Short
on Time?
Take a Twenty-Hour RoadTrip
 |
|
 |
|

No time for an epic journey? Try a Twenty-Hour
RoadTrip!

The road is out there

Someone, somewhere will have left a light on for
you.

Slow down... and take the road less traveled
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
A road trip, in our view, in not merely a journey
that covers the distance between point A and point B. "Roadtrip"
is a state of mind you can access any time you decide to enter
the world of adventure as opposed to routine travel. In other
articles, we have explored the concepts of Two-Hour
RoadTrips, Cheap
RoadTrips, and The Art of
Roadtripping. We've also provided dozens of examples of
"challenge"
and "quest"
roadtrips. Recently, we've been enjoying another type of adventure
we're calling the Twenty-Hour RoadTrip.
Twenty hours is all it takes to get away. One
short jaunt, and you'll be forever convinced that road trips
don't have to be lengthy or require extensive planning. The
only preparations required for a 20-hour journey are the willingness
to embark, a full tank of fuel, a good map and a little bit
of cash.
Picture this scenario: You get home from work,
change your clothes and grab your pillow. (Nothing improves
a less-than-optimal motel bed better than a familiar pillow.)
Throw a few essentials into an overnight bag. You can even
pack a cooler with snacks, so long as it doesn't take you
more than a few minutes. Your goal is to be on the road within
a couple of hours of leaving work. In a multi-shift, flextime
world, that means departure time could be practically any
hour of the day, but whether you hit the road at 6 a.m. or
midnight, you've got a stretch of time ahead of you long enough
to whisk you away from routine and short enough that no one
will miss you.
Take a moment right now. Close your eyes and
think of a place that you haven't visited for a long time,
or one that you always planned to visit but somehow never
did. Choose a destination that's three or four hours from
your home or starting point. Maybe it's a tiny hamlet you've
heard about or seen in a magazine. Maybe it's one of those
spots you haven't visited because it was too close to home
and therefore not worthy of a full-blown road-trip vacation.
The beauty of a 20-hour window is that you can
drive two or three hours, stay overnight, drive another couple
of hours and then head home. What works for me is to leave
mid-afternoon, enjoy my 20 "easy rider" hours and
get back to the office by 1 p.m. the next day, leaving sufficient
time to catch up on whatever needs to be done that day.
Since this type of road trip isn't really about
the destination as much as it is about driving for the sheer
fun of being "out there," I've found it's nearly
impossible to have a bad trip. Invariably, I return home rested,
recharged and looking forward to getting back to work. The
overnight stay is what makes this kind of road trip different
from a day trip - and more refreshing. There's nothing like
sleeping in an unfamiliar bed to make you feel as though you've
really gotten away.
Here are a few suggestions to get you going.
If you call Los Angeles home, consider the entertaining town
of Solvang, a Danish hamlet with thatched, copper and tile
roofs. It's 150 miles away, making it an ideal candidate for
a 20-hour road trip. Similarly, the German-inspired town of
Leavenworth, Washington, is just three hours from Seattle.
San Antonio, Texas, also has a nearby community with a northern
European flavor: New Braunfels. If you're in Chicago, try
a driving tour of Wisconsin's cranberry bogs just a few hours
to the north. Starting in Connecticut? Your state is among
the best-endowed in the country when it comes to B&Bs
in quaint towns. The fact is, every city has appealing destinations
within a short radius of home, yet far from the madding crowd.
So, the next time you say to yourself, "I
wish I had time to take a real road trip," remember that
only 20 hours - not even a full day - is enough for a genuine,
refreshing, outlook-changing adventure. Think about it. You
might have enough time this very week!
Mark
Sedenquist
June 24, 2007
|