LA to Seattle In 3 1/2 Day - Possible?
Is this possible?
I want to leave LA Thursday morning & I need to be in Seattle by Noon on Sunday.
1. Is it possible to see the Hearst Castle & Muir woods? Will I be backtracking anywhere if I do?
2. I heard good things about Carmel – maybe this could this be my first night stop?
3. I would like to make one stop in San Fran for a few hours – do you think I will have time? Or should I just keep driving?
4. After San Fran is there any other points of interest for me to see & will I have time?
5. Where should I make my second night stop?
As you can see I’m a bit lost on what to do. I realize I can’t do everything
Thank You
Very doable trip.. another view
Hello Bello,
The trip as you've outlined it is very doable in 3 1/2 days -- *Grins* as usual, you'll get a variety of opinions, all of which are valid. Depends upon specifically what you'd like to do of course..
For a route routing you might try
LA - Depart Early Thursday (and I'd encourage *early* rush hour traffic can start by 7 am in some places. I'd try to be past LAX and through most of the valley on 101 by 7, which may mean a 6 am start.)
If you depart LA very early, you can make it to San Simeon, near Hearst Castle in 4 hours. The route for this would be (assuming LA International Airport as a starting point), up the 405 freeway to the 101, and then west out the San Fernando Valley through Oxnard and Ventura to Santa Barbara. A good place to stop to stretch your legs could be either Santa Barbara area, or Buellton/ San Ynez. At San Luis Obispo, you'll head west through past Cambria and Morro Bay to San Simeon on Coast 1.
You should be able to get a tour of the Hearst Castle in San Simeon, but it will take a couple of hours to go through it. Time well spent in my opinion. You can either eat in the cafeteria at the Hearst Castle vistors center, or picnic there if you have an ice chest along.
About 10 miles up the coast there is an elephant seal colony near Pedros Blancos with a turnout and parking area along Coast 1. Also worth the stop.
From San Simeon to Monterey area is about 2-3 hours, depending upon your stops and scenic visits. So its very doable to make it to Carmel or Monterey that evening. I would sort of push for Monterey, as I've always liked walking the pier there, and having sea food on the pier. You'll have had an early start, so I wouldn't push it too far that evening.
On Friday, its about 2 hours into San Francisco, although the fastest route is to cut over at either Castroville or Santa Cruz (via the 11) back to the 101, rather than continuing on 1 up to SF. I would be somewhat concerned about rush hour traffic here as well -- the 101 is one of 2 major routes into the SF Pennisular and gets rather jammed up (as does the parallel route on the 280). I'd add another hour at least to the travel time for traffic. If you depart the Monterey are at say 8 am, figuring to let traffic die out a bit before you get to SF, you'd be getting into the downtown SF area by about 11 or there abouts. That would put your at somewhere like Fisherman's Wharf for and early lunch and some sightseeing.
From Fisherman's Wharf in SF to Muir Woods National Monument isn't far -- you'll cross over the Golden Gate Bridge and head back west and north a bit on Coast 1. Figure an hour to get there, since the roads are rather windy as I recall.
(However, this is where I depart on a route from some of the other advice). I'd recommend heading out of Muir Woods and retracing yoru steps back to 101. Then I'd head up around the north side of the SF Bay to Napa, and plan on spending the night somewhere in Napa or Napa valley wine country. This would give you a chance to try one of the excellent restaurants for dinner or do some wine tasting. (Night #2) I'd estimate Napa as something like 90 minutes to 2 hours from Muir Woods NM
The 3rd day, would be a travel day -- primarily pushing north. You can head north out of Napa Valley via Clear Lake to catch the I-5 superhighway north at Williams, or you can head more directly east out of Napa to catch the 505 cutoff to the I-5 at Winters. I think the route through Clear Lake would be more scenic, since it goes through the length of Napa Valley -- and I think it'd be just as fast as 128 to Winters. The computer does say the fastest route would be a backtrack south out of Napa and then east via Vacaville to get to the 505 and I-5, but where's the fun in that?
Once on I-5 you'd make tracks north for Redding and then Oregon. This will be a longish driving day, but would put you in the Salem area in about 10 hours of travel from Napa (Night #3)
From Salem to Seattle is about 4 hours of driving, which is your 3 1/2 days to Seattle including some scenic stops.