From Lousiana to NYC - Is our 3 months trip plan realistic ? :)
Hi everyone,
My name is Anaïs and my boyfriend and I are planning a 3 month roadtrip for our 10 year anniversary. We're from Paris (France).
This is the first time for us travelling this long and we don't know if we are getting carried away or if our plan is realistic :)
We would like to visit or to stop there :
New Orleans // Bâton-Rouge // Lafayette // Austin // Big Bend National Park // Chihuahua (Mexico) // El Paso // White Sands National Monument // Tucson // Flagstaff // Grand Canyon // Monument Valley // Antelope Canyon // Las Vegas // Death Valley National Park // Los Angeles // San Francisco // Yosemite National Park // Portland // Seattle // Vancouver // Yellowstone // Mont Rushmore // Chicago // Niagara Falls // Toronto // Ottawa // Montréal // Québec // New York
The shorter time spent in those cities would be 1 day and the longest would be 5 days (in big cities).
It's a first draft, maybe we are missing a lot or maybe the route is not optimal. Of course I guess we will have to stop between some of the places to get some rest. Does it seem realistic to you ?
We can of course try to do less, we don't want to be binge travelling but still would love to make the most of it.
Sorry if this can seem a little bit paradoxical.
And another question, is it cool to visit these places from the end of march to the end of june weather wise ?
Thanks a lot for your anwsers and piece of advice, we're a bit overwhelmed :/
A Possible 'Rule-of-Thumb'
Bienvenue sur les forums de RoadTrip Amérique. Welcome aboard the RoadTrip America Forums!
With three months to work with, you could do almost anything you want! But you're right, trying to do everything would result in a trip that was more hectic than enjoyable. What my wife and I have found works for us is to spend a week in a given area/city and then move on. This has a couple of advantages. It gives you time to really experience a place in some detail. It allows for days 'off' when you just want to rest or the weather isn't co-operating. And finally, it opens up the possibility of doing 'vacation rentals' rather than just staying in motel rooms. With a vacation rental, you get an entire house or apartment, complete with kitchen and laundry facilities, thus saving you from having to eat every meal at a restaurant, and might even mean that you can travel with a simple carry-on bag rather than having to check (and wait for) larger luggage.
Such a schedule of a week here a week there, means that you can visit roughly a dozen places in three months, all the while working your way around a loop back to your arrival/departure city in North America. Also note that three months is starting to get you into the timescale where you might be able to do a lease on a car rather than a rental, perhaps saving you some money. Just make sure that you get the insurance/paperwork that will let you take the car each way across the US-Canada border.
AZBuck