Seattle to Georgia and back in 23 days... are we crazy?
First time posting here. I'm looking for some advice as to how crazy we are in our planning. A friend of ours moved from Seattle to Georgia and had so much fun driving cross country on her trip, we thought we would do the same to go visit her. We've looked into driving round trip vs. flying one way and renting a car and driving home and it's pretty much a wash. It actually might be a little bit cheaper to drive RT but will depend how many entrance fees (food we buy, etc.) we have that first week. Who knew it would be so expensive to rent a car to drive home. So the cast of characters are me and my 13 yo daughter on the drive to Georgia where my husband will fly in and meet up with us and then we'll drive home together. My plan currently is to leave on Saturday, June 24th and return Sunday, July 16th.
Here is our plan for now:
24th Seattle to Missoula 8.5 hr
25th Missoula to Keystone, SD 10.5 hr
26th stay in Keystone to see Mount Rushmore and Custer
27th to Omaha 8 hr (see zoo in am)
28th to St. Louis 6 hr
29th to Nashville 4.5
30th arrive in Carrolton, GA 4 hr
July 5th - leave GA for Gulf Shores, AL 5.5 hr (want to see Gulf coast)
6th to New Orleans 3 hr
7th to Waco, TX 8 hr
8th to Oklahoma City and see cousin 4.5 hr
9th stay in OKC
10th drive to Santa Fe NM 8hr
11th to Flagstaff (see Grand Canyon, etc.) 5.5 hr
12th See Grand Canyon
13th to Page, AZ 3.5 hr
14th to SLC, UT 5.5 hr
15th to Pendelton, OR 4.5 hr
16th Home
The fun is in the journey for us. We have things we want to see in each place and part of it is just having the experience of driving across the country. I'm a touch worried about my daughter getting bored but she is the one really advocating to drive round trip vs. flying to Atlanta and driving home. I've booked most of our places to stay and made sure to have pools so we can cool off and relax at the end of every day.
If you have any thoughts or suggestions or a different way to organize, please let me know!!! If you think we're simply crazy, let me know that too! I'm hoping I've alternated super long driving days (except for the initial 2) with shorter ones and/or a few days of no driving to make it all tolerable. Thanks in advance for your help.
You Have Enough, But Certainly Not Too Much, Time
This could be a great trip, 23 days is certainly quite a bit for even a double-cross-country RoadTrip. However, it's still not forever, and once you take five or six days out for visiting with your sister in Georgia, you do have to start carefully budgeting your remaining time. With that in mind, here are just a few(?) places on your trip where you might want to spend less (but mostly more) time.
Missoula to Keystone is just too much for a single day's drive. Indeed Keystone is a bit too far to plan on getting in two days no matter how or where you take an overnight stop. In addition, you might want to give serious consideration to staying in the Keystone/Rapid City area longer than a day. Besides Mount Rushmore, there's Devils Tower, Wind and Jewel Caves, the Crazy Horse Memorial and Badlands National Park.
Santa Fe is off the direct route between OKC and Flagstaff/Grand Canyon, so if there's a reason you want to go there instead of, or in addition to Albuquerque you'll need to budget the appropriate amount of time. Taos is also in that area and if you have the time, worth a visit. Also keep in mind that there is a lot worth seeing on the way to and in/around Flagstaff besides 'just' the Grand Canyon, including Walnut Canyon, Sunset Crater and Wupatki National Monuments as well as the Museum of Northern Arizona and Lowell Observatory.
Salt Lake City to Pendleton is also too much for a single day's drive, especially at the end of a trip when you'll be wearing down. Boise would make a better overnight stop for that final leg.
If your daughter is the one advocating for the trip, then it would be a good object lessen for her to take on some responsibilities for it as well, such as mapping out a couple of places to stop each day as you travel around. These don't have to be major stops, but a chance to get out of the car, take a short walk, get some fresh air, see some scenery, or take in some history would add to the enjoyment and memories of the trip. You can get some ideas of the sorts of stops that are available nearly everywhere by looking through these listings.
As I look over my suggestions above, I see that I've mostly given you ideas for more places to visit and more things to do when I think your itinerary is already a bit overloaded. So you, your daughter and your husband are going to have to start paring down your wish list and maybe dropping a few destinations altogether. I think you'd be much happier with a trip where you tried to do less but enjoyed the things that you did do more. You've been bitten by the RoadTrip bug. We understand. There will be time for many, many more.
AZBuck
Tips for roundtrip cross country road trip. highway tips & do I need a weather radio?
Hello... We leave in 2 weeks on a 4 week roundtrip roadtrip across the US.
Our route in a nutshell (is over 4 weeks so don't worry I'm trying to do Seattle to Omaha in a day! :) is:
Seattle through Idaho/Montana/SD on I-90 then south on I-29 to Omaha.
Omaha to Kansas City. I-29
Kansas City to Nashville 70 to 64 then 57 to 24
Nashville to Carrolton GA. 24 south to 59 then 20 to 27 in GA.
On the way home we are going from Carrolton down to Orange Beach Alabama and along the coast to New Orleans. 90 along the coast.
NOLA to Houston. I-10
Houston to Waco. 290 north through College Station
Waco to OKC. i40
OKC to Santa Fe/Albuquerque. I-40
Then to Flagstaff... 89 North Grand Canyon, Zion, Bryce, Salt Lake City, Ontario OR and home to Seattle (across many days!!)
The route is already set so just looking for tips if you have them about things to think about (construction/road condition/no gas stations, etc.) on the highways between these cities/places.
I'm wondering if local radio is good enough for weather-related issues of should I get some type of weather radio? We leave June 23rd and arrive home July 20.
Would I need to have chains in the car for mountain passes? We have AWD Kia Sportage.
Finally, I want to enter Zion, if possible, through the southern entrance so I don't backtrack when I head out for Bryce. I'm thinking of driving from Grand Canyon north on 89 and then switching to 89A to go by Jacob Lake and that route. Then I would take 389 West to 59 and then get off at "Main St" exit to S Bench Road to UT-9 E/Zion Park Blvd. Does anyone know about that road between 59 and UT-9? The Main St to S. Bench Road? Is it safe for AWD vehicle?
I'm reading through old-posts for packing lists and emergency items but if something pops to mind, please let me know!
Thank you for your help.
Moderator Note: Please keep all questions about the same trip in the same thread