Spartanburg,SC to Casper,Wy
We will be heading to Casper,Wy in mid June for a mission trip. Here is our plan:
June 10- 24
Spartanburg to Nashville,Tn 1 night at Koa
Nashville to Kansas City,Mo 2 night at Koa
Kansas City to Casper,Wy 6 nights at Fort Caspar Camoground
Casper,Wy to Estes Park,Co 2 nights at Yogi Bear's Jellystone Camoground
Estes Park,CO to Topeka, Kansas 1 night at Koa
Topeka,Kansas to Paducah,Ky 2 nights at KOA
Paducah,Ky to Spartanburg,SC
We will be traveling with our 3 children (11,9 and 6). Is there any must see places along the way? We are going to the Kansas City Zoo and Rocky Mountain National Park. I know this trip involves alot of driving,but we drove to Rapid City,SD last summer. This year we are going to be pulling a camper. We have thought about taking I-85 to I-75 to I-24 to get to Nashville to bypass The Saluda grade on I-26 in Asheville. Any thoughts on that? Also has anyone stayed at campgrounds along this was before? I just booked KOA's to be on the safe side.
you're mistaken, and its still wrong
Quote:
Originally Posted by
cotheran
When I use google maps and mapquest it shows from Kansas city,Mo to Casper,WY 11 hours and 29 minutes. Is that wrong?
I'm not sure where you're getting that information, but when I plug KC to Casper into Google, it comes up at 824 miles and 12 hours 54 minutes of driving. An 11 and a half hour estimate would mean covering that ground at an average speed of 71 mph - which is only possible with a police escort and spending most of the trip traveling at speeds in excess of 100 mph, or driving a car that never needs fuel, and having a driver that never needs to take a break - neither of which are possible.
But even in a car, Google's 13 hour estimate would be a virtually impossible time to meet. That requires an average speed of 63 mph, and to average those kinds of speeds over a full day of driving - just factoring in the bare minimum of stops - you have to be sitting at a cruising speed of 80-85 mph. The last time I covered that kind of one distance in one day (in a speed run, after learning of a family emergency while on the road) it took 15 hours, and I certainly wasn't pulling a trailer.
I agree with GLC that you really need to cut back this leg. Traveling at a safe speed and lawful speed while pulling a trailer (remember, even when the speed limit is 75 for cars, vehicles with trailers still have a 65 mph or lower limit.) this will very likely take you a minimum of 16-17 hours, and that's if you make it a slog where you don't stop to enjoy anything. When you consider the extra alertness you need because of your rig, that's really far too much to be safe.