From Greensboro NC to Salt Lake City UT in December
Hi, everyone, I am from Greensboro, NC. I plan to drive from Greensboro to Salt Lake City, UT from Dec 13, 2013 to Dec 17, 2013. I will go with my wife and we have a CRV with all season tires. We do not have any plan to stay for the natural wonders during our trip, and just want to be UT fast and safely. Can anyone give us some suggestions regarding the route, where we should stay, the preparation, and the cautions we should have? Thank you!
Wayne
Hope for the Best But Plan for the Worst
Welcome aboard the RoadTrip America Forums!
There's no way to predict what the weather will be a month from now when you're traveling. Even when you leave Greensboro, the weather forecast for Salt Lake City four days later will be little better than an educated guess. What you should do, then, is to plan out a route and schedule that will get you to SLC in the most efficient manner and have a fair idea of where you should end up each evening. The most direct (almost) all-Interstate route is (from Mount Airy) I-77 up to Beckley WV, I-64 west to St. Louis, I-70 west to Kansas City, I-29 north to Nebraska City, NE-2 west to I-80 west to Salt Lake City. Evenly spaced and well-paced daily goals would be roughly Evansville IN, Lincoln NE, and Rawlins WY.
Now that's if everything goes according to plan. But you should be ready for the distinct possibility that you will see some snow along that route that late into December. Your best way to deal with that is to have some spare time in your plan so that you can just sit out the storm, let the road crews do their job, and get back on the road when, and only when, the highways are clear and dry again. If you schedule four to four and a half days for the drive you will have plenty of time for both, the drive and the 'not driving' should you need it.
Other than that, the standard pre-RoadTrip preparations are in order: Make sure that you're familiar with your route, particularly in and around large cities such as St. Louis and Kansas City where you will be using connecting routes or beltways and/or changing route numbers, and have paper maps that you know how to read; Have your car thoroughly serviced, oil and tires checked, etc.; Blankets, food and water are al handy to have on any winter drive and can come in handy should you fail to get off the road soon enough during a storm. Otherwise just use common sense. Only in the far western portions of this trip are you going to see long stretches between towns where you don't want to let your gas guage get much below half a tank. Once you've done everything you reasonably can, just enjoy the trip!
AZBuck