Sounds like a Hollywood Script!
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Originally Posted by AZBuck
This will instantaneously 'turn on' the comet.
Wow! That is cool. It certainly sounds like a movie script...
Mark
Route 66... is a lot of work
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Originally Posted by Lufraf
I'm planning to go to Chicago first, and take Route 66 to California.
I love visiting Chicago, but unless you really need to go there and I would suggest exploring the mid-range of the country. And following Route 66 -- although an epic journey and worthwhile -- is a great deal of effort and work that might be better spent elsewhere. There are sections of US-66 that I really like (but I have a short attention span for slow-moving two-lane highways) -- to get an idea of what you can expect -- Guy Randall's site is just about the best for a pictorial study. Plus, the work is a fairly recent documentation of what is still around. In addition, we spend a goodly amount of time building our links pages and the Route 66 page has some good resources for planning such a trip.
My favorite section of US-66 is found in Arizona between Williams and Needles and Moderator Bob has traveled much of this route, many times.
Mark
Interested in Civil War stuff?
Some of the most significant Civil War sites are right along I-81's corridor -- Gettysburg, Antietam, Harper's Ferry, even Appomattox C.H. is not too far off the track.
You could drive portions of the Blue Ridge Parkway/Skyline Drive.
Also, at Lexington, VA, Stonewall Jackson had a home that's now open to the public, and MOST of the General is buried nearby. South of Lexington, you might check out the "Natural Bridge."
In Tennessee, near Greenville, you could stop for a visit at Andrew Johnson's home. Across TN, there are a multitude of state parks to visit -- maybe picnic in. At Nashville, you could check out Music Row, and visit The Hermitage -- learn a little more about Andrew Jackson, the first "common" man to become a U.S. president.
There are also a couple of important Civil War battelfields along the route in TN, including Shiloh. Closer to Memphis, in Jackson, you can find the Casey Jones Home and RR Museum -- presumably, he still has "his orders in his hand." Then there's Graceland, of course. Memphis also has the Natl Civil Rights Museum -- and some of the best barbecue this side of heaven.
In Arkansas, state parks practically line the interstate, plus I'd have to make a side-trip to Hot Springs Natl Park. Also, Ft Smith Natl Historic Site would give you a glimpse into the frontier history of the Indian Nations and the role old Ft Smith and Judge Isaac Parker played in that area.
Oklahoma: The National Cowboy Hall of Fame in OKC, the Oklahoma City Bombing Memorial Site and the Washita Battlefield, where Custer attacked Black Kettle's village in the latter 1860s (north of Elk City).
Texas: The Big Texan for a steak dinner (Amarillo) and the Cadillac Ranch, just west of town.
New Mexico: Most of what I'd recommend would involve some serious side-road tripping -- if you have time to do that, let me know and I'll add some things to the list.
Arizona: Hubbell Trading Post near Ganado; Petrified Forest National Monument (don't take any with you); Meteor Crater, Walnut Canyon (an early culture ruin); Sedona and Oak Creek Canyon; Arizona Snowbowl (near Flagstaff), take the chairlift ride up the mountain for magnificent 100 mile views; GRAND CANYON; drive old Rt 66 from Seligman to Kingman for a change of pace and a little highway nostalgia, be sure to stop at Delgadillos Sno-Cap Drive Inn in Seligman; Hualapai Mountain Park near Kingman; and Oatman, also on old 66 WEST of Kingman. Or the real London Bridge at Lake Havasu City.
For California, Mark's forgotten more about I-15 than I ever knew, so I'll let him or another poster give you tips for that.
Bob
Ignorance isn't always bliss
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Originally Posted by amukia
Whatever you do, stay away from the I-10 between Texas and California.
How much time have you spent in this area? This is one of my favorite roadtripping roads in the country, full of more natural and historical wonders than the sum of many other areas in the country. It is also home to some of the most diverse weather patterns in the hemisphere and there are animals and flora along this route that exist only here in the world. Since you are about to embark on a cross country trip, perhaps you would like to read some of the scores of posts and theads about this area, which you can pass on to your family.
We have adopted a roadtrip Maxim to cover this: If it seems boring, look again.
Mark