Road-trip from Boston to San Diego
Hi all! I am moving to SD the last week of November from the Boston area. I have been trying to plot out the best route for me to take but I keep getting stuck. I would like to take an enjoyable drive with some sight-seeing but I am MOST concerned with taking a route that is direct and takes a lesser amount of time to reach California. I would also like to avoid tolls and long, civilization-less roads as much as possible (I do not want to drive long stretches of unpopulated areas for safety purposes). Also, I am driving a sedan, so avoiding rough road conditions would also be a plus. So far, I've found that my best bet is I-90 W > I-71 S > I-70 W > I-44 > I-40 > I-77 > I-87 > I-10 > I-15. Has anyone ever taken this route or could recommend a better one for me to take with the preferences I have? Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!!
Good maps will show all the towns along the way.
Hi daniii, and Welcome to the Great American Roadtrip Forum.
In the US there are very few roads which are isolated for long stretches, without civilization.
A few years ago I drove from SD to Boston using my maps to pick and choose my route as I went. Much depends on how much time you have for this trip.
You might find you will be better off, if you follow the advice in this paragraph, even though it is not a sightseeing trip:-
Quote:
Originally Posted by AZBuck
Start with maps. Not GPS, not software, not Google, but real honest-to-god paper maps that show you your entire route, that you can mark up (and erase), that you can stick pins in, and that show something about the land you'll be driving through. Those are your essential tool in any RoadTrip planning process. Start by marking all the places you know you want to visit. Then connect the dots. Then look for more places of interest and scenic routes along the lines connecting the dots. Repeat until you've got as many sites and roads as you think you want.
Lifey
Changes that Fit Your Style
If you world "like to avoid tolls", then I-90 to Cleveland is not the way to go. That would take you nearly the entire length of both the Mass Pike and the NY State Thruway, both expensive. Instead, leave the Mass Pike at Sturbridge and take I-84 to Scranton and I-80 west to just past Youngstown and there switch over to I-76. You'll actually just stay on the same road when I-80 exits to join the Ohio Turnpike. Then get on I-71 west of Akron. This routing is actually five miles shorter than taking the toll roads.
I'm not sure how you intend to get from I-40 to San Diego. Note that I-77 goes from West Virginia to South Carolina, and I-87 follows the Hudson River and Champlain Valley in New York, so I'm sure that's not what you meant. On the other hand, note that I-44/I-40 follows the old alignment of 'Route 66', famous in song, story, and TV. To get from I-40 to San Diego, and given your desire to 'avoid long, civilization-less roads', what I'd suggest is that at Flagstaff (remember - at this point, a tour of the Grand Canyon would be a half day detour) take I-17 south to Phoenix, Loop-101 around the northwestern suburbs, and I-10 west. But at Buckeye, take AZ-85 south to Gila Bend and I-8 the rest of the way west to San Diego.
You'll need at least five and a half days to make the drive comfortably and safely. If you have significantly more time than that, and once you have decided on a final route, we can suggest some sight-seeing options to make the trip more enjoyable. As long as you stick primarily to the Interstates (and out of west Texas) you will never be that far from civilization. The roads suggested above are all well-traveled and typically have motorist's services, food/fuel/lodging, at most exits.
AZBuck