NYC - L.A. (5 weeks) - In desperate need of advice!!
Good evening form the UK!
Back in November last year me and two friends mistakenly booked return flights to America, whilst recovering from drink, one Sunday morning; on the premise of driving New York to Los Angeles in 5 weeks.
The route is planned as follows:
NYC (Arrive 26 Aug...)
Boston (30 Aug)
Penn State (1-2 Sept)
Philadelphia (3 Sept)
Washington DC
Columbia (4 Sept...)
Savannah
Jacksonville (5 Sept)
Daytona Beach
Orlando (6 Sept)
West Palm Beach
Miami (7-9 Sept)
Tampa (10 Sept)
Tallahassee
Montgomery (11 Sept)
Birmingham
Nashville (12-14 Sept)
Memphis
Jackson
New Orleans (15 Sept)
Baton Rouge
Houston
Austin (16-18 Sept)
El Paso
Pheonix (19-20 Sept)
Winslow (Meteor Crater)
Grand Canyon
Las Vegas (21-24)
San Francisco (24-26 Sept)
Los Angeles (26th - 29th Sept)
NYC (internal flight - 30/09/10 party in NYC if anyone is game?!)
We have accommodation in NYC and we are hoping to buy a people-carrier/wagon there (which we will sell when we arrive in LA). I was just wondering if people had any details about the sort of issues we will face, namely, insurance, registration, taxes etc. We are all over 25 years of age and have full driving licenses; we also have an address in Queens and in Brooklyn that we can use as our 'base point' for the car registration. We did consider renting a car but, given we will be driving on the wrong side of the road... and the wrong side of the car... we thought there's a chance we would not be returning it in the same shape as when rented. We will also be sleeping in the car during parts of the trip.
If anyone has any help then it would be most appreciated!
As for the trip itself... I will be writing a book about the trip, the book will be informative with a humorous slant. As such, we are looking to visit some decent points of interest along the way, with as many breath-taking sights as possible but also to get wrecked as much as we can afford to.
If anyone wants to throw in for gas and join us en route that would also be cool!
If you have a guitar or a football (soccer) then get yourself along!
Thanks guys!
Liam
The wonderful wizards of Oz!
I'm just on Facebook as we speak trying to get hold of one of them: three Australian guys (touring last year). I'll post as soon as one of them gets back to me.
Are there any hidden gems, in terms of renatl places, that I could look at in NYC upon arrival?
Also, we have worked out that 6000 miles in say a 28mpg car/carrier is probably going to be around the $1000 mark for gas, but I don't know if my pricing is right (I believe it is done by the gallon over the water!). Can anyone let me know if this is way wide of the mark?
Thanks
Liam
Research, and then research some more !
A list of places of interest on a journey like this would go on and on, there are literally millions of them. This one thread has a few thousand and you will find much more searching the forums and road trip planning pages in the tool bar above. A lot will be down to your own personal interests but they seem wide and varied anyway.
As my board name suggests, I am a big fan of the Southwest with it's small towns and BIG scenery with so much diversity, the type we don't see the likes of in the UK such as the Deserts and Red rock country. Near to the Grand canyon is Monument valley, made famous for all the John Ford Westerns filmed there with John Wayne. A little further North are the National parks of Zion and Bryce canyon. From Vegas to San Fran be sure to spare time to drive through Death valley and across the Sierra Nevada on Tioga pass into Yosemite, and don't forget to allow a couple of day's to drive the Pacific coast highway between SF and LA.
A list just in this area could go on for pages and pages, but for now I would get a good map and use the RTA pages to find points of reference and find out what there is between your list of City's that are of interest to you by breaking it into smaller sections. Don't get me wrong, there is nothing wrong with a list of City's, but there is so much more out there that you don't see the likes of back home.
Enjoy the planning stages, they are a great part of the trip as a whole and as you build your trip keep asking questions and it will all start coming together, but for now the research is the key.