Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Road Trip on the Web



Hello again

A quick post to say hi and spread the word about a couple of things, First, I've noticed a fun road trip photo contest that is being sponsored by stylish Jones Soda (you can win lots of iPod accessories just by posting up cool "road trip" photos, like the one at the top of the page...)
Click here for more.


Second, we got a prize (10th Place out of 10! How great is that!!?) for this here blog, winning a green ribbon that
"... is only passed on to the most seasoned of road-travellers that opt to embark on their adventures using the humble car and/or bike as their main form of transportation, and to those with the know-how to maintain a fascinating and continuously interesting blog with regular updates as well as being a generally respectable source of information for the would-be road-tripper.

Their blogs have a wide range of content, which is both gripping and informative, as well as being of use to others with similar interests. The topics are insightful and well-written, with stories that are accompanied by additional content such as pictures in order to provide readers with a decent overall image of what the blogger is trying to relay."


To see the other, bigger better winners, click here.


More from me, soon!

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Road Trip Advice 8 -- "Wild West" to Pacific Northwest




Dear Jamie --

My dad turned me on to your book. We are planning a cross-country move from New York City to Seattle. We thought it is a perfect opportunity to drive across country. With three kids (10 yr old and 4yr old twins), we may be crazy but we thought it would be fun (and memorable). I would love to get your thoughts on the trip. My initial thoughts on a route seem to cross 4-5 of your itineraries. Here are the details.

Leave June 22. Want to arrive in Seattle in 8- 10 days. Need to find activities/events/points of interest that work for children to keep them preoccupied. I love rodeos and my husband loves baseball so those added points of interest are a plus but not required. The key places we want to visit are:
St Louis (have friends there)
McCook and North Platte (Grandparents buried there)
Mt Rushmore
Devil's Tower, WY
Yellowstone (maybe) - we have spent a lot of time there so it is a nice to have

My initial thoughts were to:
- Head down the Blue Ridge mountains
- Cross over to St Louis (through Louisville)
- Head to Kansas City and across
- Up North through McCook/North Platte to South Dakota
- Across S Dakota and Wyoming
- Hit Cody and Yellowstone
- Then up through Montana and across to Seattle

Would love your thoughts on must see routes. I would assume we would do some two-lane highways and some interstate depending on the points of interest.

I would love any of your or your readers thoughts. I think the kids attractions are going to be most important as 8-10 days in a car with three kids will be challenging.

Thank you for your help and keeping the American Family Vacation alive!

Jennifer M


=====

Dear Jennifer --


Many thanks for your message -- I'm sorry it took me so long to get back to you, and I salute your bravery. (And your understatement -- 8-10 days in a car with three kids is sure to be challenging, to say the least.)

You've set me quite a challenge -- Keeping the American Family Vacation alive! -- but I will try to live up to your ambitions.

Here goes:

The route you outlined sounds pretty good -- here are my thoughts on kid-friendly attractions, baseball teams and other things that come to mind, along the way:


** Day One -- west from NYC:
To set the right tone for the trip, my recommended first stop for your cross-country adventure is right along I-78, your likeliest "Escape from New York" highway: the miniature village of Roadside America, an absolute gem, 8000-square feet of wonderful, handmade, mechanical charm.


Added bonus in the Allentown area: Yocco's Hot Dogs, the rollercoasters at Dorney Park, and baseball aplenty -- the Class AAA Lehigh Valley Ironpigs play near Allentown, while the AA-level R-Phils play in Reading. Both are farm clubs for the defending World Champion Phillies.


** Day 2? : Louisville Visit the home of Louisville Slugger baseball bats (there's a real factory out in the 'burbs, and a more kid-friendly visitor center right in town, complete with a 75-foot-tall baseball bat!). The local team, naturally, is called The Bats, Class AAA farm club for the Reds.


** Day 3 ?: St Louis: Your friends will probably show you the sights, but be sure to spend time at the fabulous Missouri Botanical Garden which many people rate as the best in the USA). They have great kids programs, a "Climatron" dome full of exotic plants, and St Louis' poet laureate Chuck Berry is doing a concert (not until July 24th, alas!)


** Day 4? Kansas City : Before you cross the country, be sure to set aside some time for the unhyped but fascinating National Frontier Trails Center in Independence. This city-run museum vividly tells the story of pioneers -- many of whom were young children being dragged to a new life in the west by their parents (some things never change, right?!).


Tracing the routes of the Oregon Trail and other routes, this may well captivate your kids, and give you some themes to follow on your way west. Independence is a pretty neat place, too -- and the kids will probably enjoy a milk shake in Clinton's Soda Fountain, the drug store where Harry Truman used to work!

Baseball: The Negro Baseball Leagues museum is great, but sorry to say, the success-challenged KC Royals are the only game in town. However, their stadium is pretty nice (in a 1970s municipal sort of way..)


Day 5-6? From here for the next 1000 or so miles west, you'll probably want to take advantage of the Interstates.
Along the way, following the I-80 freeway in the tracks of the old Oregon Trail, North Platte is interesting thanks to the larger-than-life figure of Buffalo Bill Cody, who lived here at what is preserved as "Scout's Ranch", and is pretty much central to anything and everything we think about cowboys, Indians, and the Wild West.


This would be the time to detour north to Mount Rushmore (* as I see you've done -- i stole your picture, posted above, and hope you don't mind! -- via Carhenge!),

Back on track: Buffalo Bill's North Platte museum is worth a visit, but the main event is further west, in the town named for him: Cody Wyoming, where the world-class Buffalo Bill Museum is fantastic -- and huge: you could easily spend a full day or more.


For rodeos, one of the most memorable moments of my own (long ago..!) childhood road trips was a visit to the Cody Night Rodeo. Well worth planning your trip around, for sure.


But then Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons are just up the road, and those are pretty tempting places to see, too. For an unforgettable overnight -- or at least a meal in an unforgettable setting -- go to Old Faithful Inn, next to the iconic geyser.


Day 7-8?: You suggested driving across Montana, but while Montana is a beautiful place, the Rocky Mountains can make for slow-going, so I humbly recommend cruising straight across Idaho instead. After the lush forests, raging rivers and wild thermo-geology of Yellowstone, your next stop could be the arid volcanic plains of Craters of the Moon National Park -- which kids usually get a kick out of (there are lava tubes and caves to explore, if the weather gets hot). Overnight in family-friendly Boise, where you can float down the river (rafts and innertubes can be rented in Barber Park, near downtown) and generally stretch your legs.




Day 9-10. Almost there! On your way west be sure to stop at the National Oregon Trail Interpretive Center, off I-84 near Baker City, Oregon. The rolling expanses east of the Cascades are a good place to make up time if you've been having too much -- but one last great place to stop and enjoy is Mount Rainier, the iconic peak of the Puget Sound region.

Celebrate your trip by staying overnight at the newly restored, mile-high rustic Mt Rainier National Park lodge at Paradise, a fitting end to what I hope will be a great trip.


Hope these tips help you have a safe and happy adventure, and let me know how it goes!


Happy Trails,






Jamie Jensen


RoadTripUSA@hotmail.com


===

Hi again Jamie ! –

I just wanted to thank you for an amazing itinerary. I am so impressed that you took the time to provide me with such relevant recommendations. I am so looking forward to the sights that you highlighted.

I have highly recommended your book and website based on your excellent advice and your personal touch in giving advice on my trip. People are amazed that I got a personal response. So thank you so much for taking the time.

I actually plan on "tweeting" across country on Twitter. Please feel free to follow me

** Note to readers who've stuck with this post this far: I've asked for permission to share Jen's Twitter details. and will post them when she says OK **

To many more road trips (and happy follower of your trips)!

Jennifer M

Road Trip Advice, Part 6 - Summer-long Road Trip!?

Hi Jamie,

I am so glad I came across your website, downloaded podcasts and just now ordered your latest book.

I am taking up on your offer of road trip advice to first time "Road Trip USA" vacationers like me.

This summer, we are planning a 45-day road trip across the US covering all important attractions, scenic routes, some museums, major national parks like Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, important landmarks etc.

I will be traveling with my wife and kids (10 and 13 year olds) in a minivan.

I already started looking into the 11 routes you mentioned .. but appreciate if you can give me your advice how I can have great time with my first family road trip of 45 days covering our great nation.

Thanks,
Ratna


===
15 June 2009

Hello Ratna --

Many thanks for your note -- and I hope I can help you have a great trip!

You have a very ambitious expedition ahead of you -- my main advice at this point is to make sure you give yourself enough time to really absorb and enjoy the many places you will see, without worrying too much about trying to "see it all.". The USA is huge -- 3000 miles across, 1500 miles top to bottom.

(Plus there's Canada to consider -- the Canadian Rockies should definitely be on your itininerary as well. )

I have been traveling around the USA for 30+ years, and I still haven't seen everything I want to see -- and considering you are traveling with your family, what I'd like to say first is remember to enjoy the time you have to spend in these wonderful places, and try to resist the state of mind where you race around feeling you have to see "everything" -- that way madness lies, as the Bard had it in King Lear, or so I believe…

Now, on to the positives -- first, I hope you get your hands on my book, which has more than enough great places for you to see and enjoy. Once you've had a study of Road Trip USA, please feel free to write me again -- especially about such vital topics as "where should I spend the 4th of July!?"

In the meantime I also have some other "family road trip advice", which I hope will help -- here it is:

---
1) Break the trip up into manageable, sane segments, rather than try to cover 600 miles at once. It’s hard for most kids to sit still for long periods of time, so stop every 90 minutes or so to get out, stretch, have an ice cream, take a swim break or see an historic marker. It makes each day special and different.

2) Let everyone make decisions, including the kids, otherwise people will get frustrated. (Dads in the driver’s seat in particular need to learn this lesson.)

3) Use the child locks. (My brother had a proclivity toward opening the back door during family road trips, spending a lot of time in the gutter before there were such things as child locks to protect him from himself ...)

4) Have everyone use the Internet to research the trip. This lets family members learn about the destinations along the way and helps in planning itineraries. There might be sites, events or activities that the kids are excited about seeing, such as a minor league baseball game scheduled for the day you plan to pass through a destination. You can make these types of events themes for the day, or set them as a treat at the end of a day.

(It’s not quite bribery, but it is effective.)

5) Use a GPS system, and let the kids program and control it. They’ll then be more aware of where they are and what’s coming up, plus it helps them to remember the places along the way. You can then download the route and map and have it as a memento (or a very cool school project!) after the trip.
---

So, hope some of this helps, and hope you enjoy my book.

Keep in touch, please, and Happy Travels!



-- Jamie Jensen


=====
1 July 2009

Hi Jamie,

We're having a great time on our road trip. Currently I'm writing to you from Little America, Flagstaff and soon heading to Grand Canyon.

We have split our 45 day trip into 2 manageable parts and plan to cover couple of trails in your book (route 66 and canadian rockies)

Thank you for all your help and advice and a great great book

Ratna

Road Trip Blogs -- Top Ten


Happy July --

I'm trying to get back into the habit of writing here more frequently, and to start the month off right I've pulled together a list of my favorite road trip-related blogs and websites. These all have something or other to do with roads, travel, baseball, and all sorts of stuff -- but I hope you like them. I was inspired to draw up a list by the folks at blogs.com, who are working to make some sense of the chaotic but fascinating world of social media.


Check it out:

Top Ten Road Trip Blogs


I could have come up with a dozens other blogs, as I'm sure you can too. (In fact, if you have some candidates, let me know -- maybe this can become a regular feature.)

But I hope you'll like these -- and I hope you all have a free and fun Independence Day on the 4th of July!


-- Jamie