Late spring, New York to Utah to ???
Hello!
My wife and I are in the early stages of planning a 2.5 week (+/-) roundtrip trip starting in upstate, NY, in either mid-May or mid-June. Our tentative destinations are Buffalo, Ann Arbor (via Canada), Chicago, Minneapolis, South Dakota (Badlands, Rushmore, Black Hills), Yellowstone, northern Utah (Logan), Colorado (Dinosaur National Monument and Rocky Mountain National Park) and then heading back east.
Curious to hear from the experts whether this sounds doable (assuming Yellowstone isn't still buried in snow) and what we might see/where we might stop on the way back from Colorado, presumably through Nebraska and Iowa. Also anything we're not hitting or should be avoiding on our tentative itinerary. The only stops that are set in stone, for family visits, are Minneapolis and Utah.
In a perfect world, we'd head up to Glacier National Park in Montana, but after agonizing over our map/atlas for a week, we just don't see how that's doable.
One thing that's puzzling us at the moment is where to stop between Rocky Mountain National Park and Omaha, which seems to be an awfully long haul.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance!
Jordan
As Long as You Realize...
Welcome aboard the RoadTrip America Forums!
...that this trip is going to be mostly about sitting in the car for 8-10 hours a day for about half of your travel days, then the trip is certainly doable. As you note, the biggest question mark is going to be whether Yellowstone is open, and even if it is - is it worth the visit. The only way to know that is to give them a call from Rapid City and determine at that point whether to proceed to Yellowstone or just head straight for Logan As far as what to see on heading east through Nebraska, just remember that you'll be following (besides the current I-80) the Platte River and the old Oregon Trail. There is plenty of history and scenic landmarks en route. In Iowa, make a stop at the Amana Colonies. But from Davenport, I'd suggest that you look at heading a bit south to I-70, avoid the tolls of I-80/I-90 and visit some sites such as the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, The Air Force Museum and Wright Brothers sites in Dayton, and then use roads such as I-99, US-15 and/or others to get you back to New York,
AZBuck
Just Make Use of All of It
If you look at the drive back home as a 'price' you have to pay for the pleasure of the trip out, then you're not going to have nearly as much fun as you could. The fact is that you have a 5000 mile adventure ahead of you and not a 2500 mile vacation followed by a 2500 mile trudge home. There is a ton of stuff to do on any route you choose to take home. I suggested just a few in my previous post. Take a look at your return route and start treating it as part of your vacation, and the whole trip will be much better for just that change in attitude.
AZBuck