Ideas for summer road trip PLEASE!
Hi, We are three sisters in our low twenties from NYC and are wracking our brains to think of an exciting and interesting road trip for this summer. We have the first two weeks of July free and we need to start generating ideas.
We already have visited most of California (San Diego to San Fransisco), Las Vegas, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Southern Utah, Detroit and some nearby East Coast destinations.
If anyone has any ideas, please feel free to share!
Thanks
Sure, there's enough for 2 months
Or even 2 years!
This thread has a lot of information on things to do in Seattle and Washington state. The hints there are for just a few specific areas. There's much more to see. Let us know what you're interested in and we'd be glad to help. Just a few things to wet your whistle that aren't mentioned in that other thread:
Washington
* San Juan Islands
* Chuckanut Drive
* North Cascades Highway
* Methow Valley including Winthrop and Leavenworth
* Grand Coulee Dam, Dry Falls, and the coulees
* Yakima Valley wine country and Goldendale's public observatory
* Long Beach Peninsula
* Washington side of the Columbia River Gorge including Beacon Rock, Maryhill, Stonehenge, Ice Caves, and lots of river-rafting opportunities
Oregon
* Oregon side of the Columbia River Gorge including Crowne Vista House, Multnomah Falls, Mt. Hood, wind-surfing opportunities in Hood River, and more.
* Oregon Coast
* John Day Fossil Beds
* Crater Lake, amazing cultural stuff going on in Ashland, and the Oregon Caves
* Bend and vicinity (tons of recreational opportunities)
* Rogue River (beaches, rafting, and mail-boat runs)
* Willamette Valley
* Hell's Canyon
Portland is a lovely city but I'm not as familiar with it as I am with Seattle. If you like books at all, Powell's Books is an amazing bookstore - 3 stories and covers a city block. OMSI, The Grotto, the Pittock Mansion, beautiful downtown with a lovely river walk, and lots of boats that cruise the Columbia River.
You could also follow the Lewis & Clark trail through OR and WA; or the Oregon Trail in Oregon.
If you're driving to the PNW, you're not going to have much time. So I imagine this is now a fly/drive vacation? You might compare flights for both Portland and Seattle, and then check out car rental rates from both locations as well. Portland is a bit farther away to drive to for me but I often fly from there just because I think both the airport and the traffic to/from it are less congested.