March 2014 San Diego to Seattle
After spending 3 weeks on the East Coast of USA, my wife and I are planning to hire a car and take a leisurely 7 - 10 days to travel from San Diego to Seattle in early March 2014. Is this feasible (or am I dreaming) and what route should I follow? What places should I definitely visit and where would you recommend that I stop and stay? Are there places I should avoid (given that it is winter), should I hire a 4 wheel drive (or is a standard vehicle OK) and is 7 - 10 days enough time? This will be my first hire car/drive experience in the US so I would like it to be memorable for all the right reasons, so any tips or hints would be much appreciated. We are aged 50 plus and are not "thrill-seekers", we like good food and wine and would prefer hotels to "camp sites".
Turning dreams into reality.
Hello and welcome to the RTA forums !
You could drive from SD to Seattle in 2.5 days, so the only dreaming you have to do is about what you would like to see and where you'd like to go with your time.
The route you should take will depend on the above, there never is a single 'best' choice and you have lots of options available to you. You could take your time up the coast, go inland to Yosemite, the Columbia River Gorge etc, or zig -zag back and forth between them, even the Grand canyon would not be out of the question with 10 days.
There is nowhere in particular you should avoid, but if you decide to go inland to places like Sequoia and Yosemite, the high ground will still be closed to vehicles due to winter snow accumulation, although the foot hills and Valleys are quite spectacular.
A standard Sedan will do the job just fine, if conditions were such that you needed 4 wheel drive then you should avoid that area or stay off the road until road crews have cleared them.
There is a big difference between 7 and 10 days but yes it would be 'enough' time, although for me it's always the more the merrier !
There will be no shortage of lodging options but before you start worrying about that you need to know where you are headed. I would suggest you look around the RTA forums and planning pages above and do a little research into things that interest you, how much driving you would like to do and that kind of thing. Once you have some dots on the map we can certainly help fill in the gaps and offer suggestions.
Maps and tourist information.
One other thought which may help you. If you are a member of the automobile club in your State, such as RACV or NRMA, make sure you bring your membership with you. It will entitle you to free maps and tourist information at the AAA all over the U.S. You could even pick up maps of the western States as well as the major cities while you get your maps when on the east coast. Don't be tempted to rely on electronics alone.
Lifey