[Solo Trip] MN - ND - SD - NE - IA - MN round trip route suggestion
I'm a 25 year old male. I am planning a road trip from Minnesota - North Dakota - Mt. Rushmore - Omaha - Des Moines - Minnesota for May long weekend. I am planning for a 3-4 day trip. As of now, it is solo. Not sure if anyone is accompanying. I enjoy scenic drives and nature.
I would prefer US routes with small towns on the way instead of inter states. Also I'm a budget traveler. I'm set to visit 50 states and will be visiting 5 of them during this trip :). I'm done with 27 of them already.
From Google Maps, all I find is interstate routes which I don't think may be interesting. However, in this part of the country, I'm guessing its safe to travel on interstates than US routes - any suggestions ?
Initially I planned to travel in https://goo.gl/maps/umXtUus9m132, but I wanted to visit Badlands National Park and Mt. Rushmore. So I modified it to https://goo.gl/maps/KGJzwdWPcZ42.
I'm planning on visiting following in each place
Minneapolis
Few places in the city like Art museum etc.
North Dakota
Fargo, ND - nothing much really. Just driving through.
Theodre Roosevelt National Park (Optional)
South Dakota
Badlands National Park
Mt. Rushmore
Omaha
Few places in Omaha city like Zoo.
Iowa
Des Moines - nothing much, just drive through. Visit state capitol.
That trips across Dakota's for 7hr each way back and forth feel like such a waste of time to cover both of the national parks. Am I mixing two different trips ? Are those drives worth it ? My friends told those area so boring to drive. Another idea is to cover only Minnesota, Des Moines and Omaha in this trip. And visit ND and SD when visiting Montana.
I'm in for taking detours to covering scenic drives. Please suggest.
There are Always Alternatives
Welcome aboard the RoadTrip America Forums!
Yes, if you leave your routing to some mindless software program that is set up to get you from Point A to Point B in the most "efficient" way possible, you will invariably end up being stuck on the Interstates. That certainly doesn't mean that that's your only option. It's a simple enough matter to find other roads. We usually recommend paper maps that give you bot the synoptic and local view at the same time, but it's also possible to find alternatives to the Interstates even on Google Maps. You just have to zoom in enough to have them show up and then pan around enough to follow them. Do that enough and you'll quickly see why detailed paper maps are the far better tool.
In your case, routes that would work well for you are US-6/IA-191/IA-44 from Omaha through Portsmouth to Des Moines; US-65 to Albert Lea MN and then MN-13 up to the Twin City area; and US-10 to Fargo. Getting from Fargo back to Omaha is a bit more problematical since there aren't any perfect options. Probably what I'd suggest is heading west on I-94 for a bit to get to ND-18 and follow that into South Dakota where it becomes SD-25, then using SD-34 east to US-81 south. Finally, at Norfolk NE, pick up US-275 back to Omaha.
You will need a minimum of three days to drive that route with only short stops every few hours for meals and exercise breaks. Any time spent doing in-depth exploring of sites along the way would be on top of that three days. You do not really have time for your extended plans to head out to the western Dakotas. Besides their limited ability to select roads other than Interstates, software-based mapping routines are notorious for their fantasy-world driving time estimates
AZBuck