Travel all 50 states in 2012
Hi there - I'm looking for some help please!! My husband, myself and our 3 kids are travelling from Australia for 12 months in 2012. We plan to be in the US from mid April to mid July and then again from mid October to mid January. We want to visit all 50 states. I can't seem to find any good info anywhere on a trip of this magnitude. Ideally we would do 1/2 the states on each visit. The complications are that we want to do a cruise to Alaska - I would assume best time for us would be in the first visit. We would also like to spend at least 10 days in Vegas while it is swimming weather! Most likely we would visit Hawaii on the way home in January. Can anyone suggest a good route that avoids the cold as much as possible - lol! We are trying to avoid backtracking - it's very complicated!! Thanks in advance!
Four Cross-Countries Should Do It
Welcome aboard the RoadTrip America Forums!
Actually, I think the basic plan for your endeavor is staring you in the face, assuming that you will be arriving from and returning to Australia on both of your visits. You would do a fairly elongated loop drive on each visit, crossing the country back and forth. That essentially gives you four cross-country drives and would let you easily hit all fifty states without too much backtracking and with plenty of time, given that you'll have four months for each visit. This would also save you a bit of money in that you would buy a simple round trip flights and do a 'local' car rental (with unlimited miles of course!), thus avoiding the extra expense of open-jaw airfares or one-way drop off fees on the car.
As just a very rough outline of what such a trip would look like, your April-September drive would concentrate on the northern and Rocky Mountain states. For this one, you might want to look into possibly flying into Chicago, New York or another inland city so that you can be in the Pacific Northwest (Seattle) in mid-summer rather than at the ends of your trip, and take the ferry up to Alaska from there then. That's one of the beauties of loop trips is that it doesn't matter where you start/end - you get to see everything anyway, and you can adjust the timing to suit your other needs.
Anyway, assuming you land in Chicago, you'd then visit the Midwest (IL, IN, MI, OH) and then head up through the Northeast (PA, NY) to New England (VT, NH, ME, MA, RI, CT) and the mid-Atlantic (NJ, DE, MD, DC, VA) on through the Border States (WV, KY, MO) across the Plains to the northern Rockies (NE, WY, ID) to the Pacific Northwest (OR, WA, AK) and then re-cross the Rockies (ID, MT) the northern Plains (ND, SD, IA) to the Upper Midwest (MN, WI) and back to Chicago).
For the winter (at least here) leg you'd land in Los Angeles or San Francisco and then do the 'northern' part of that trip first heading across the Sierra Nevada and the Rockies first (CA, NV, UT, CO) the middle Plains (KS, OK, AR) through the upper South (TN, NC, SC) and the Deep South (GA, FL, AL, MS, LA) then the Southwest (TX, NM, AZ) and returning to your starting point on the west coast.
As I said, that should give you a rough outline of a workable plan. And you can now start filling in the details on the maps and atlases that Donna suggested you get.
AZBuck
From One Aussie to Another.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
lifechangingyear
... travelling from Australia for 12 months in 2012...
We plan to be in the US from mid April to mid July and then again from mid October to mid January.
My question would be, where is the rest of your 12 months taking you? I assume that July to October will be spent somewhere in Europe, or another destination away from the North American continent. In which case it would make sense to start / end each leg at the most convenient entry port, and travel cross country twice, hitting all the States you plan to visit.
But how much will you see? I have now spent more than 20 months over four visits, and although I have visited 48 of the 50 States, have barely started scratching the surface of what there is to see.
How old are the children?
Lifey in Melbourne