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Aussies on Road trip from San Francisco to NY and Nashville to LA
Hello All,
We are starting a 10 week road trip in 11 days and have mapped out our route.
Our last trip was from Houston to NY via New Orleans, Atlanta, Nashville, Memphis, Louisville and DC. We loved the USA so much we are coming back for a bigger better trip.
We are travelling the following path:
Part 1- San Fran to NY with stops at
Mendocino California, Eureka California, Coos Bay Oregon, Portland Oregon, Seattle Washington, Leavenworth Washington, Spokane Washington, Butte Montana, Billings Montana, Rapid City South Dakota, Sioux Falls South Dakota, Minneapolis Minnesota, Milwaukee Wisconsin, Chicago Illinois, Cleveland Ohio, Buffalo New York, Albany New York, Boston Massachusetts, Providence Rhode Island, New York, New York.
Part 2- Nashville TN to LA with stops at
Atlanta Georgia, Charlotte North Carolina, Savannah Georgia, Jacksonville Florida, Daytona Beach Florida, Cape Canaveral Florida, Orlando Florida, Miami Florida, Key West Florida, Naples Florida, Clearwater Florida, Tallahassee Florida, Pensacola Florida, New Orleans Louisiana, Houston Texas, Dallas Texas, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Wichita Kansas, Colby Kansas, Denver Colorado, Rock Springs Wyoming, Salt Lake City Utah, Las Vegas Nevada, San Diego California, Los Angeles California.
I have identified a lot of things to see (mostly the general tourist places) but dont want to miss anything significant or interesting along the way.
We are both in our 50's, and interested in landmarks, historical places, and scenic places. We are not so much into walking, hiking, flowers or trees. The wife loves everything from "Gone with the wind" era such as plantation houses etc.
Any advice would be really appreciated, and if yu are on my route, feel free to message me and we might catch up for a beer.
Thanks all in advance.
David.
Some Historical and Scenic Sites on Your Route
With the scope of your travels, there really isn't space or time to list everything historic, scenic, or noteworthy that is within visiting range or your route. Most of the really famous sites will, I think, be on your wish list already. What I will try to do is to present just a brief list of some of the smaller or less-visited places that I think you might enjoy. The biggest advantage of the smaller sites is that the rangers or docents are less world-weary and more accessible to visitor. Especially at historic sites this can make all the difference between just seeing a building or landscape and learning its story. So without further adieu...
Historic Columbia River Highway
Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument
Devils Tower National Monument
Crazy Horse Memorial
Theodore Roosevelt National Park
Apostle Islands National Lakeshore
Greenfield Village
Lake Erie Islands
Erie Canal
Women’s Rights National Historical Park
President Calvin Coolidge State Historic Site
Mohawk Trail
Salem Maritime National Historic Site
Mystic Seaport
Elfreth's Alley
Blue Ridge Parkway
Chickamauga & Chattanooga National Military Park
Savannah's Squares
Cumberland Island National Seashore
St. Augustine
Kennedy Space Center
Sixth Floor Museum
American Indian Cultural Center and museum
Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve
Dinosaur National Monument
London Bridge(!)
Mojave National Preserve
And even that list is just scratching the surface.
AZBuck
You need to ask and look - but not on the w.w.w.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
dsm99
Hi Lifey,
Thanks for reply.
I wasn't aware that places in the USA recognised our Automobile clubs. We are in the RACQ so I will see if I can get discounts when there.
As for maps and tourism info, I am all over that, but in many places its harder to find the out of the way/ off the grid places that are worth seeing. Trying to sift through places on many sites is like finding needles in haystacks. We have all the usual suspects covered but there are obviously places we don't know about along our route. That's what I am generally after.
Dave
Most automobile clubs worldwide have a reciprocal arrangement for travellers.
The out of the way places you can learn about when you are chatting with the locals. Ask them where their favourite place is when they want to get away from it all. I find chatting with folk in the queue at the checkout most helpful. They often want to know where you live. AAA will often tell you about out of the way places, so long as you tell them what you are looking for. Another great source is the BLM offices and the local rangers offices. But you won't find them on the interstates. They are often in the smaller towns, along the minor highways.
I have stumbled upon numerous sites by speaking with the staff in those offices, and seen the most amazing places. But if you are looking only on the internet, well, you won't find many of them. The AAA and Rand McNally maps, have a lot of these things marked on them. So look for the minor highways between all the places you already have on your list, and stop in the small towns, speak with the locals, and who knows what gems you may unearth.
Lifey