June/July 2012 - Road Trip advice needed
Hi everyone,
I have been checking out your forums and I am really impressed - great info.
My husband and I are coming over next June/July for 5-6 weeks from Australia and staying with family in Oregon. We are hoping to do a bit of a road trip while we are there - by hiring a car and tenting. We are thinking the best thing to do to see all we want is to do a round trip from my families place in Portland. So anyhow the rough itinerary we have done up is:
Day 1 - Portland to Seattle.
Day 2 -Seattle sightseeing
Day 3 - Seattle to Spokane
Day 4 - Spokane to Glacier National Park
Day 5 - Glacier national Park sightseeing
Day 6 - Glacier national park to Teton National Forest
Day 7 - Teton National Forest sightseeing
Day 8 - Teton National Forest - Mt Rushmore
Day 9 - Mt Rushmore sightseeing
Day 10 - Mt Rushmore - Denver
Day 11 - Denver - Grand Canyon
Day 12/13 - Grand Canyon sightseeing
Day 14 - Grand Canyon - Las Vegas
Day 15/16 - Las Vegas sightseeing
Day 17 - Las Vegas - San Francisco
Day 18 - San Francisco sightseeing
Day 19 - San Francisco - Crescent City, CA
Day 20 - Crescent City, CA - Florence, OR
Day 21 - Florence OR - Portland.
So 3 weeks travelling. Is this do-able?? We do a lot of driving here in Australia (long distance) and my husband is used to driving on the opposite side of the road..
Also with campsites we are pretty happy to rough it and don't need power.. but i DO need a shower! Are amenities blocks common in all campsites in the US? Here in Australia all campsites pretty much have them with full laundrys and camp kitchens, so I hope its the same over there!
Also any recommendations for the best car hire with unlimited mileage??
I look forward to chatting,
Rach :)
From One Aussie to Another.
Hi Rach,
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mass Tim
I'm not sure what you mean by "camp kitchen."
For clarification, a 'camp kitchen' is an area usually equipped with a fridge, hotplates or gas burners, a microwave, and sometimes a toaster and electric jug, or any combination of these. It usually also has a sink for doing dishes and most have hot water on tap. Some even have power outlets to plug in appliances. These are for the use of all campers.
Just about all commercial campgrounds which welcome tents have camp kitchens... some better than others. But the scene over there is so heavily focused on RVs, that you may come across campgrounds which do not make room for, or welcome tents. I have even come across the odd one which does not have an amenities block, just a dump station... assuming all RVs are completely self contained.
Just like at home, you will rarely find much of a camp kitchen in a State Park or National Park campground.
I would have to agree with many of the comments made above, your itenary overlooks many of the most amazing places on earth... places where you will want to linger just that bit longer. You can't possibly by-pass Yellowstone. Neither can you see it with just a drive through. My inclination would be to follow Michael's advice, scale back the distance and see a little more of the many National Parks in a smaller loop. Arches, Canyonlands, Bryce and Zion, as well as Death Valley and Yosemite are like nothing you will ever see at home. You may find that you will want to spend days at some of those parks.
The Southwest of the US is an amazing place!
Lifey in Melbourne
You can do it, and yet will miss so much
hi Rach, my wife and I did a similar trip back in 2006 and I have to say I agree with the comments of all the others, we took five weeks and found that although I thoroughly enjoyed driving the big miles after a three day stint at the wheel I felt like staying the next location for two night just to recharge my own batteries so to speak. I found that 300 miles per day or driving untill 3 pm witch ever came fist was a good guide for us. This allowed breaks and siteseeing as and when we decided. Point the GPS in the direction we were headed for the day and used the GPS to locate a motel atthe appropriate time.
We unfortunately missed the Yyellowstone national park due to snow but saw vitually everything else you have mentioned but we started out and finished up again in San francisco.
My first piece of advice is to make sure you have an upto date GPS because they travel faster than we do in New Zealand and Australia, my wife is an excellent navigator but to be fair we would have struggled to keep up with the flow of traffic and handle some of the major interchanges at the speed of the rest of the traffic if we had not had the GPS. All of this and the fact that both Aussies and Kiwis drive on the left hand side also can add to a bit of stress but you do soon adapt to the opposite side but keep in mind the natural instinct after all the years of driving on the other side can offer up a few "special" moments now and thenwhen you least expect it.
The beuaty of most GPS's is that they offer the user the choice of "most use of freeways" "least use of freeways" " fastest route or shortest route" We more often than not chose least use of freeways as we felt we would see more of the country side and weren't dissapointed.
The yosemites is a must see along as well as Bryce and zion NP's. To be honest I appreciated all three of those parks more than I did the Grand Canyon. I think when I next go to the grand Canyon I will try and do a scenic flight and also get down on the floor of the canyon as just seeing it from the rim for me was just about too much to take in and therefore appreciate the overall size of it all.
We stayed at Super 8 or Days Inn chain motels all the way as they are all in the same chain and offer free breakfast each morning albeit in a form of a continental breakfast and you also sign up for their card and qualify for a free nights stay I think every seven nights, need to check that, I know this adds cost but for us anyway in the long run was way easier than having to pitch a tent each night and we wern't weather dependent. I spent 28 years pitching tents for a living in the Army so that also helped me determine that motels were the way to go for us.
I hope you have a great trip, my wife and I are booked for five weeks again this July/ August to go to New york and we were going to go and do the Eastern Seaboard, New york to Florida and back but are now considering heading west again as we loved it so much last time.