Road Trip Advice/Guidance
My girlfriend and I are two college students looking for a unique, challenging, and rewarding experience for the end of this summer. We have decided to hit the road and go coast to coast and see some friends on the way. We have been reading this forum and doing research for a couple months now and want to see if the members of this forum have any advice/guidance for the trip (cool places to see, possibly unforseen obstacles, cost, etc.) The trip will span 2 weeks, here's the plan;
Day 1: Leave from Fitchburg, MA early in the morning and take I-90 to Flying J in South Beloit, IL.
Day 2: Next morning take I-80 to friend's house in Boulder, CO.
Day 3: Spent in Boulder
Day 4: Drive to and spend the night with friends in Castle Rock, CO.
Day 5: Leave in morning and take I-40 to Flying J in Winslow, AZ
Day 6: Go see the Grand Canyon in the morning and then hop back on I-40. Stay with friend at UCLA.
Day 7: Take I-405 and I-5 to San Diego area. Beach. Stay in hotel in La Jolla. (already booked)
Day 8: More Beach and then take I-8 to and stay at Flying J in Eloy, AZ.
Day 9: Leave early and take I-10 and then I-20 to Flying J in Dallas.
Day 10: Hop back on I-20 all the way to Flying J in Carnesville, GA
Day 11: Take I-85 and then I-95 to stay with friends in MD.
Day 12: Drive back home to MA
P.S. I do realize that this is quite ambitious. I do not expect it to all go according to plan, so I left a couple days of wiggle room at the end. Unfortunately, the plan includes a lot of nights sleeping in my Corolla. But, being college students, we don't have much money to work with, and not taking the trip is not an option. We are saving money faster than we thought, and it is my understanding that some Flying J's have lodging, so maybe if we save enough we could get a room a couple of those nights instead of sleeping in the car. We have a approximately $2000 saved to this point.
This road trip is planned to be trying on our resolve, our relationship, and our sanity; but also a lot of fun. Thanks in advance for your help, guys!
Love,
Luke
Not Even Remotely Possible
Welcome aboard the RoadTrip America Forums!
Your first two days are impossible. That's not an opinion, that's a fact. You plan to drive over 2000 miles in two days with nothing more than a catnap in a truck stop. The fact is that to cover a thousand miles a day requires not stopping AT ALL except for fuel, food (drive through windows only) and bathroom breaks. Long before you reach Boulder you will be a danger to yourselves and everyone else on the road.
Your 700+ mile day from Castle Rock to Winslow is another killer, and the 600+ mile day that includes the Grand Canyon, and another pair of back-to-back 1000 mile days to Dallas and Carnesville followed by a 600 mile day to Maryland.
This trip simply will not work as planned. At best you will be dead tired throughout the entire time, at worst you will simply be dead.
AZBuck
not just impossible, illogical too
I completely agree with Buck that your plan is just not safe or smart on a number of levels. Trying to drive from Mass to Colorado in 2 days just isn't going to work in the best of circumstances, and having 2 people try to sleep in a compact car is going to make you want to kill each other before you even make it across the plains.
But on top of all of that, looking at your routing, I really don't think you've put much thought into this plan. I mean, you're going to drive to South Beloit on I-90, which will force you to drive through the heart of Chicago and its traffic, and puts you almost 100 miles north of I-80. So not only are you hoping to do near suicidal amounts of miles, you're going to have to do some serious back tracking on top of everything! I'll say, the Flying J in South Beloit is a perfectly fine place to stop for gas (I've been there many times myself), but its certainly not worth traveling a hundred miles out of your way for!
Seriously, you need to go back to the drawing board. You are a long way from having a reasonable trip plan, and what you've come up with so far is not a good starting point.