ha ha. Plenty of dust and tumbleweeds between Amarillo and ABQ - you just might need that carwash.
Have an A1 Day! 😎
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For a 35-night road trip with four adults, budgeting $100 per person per day for food and drinks might be cutting it close, especially if you're planning on dining at places like Big Texan Ranch. I'd suggest increasing your budget to around $125-$150 per person per day to cover all your meals and drinks comfortably. This should give you a bit more flexibility for those nicer dinners without stressing about overspending.
I was going to say that whichever national park or monument you get to, first, that's where you should purchase your AtB pass. In most cases, if an NP or NM charges for entrance, they will have the AtB Pass available for purchase there at the Visitor Center or even the Entrance Station.
Also, on budgeting, we budget $120/day for food, $4.25/gal (and we do the math for our vehicle's average fuel mileage and how many miles we expect to drive), and when you make hotel reservations, you'll know how much those will cost. Here is the final expense log from our recent 18 day trip. There are only 2 of us, though, and 3 days of our meals were with friends who fed us.
Donna
Yes. Budgeting food is the most difficult, because so many things are involved: type of restaurant you choose, whether or not you partake of alcohol-appetizers-dessert, and how much each person eats. Also whether you partake of the hotel's breakfast (if available), and how many meals you need. We are usually 2-meals per day when we're on the road.Quote:
Is that for the both of you Donna? (I imagine so, but just for clarity as the OP budgeted per person.)
Dave
Donna
With only three of us going the budget is £100 per person per day, but have sneaked in a contingency of £40 per person per day in case of those unexpected expenses.
Am one of those people that will track expenditure throughout the trip, so when I report back, could give a good indication of how accurate the plan was!
Do you mean the Lincoln Home in Springfield?
I believe all the National Park Sites in Springfield are free, so they may not actually sell the pass there. But as Donna mentioned, there's really no advantage to buying it in advance, you can just pick it up at the first park that actually charges a fee.
That said, not all of the Lincoln Sites in Springfield are NPS run - the Lincoln Library and Museum, for example, is separate and does charge a fee, but is well worth it.
If you want to hit an NPS site in Chicago, the Pullman National Historic Site is right in the city. That one is also free.
Here is where you can get passes:
https://www.nps.gov/planyourvisit/pi...-locations.htm
Have another question re Toll Roads.
My car hire is through Hertz - we intend on avoiding toll roads as much as we can, but will no doubt encounter them somewhere (SF to LA? GG Bridge?) - will I need cash in the car to pay at the booth (if so how much would you recommend keeping close by), or is the system cashless and payable by CC? Or do I need a tag thing in the car that will get scanned by the toll?
Hertz and other major car rental firms have open accounts for tolls around the USA. Typically, you will receive a bill sent to the email address you used to rent the car about 30 days after your rental is ended. There is often a small surcharge added to the bill -- a couple of dollars per toll.
Most toll booths don't even accept cash payments anymore.
Mark