Florida to California vs Ring Trip
Hi there.
My sweetie and I are living in Sweden, but getting married this November in Florida. We were thinking of doing a crosscountry drive, but only have about 3 weeks. Is this even possible?
We were thinking of doing a California, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida route. Another option is flying out west and do a ring trip through California, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona?
Any idea if either of these can be done in 3 weeks and if so which is recommended and why?
Also, how much money should we calculate per day? We plan on staying in hotels and eating out- it will be our honeymoon- although not fancy.
Thanks for all of your help!
Do-able if you really like to drive!
Welcome to the RTA forums and congratulations on your upcoming nuptials!
Both trips are do-able. However, doing either trip in 3 weeks means that you will have to balance driving and sightseeing. You won't be able to see it all.
Personaly, I would do the ring for a few reasons.
* It's some of the most amazing scenery in America.
* If you find that you've lingered too long in one area and that you're behind schedule, you can more easily change your plans and cut something out. If you have to get from Point A to Point B like you would on the coast-to-coast drive, your options for making any changes are far more limited.
* Car rentals cost a lot more when you pick up in one location and drop off at another. Same with airline flights.
If you're going to splurge on hotels and restaurant meals for your entire trip, you will probably want to budget, at minimum, $150/day. And that is low. I would budget closer to $250 and enjoy spending the excess if I'm coming in under budget on other fun stuff.
Hotels can be had for $40 to $250 night. The $40 hotels are usually clean but lack amenities and luxuries that you might want to enjoy while on a honeymoon. In non-touristy areas, you can probably find nicer lodging in the $70-100 range without any problem. But in the touristy areas near national parks, cities, major tourist attractions, the price might easily reach $150-200/night.
Restaurant meals vary. You could each eat 3 squares a day for about $30 if you stick to someplace like McDonald's. But how yucky would that be? If you want to feel good and stay healthy for the honeymoon, this would not be a good choice. At inexpensive family restaurants (chains like Denny's, Cracker Barrell, etc.), you could probably enjoy a meal together for about $20-30/meal without any problem. And then, of course, you could easily spend $100 at a more upscale restaurant. So, for food, planning for spending, at minimum, $60 per day at restaurants with some money in reserve for times you want to splurge on finer dining seems reasonable.
However, I would really encourage you to buy a cooler at any grocery store and fill it with healthy foods at grocery stores along your route. You might want to do this for these reasons:
* Cheaper and healthier
* Quicker....eating in restaurants 3 times a day really cuts into your time to drive and explore
* When you're driving a lot, eating 3 times a day in restaurants might make your clothes a bit tight by the time you return home. (American portions tend to be quite a big bigger than those in European restaurants. You might find that there are times when sharing a meal makes more sense than getting separate meals. You can always request an extra plate.)
There are lots of choices for eating out of a cooler. You can pick up very cheap plasticware with lids to store some food items to keep them fresher. Plastic utensils and paperplates are very cheap. So are coolers. One sharp knife won't cost much either. These are all you really need to eat cheap and healthy. Things to put in the cooler might include: cheese, fruit, veggies, salad makings, crackers, granola, granola bars, protein bars, bagels and cream cheese, and anything else you might like that doesn't require cooking. I don't know about Swedish grocery stores, but American grocery stores often have big deli sections where you can buy things that have been pre-prepped, like cleaned/chopped veggies, hard-boiled eggs, sliced meats for sandwiches, etc.
It's really nice to be able to have a beautiful park and or scenic viewpoint and enjoy the scenery without having to hop in the car and find a restaurant when your stomach starts growling.
Hope this helps. And come back with more questions so we can help you plan a sublime honeymoon!
Can it really cost that much?!
Hi there.
I posted a while back about planning a ring trip for my honeymoon. We live in Sweden currently, but will be married in my home town in Florida. It will be my husbands first trip to the western USA so I want to show off as much of my country as possible!
We have around 18 days or so and had planned on the following:
Las Vegas
Hoover Dam
Grand Canyon
Painted Desert
San Diego
up the coast to San Francisco
going through Yosemite, Sequoia and Death Valley
back to Las Vegas
(We are 100% up to route additions!)
Based on 18 days I came up with the following:
Flights from Florida $700
Car Rental (he is dead set on a convertible- a luxury to Europeans) $1000 (based on the websites... will there be hidden fees??)
Gas (by using the calculator on the site) $500
How much should I figure into the daily budget? I had guessed around $150 just to be able to see sites and have a nice meal per day, plus sleep in clean hotels.
That brings our honeymoon to more than we are spending on our wedding!
Am I missing something? How can we save? Does this iteriary looks reasonable for 18 days without stressing too much? Am I way off our daily budget?
Thanks!