Summer Road trip New York to Chicago
Hello all, i am new to this site and looking for help on a road trp i am doing later June / Early July Next Year.
The Trip
We are planning to drive from JFK Airport to Chicago over 6 days then stay in Chicago and do the return journey in Two days.
I am just looking for advise on which routes take, as i would like the scenic options, i have been looking into this a bit. i think i found one called route 6 in Pennsylvania. Also another few things that we would like to do on the way is Cedar point and maybe Columbus Zoo.
As i am from the UK, we will hiring a car, at the moment we only have a compact car, Chevrolet avea but could upgrade to a Nissan Maxima or something similar. Now i never drove in america before but i driven abroad before. is it better to have an compact car or maybe need something a bit bigger if we are doing about 1500 miles.
Regarding accommodation is it best to book before hand, i was thinking if we didn't book before go, could end hours looking for suitable accommodation? are the motels on the road that cheap??
any advice on this trip would be much appreciated.
thank you for your time
Matt & Kayleigh
Roads, Cars, Motels, Sites
I wrote this response to another Brit looking for some idea of what driving on American roads was like. It's still pertinent. What I also think you will find as you shop for a hire car is that it is only marginally more expensive (maybe two or three pounds per week) to get a 'mid-size' or 'intermediate' class. The added boot space and interior comforts as well as a larger engine make this my go-to class when I rent. You may get slightly fewer miles per gallon of petrol, but at 25 pence/liter I don't think you'll care much. Our European friends can sometimes get better rates from a local consolidator such as Europcar or RentalCars. I would definitely not take the GPS option from the hire firm. For what that would cost you for a week, you can buy your own. If you and/or your passenger are comfortable reading maps that is the way to go. Roads in America are well-marked. You may have to drive around a bit in cities, but see my earlier reference to the cost of petrol here.
As for a rough idea of what motels typically cost, I use the following rules of thumb: Low cost (Motel 6, Red Roof Inn, etc.) $50-75/£35-52 (very occasionally less); Mid-range (Day's Inn, Holiday Inn, etc.) $75-100/£52-70; Upscale (Hilton, Doubletreee, etc.) $100+/£70+. Those rates will include at least two people per room, sometimes up to four. Reservations aren't needed as a rule, but if you know where you're going to be on a given evening, you can sometimes get a lower rate by booking ahead. The main advantage, though, is that you'd be doing your shopping ahead of time, comparing various motels in a given area, and not just taking whatever is handy at the end of a day on the road.
Some other places you might want to consider as you head west to Chicago are Cuyahoga Valley National Park, the Bass Islands, Greenfield Village, and Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore.
AZBuck
Speaking with the locals.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
finchmatt
Lifey said that in Centrailia they will tell you where to go.
Matt
I make it a point of wherever I travel to speak with the locals, rather than get my imformation from the internet or books. The locals know better than anyone where to go to see/do what you are interested in. I never plan all these things before my trip.
Very rarely have I received anything other than a warm welcome.
Lifey
To Quote George Bernard Shaw (or Oscar Wilde or Winston Churchill)
"America and Britain are two countries separated by a common language." This is only compounded by the facts that 1) 'Telling someone where to go' can be polite when taken literally, and as terribly impolite when said with a certain tone of voice. Unfortunately the printed word does not convey tone of voice. and 2) We have an Aussie talking to a Brit on an American website.
AZBuck