Route thoughts on Michigan to Savannah
Hi....I am new to this forum and website and looking for some thoughts and ideas.
My wife and I have driven from Northeast Michigan to Savannah, GA many times over the years. We have probably taken 3 different highway routes, primarily freeways.
This summer we are thinking of trying a new route which would be driving US 23 all the way to where it connects to I-64. We are familiar with US 23 through Michigan and into Columbus, Ohio....but am wondering if anyone could give some thoughts or ideas on how US 23 would be if continued the rest of the way through Ohio all the way to Asheville, NC?
Any help would be appreciated...thank you in advance
But I wonder if it's like US 25E from Corbin, KY to Cumberland Gap?
Far be it from me to question a route I haven't trodden since 1975, but I traversed US 25E shortcutting from Corbin, KY through Cumberland Gap to I-81 southwest of Kingsport on a Sunday afternoon in July 2010. On my 2010 Rand McNally atlas, each route is shown as an "other multilane highway", a symbol distinct from the toll and the free limited-access 4-lane highways. In the case of US 25E, while there are segments of lane separation via median or Jersey barriers, there are many segments with only double-yellow lines or a center turn lane separating northbound and southbound traffic. It generally followed the stream bottoms so was rather curvy and slow, even for a 4-lane. The most annoying aspect of the trip was the dozens and dozens of stoplights, both in the many towns and communities, and in between them at major crossroads.
It looks to me that US 23 goes directly through quite a few small towns in the very heart of coal mining country, and this often translates to heavy coal truck traffic. Coal trucks are triple- or quadruple-axle dumptrucks and are quite frankly harrowing to share the road with. They haul coal from mines to the railroad siding where a "tipple" receives it.
Perhaps my colleague and online friend AZBuck has some updated information on the current nature of US 23 in southwest VA and far eastern KY, and if so I of course defer. Absent same, the symbols on my Rand McNally and my undergraduate school trips to coal country would have me giving US 23 from Big Stone Gap, Va on up to I-64 a wide berth and avoiding it whenever possible.
Foy