in the snow?

aloha, tikicoma

It's amazing where tropical-themed stuff settled - that's wild west silver mining country... Interior pics would be great, who knows if any exist?

The web site where that photo came from says there's a Burger King at that spot now.

S
Swanky posted on Tue, Mar 4, 2014 9:12 AM

On 2013-08-14 21:42, Dustycajun wrote:
Astute observation Bigbro, Dug served Dagger Rum for the Blue Mai Tai!

I picked up a new postcard from Dug's with a wider view of the exterior.

Close up of the sign.

And another Tiki.

Now the back of the card is cool.

The note at the bottom states that the author of the postcard was a partner in the bar, with the car in the photo. How cool is that!

DC

Just reading this and can't believe the coincidence. How did you get a postcard sent by Inga???

Burger King is down the block the little rock building is still there....

Picked up a little menu mailer from Dug's.

The front has the sailing ship that was represented one of his decanters.

The back has the tropical drink list.

And it opens up to the menu.

DC

On 2014-07-08 16:56, Dustycajun wrote:
Picked up a little menu mailer from Dug's.

The front has the sailing ship that was represented one of his decanters.

The back has the tropical drink list.

And it opens up to the menu.

DC

Cool find, DC, I love that whole Dug's story: It is purest Americana!

On 2012-09-16 23:33, bigbrotiki wrote:
...Themed liquor decanters are so much a symbol of the times of Tiki and its generation, there is a mind-boggling array of them out there...

The figural liquor decanter collector scene even put out this self-referential bottle:

Some restaurants like the Formosa Cafe in Hollywood displayed some great figural bottle collections.

Next: MINI liquor bottle collecting. Or how about: Figural bottle OPENER collecting ? :D

[ Edited by: bigbrotiki 2014-07-09 10:49 ]

S

Always with the bow tie. You collect stuff and they assume you wear a bow tie...

There is actually a Captain Dug's Brothel Decanter price guide book out there!

Another photo of Dug at his bar with the first sailing ship decanter.

Here is Dug's story from the price guide.

The inside of the guide also has photos of the brothels that the decanters were based on.

Love that Captain Dug!.

DC

Ha! So THAT'S where that e-bay seller has all his info from! I was thinkin' he must have been a REAL good friend of Dug's :)

T

Another photo, with a neon sign, posted this year on the West Nevada Historical site ID'd as Dug's West Indies, Carson...

I'm guessing this predates the photos on the postcards one of which is dated 1975. The bones of the buildings are similar even though the roof isn't.

C

On 2018-07-07 14:52, tikicoma wrote:
Another photo, with a neon sign, posted this year on the West Nevada Historical site ID'd as Dug's West Indies, Carson...

I'm guessing this predates the photos on the postcards one of which is dated 1975. The bones of the buildings are similar even though the roof isn't.

I found this today:

This photo is actually from The West Indies Club in Reno. From the Western Nevada Historical Photo Collection:

"The address was 5560 South Virginia Street. The book "The Rise of the Biggest Little City: An Encyclopedic History of Reno Gaming" goes into more detail.

"The West Indies Club opened on July 27, 1944, as a restaurant featuring Chinese and American food. It wasn't until 1945 that a 21 game was licensed there."

"The West Indies was closed in 1954 when Raymond I. Smith of Harold Club purchased the two parcels of land where the West Indies was located. The business later reopened, and over the years several restaurants and bars operated there. The building was razed in 1998. The empty lot is about twenty yards north of the northeast corner of Meadowood Mall Way and South Virginia Street."

Later Captain Dug Picking would open Dug's West Indies in Carson City."

WOW, what a cool find, I had missed the post from Tikicoma before. That, my friends, is the West Indies that was opened by none other than Skipper Kent of the Zombie Village, Skipper Kent's, and Polynesian Village restaurants. I have this menu from there and I need to start a Location for it on TC.

DC

C

On 2020-01-22 16:16, Dustycajun wrote:
WOW, what a cool find, I had missed the post from Tikicoma before. That, my friends, is the West Indies that was opened by none other than Skipper Kent of the Zombie Village, Skipper Kent's, and Polynesian Village restaurants. I have this menu from there and I need to start a Location for it on TC.

DC

WHAAAAT??!!?!? Holy Smokes! That's so cool. DC, you never cease to amaze me.

[ Edited by: Cavemoai 2020-01-22 16:26 ]

Started the location page for the Reno West Indies.

DC

[ Edited by: Dustycajun 2020-01-22 16:46 ]

Pages: 1 23 replies