Niagara->Houston(NFL)->Austin->Dallas->Chicago = 7 days!? Doable??
Hey everybody, let me start by saying thank you for your help. Its incredible to see how supportive everyone here is of each other. Lets all pay it forward.
My future wife and I are taking our first road trip. She couldn't be more excited. Below is our timeline. Red is mandatory, green is not. Are my expectations realistic?
Oct 7th, 2am -Niagara Falls- NY- Depart to arrive @ Nashville
Oct 7th - Nashville- Spend the afternoon, leave for Houston @ sunrise
Oct 8th - Houston- NFL Night Game Colts VS Texans @8:25
Oct 9/10 - Austin- Music Festival, leave for Dallas @ sunrise
Oct 11- Dallas- NFL Patriots vs Cowboys @4:25, leave for Chicago @ sunrise
Oct 12/13- Chicago- Leave for Toronto, ON night of sept 13
We would get tons or rest and wake up at 2am on the 7th in efforts of making it to Nashville in the afternoon. She wants to see the our country music capital. Leave Nashville early on the 8th in time to make to arrive to Houston by 8pm the same day. From Houston to Austin on the 9th. Be well rested for the music festival on the 10th. Leave Austin early on the 11th to arrive in Dallas by 4:25 (we dont have tickets to this one.. We hear the bars in Dallas are amazing during pigskin season). Leave Dallas early on the 12th to arrive in Chicago that evening.
^^^ - Its beginning to look a lot like christmas.. :)
Whats important is we make it to the football game on the 8th, the music festival on the 10th and Chicago on the 12. Between Niagara and Houston we gotta sleep somewhere may as well be Nashville! Only thing that may be in excess is going to Dallas to watch the game.
What do you think? Her and I can both drive up to 6 hours at a time. We also dont mind sleeping in the car if we have to.
Let me know if this is realistic. The routs are pretty self explanatory. I will use google maps (?)
myths and dangerous logic
Yes, as I clearly said, if you want to drive to the game on the evening of the 8th, you need to leave no later than the morning of the 6th. Even as a speed run, you're looking at 2.5 hard days of driving from Toronto to Houston, before any extra exploration. Even if you plan to leave on the 6th, you can't plan to spend any night in Nashville, as it just isn't in the right spot. You could visit it as you drive through, but you need to plan your first stop closer to Toronto and your second stop closer to Houston.
The logic of your plan contains some common, but very dangerous myths.
First, I'm assuming you're using the time estimates of Google Maps, which don't factor in time for food, fuel, restrooms, traffic, construction, or really anything else that keeps you from driving at or above the speed limit. (If you left Nashville at 6am, you couldn't even expect to get to Houston until 9pm.. likely even later with traffic, especially around the stadium)
Second, multiple drivers do not make for a 1+1=2 situations. Meaning, just because 1 person can drive 8 hours in a day, that doesn't mean that 2 drivers could drive 16 hours. Sitting in a car for hours at a time by itself is fatiguing. Having 1 person nap while the other person drives is also not a way to overcome this, as you should have two people awake at all times. A person napping in the passenger seat makes it more likely that the driver will also drift off.
Third, you're seeming to forget that fatigue is cumulative. In a one day sprint, you might be able to polish off a 750 mile drive safely, but that's a lot of work, and there is no way you could get back in the car and plan to be a safe driver for any significant distance the next day.
Four, you seem to be completely ignoring the reality of your body clock. On several instances you're planning to wake up very early in the morning, and then the very next day, you're planning to stay awake very late into the night. One night of sleep is not enough in about a 48 hour period. There is no way you'd be in shape to enjoy a football game the night of the seventh, if you'd woken up at 2am the day before, and there is no way you could be a safe driver late night on the 13th, if you'd woke up before dawn on the 12th.
Again, if you want to have any fun, and don't want to put your lives, and the lives of everyone else on the road in danger, you need to go back to the drawing board. 600 miles is the very top end of what you can plan to safely do each day on a multiple day trip, even with multiple drivers.