Friday, April 23, 2010

Road Trips on ABC News



Breaking News!

Well, maybe it's not exactly big news, but I had fun the other day recording some bits about road trips for an ABC news feature story. There are some nice images -- of Grant's Tomb, the Golden Gate Bridge, and me eating a piece of pie at my favorite edge-of-the-world diner, Louis' at Lands End in San Francisco.

It is being broadcast on some of their cable channels, and is also online. (I'm only on screen for the last 2 minutes or so, so I'm going to try to copy it and edit and post it up at YouTube, for your eternal enjoyment and edification.)

Here's the URL:
http://abcnews.go.com/Travel/video/road-tips-tools-10396880&tab=9482931&section=8865284&playlist=&page=1

Check it out, and happy Road Trips!

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Musical Road Trip -- Texas, Chattanooga and more




Hey Road Trip --

I love your books and I just came across your site today. So I thought – why not write and maybe get some help with our big drive?

This summer my husband and I are planning a 3 – 4 month trip to the states to reconnect with roots music and our spiritual heritages. We hope to hit New Mexico, Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Kentucky, North Carolina and then back up north to Ontario in Canada.

Our only definite destinations are Texas in July to record a CD and Chattanooga in August to perform. What would you suggest as the best places to go and explore? We live in the Okanagan Valley in British Columbia and had planned to motor down through Montana on the way to New Mexico.

Any off the beaten path places would be greatly appreciated. We’re thinking the Natchez Trace sounds cool!

Thank you.

Jane E


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Hello Jane --

Thank you for writing in to Road Trip USA -- I hope I can help you plan a great trip & tour .

Chattanooga (and nearby Lookout Mountain) is a real Road Trip mecca, and Montana and New Mexico are also great places to travel -- all these places are ideal for any kind of quest, spiritual or otherwise. If you could manage a swing slightly west from your proposed route to include the Native American lands of the "Four Corners" region (especially the Hopi plateaus of Arizona, and the ancient cliff palaces of Mesa Verde and Canyon de Chelley), you will have a memorable adventure, for sure!

And just off Route 66, west of Albuquerque, is another amazing place: Acoma Pueblo, also known as "Sky City." (Visit the ancient mesa-top community, not the freeway-fronting casino complex!)

Further east on your tour, the Natchez Trace has a great history, and is interesting in many other ways - the current road was built during the last "Great Depression" as a public works project, but it tracks the much-older footpath and passes by some fantastic settings (giant Pre-Columbian mounds like Emerald Mound, and antebellum mansions in Natchez itself and all over Mississippi.)

For a pplace to stay, try the Shack Up in Clarksdale MS -- with your musical interests, I'm sure you'll like that!

The nearby college town of Oxford gives a great contrast with the sweltering, suffering Delta Blues world, for sure.

Plus there is a lot of "Civil Rights" era history to be experienced, especially in the town of Jackson Mississippi (where the two main roads have been renamed for Medgar Evers and James Meredith), and Selma and Montgomery Alabama are also worth a look, if you are in the region. (Montgomery has many claims to fame, not least its connections to Martin Luther King Jr., and the late great songwriter Hank Williams, too!).

There are many great towns and place to enjoy all along your way -- and I suspect your musical connections will lead you to many of them. If you haven't heard of it, I also would like to suggest you check out one great little institution in sleepy St Francisville Louisiana: the Magnolia Cafe, which has served as a combo cafe-and-live music club for many great years. (I think it is still in business, but their website seems to have been taken over by someone in Austin TX, another cool place to linger...)

If you get there -- or find other great places in your travels -- please let me know what you think!

Hope this helps inspire your travel planning.

Happy Trails,


Jamie Jensen
--
Road Trip USA

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La Dolce Vita on Route 66



Hello Jamie,

I'm Paolo from Italy and last summer I had a wonderful road trip on Route 66 with four friends. I just wanted to thank you because your Route66 book was of big help on the road (and actually also in the previous weeks\months to get us hyped!), and I still visit and appreciate the website. Actually I would love to make another road trip in the US this summer, but I still have to find the right trip-mates and to choose the right trip - I have to admit that after our practically perfect Route 66 vacation everything looks second-choice now!

In case you or your readers might be interested, here you can find some of the pictures that I took:

http://picasaweb.google.it/paolo9/Route66200902?feat=directlink

and here a little video that I made with the driving footage along the road: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C1n1mkj2nFo

(actually I have 3-4 more videos, but there's people appearing and talking on them, so I didn't put them on YouTube. In case you might be interested, just let me know!)

But - I didn't write you to showcase my pictures or videos. My first and only goal was to thank you.

So thanks, and good luck with everything.

Paolo


===>>>


Hello Paolo from Italy --

Thank you for your very nice note -- I am very glad to hear my Road Trip USA book helped you to have such a great trip!

I will check out your photos and videos as soon as I can, and am glad you've said it's OK for me to show them or link to them on my blog / website / Facebook page? It looks like you had a great trip, and your pictures might inspire others to "get some kicks" on Route 66.

( I am still pretty stupid about all this digital social media, but think other readers and travelers might enjoy them ! )

So anyway, "molto grazie" for writing to me, and rest assured: Route 66 is only the most famous 2000 miles of the many millions of great American highways that are all over the USA, just waiting for you to drive them. So I trust you will have many more perfect vacations ahead of you!

Happy Trails,


Jamie Jensen
---
Road Trip USA

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Monday, April 05, 2010

Baseball's Back -- Time for a Road Trip!

In case you haven't yet marked up your calendars, baseball season is officially back. After the Yankees-Red Sox extravaganza last night, the traditional first game in Cincinnati (home to baseball's oldest professional team) got underway just a few minutes ago, and there will be more than 2400 more games in ~ 28 cities around the country, all summer long.

Not to mention the thousands of other games played in the minor leagues, in smaller towns and smaller (and cheaper, and usually more characterful) ballparks all over the USA.

USA Today ran a short story today about some of the best minor league destinations, and I have included details for about 70 major and minor league teams in Road Trip USA. So start planning your baseball pilgrimage (as another baseball obsessed website has named it) today

Batter Up!

Thursday, April 01, 2010

JCB across America -- for Haiti reconstruction



This is no April Fool's joke -- it's a mix of fun and fundraising!



On the day the world announced $10 Billion in aid to help rebuild Haiti, heavy equipment company JCB is kicking off a month-long cross-country road trip -- in a huge JCB backhoe!

JCB hopes the 26-day trek will both remind Americans that Haiti’s long road to recovery is only just beginning, and encourage them to show their continued support – either by visiting one of the 11 featured route stops or visiting www.JCBforHaiti.com to make a donation. Additionally, an American Red Cross mobile blood-collection vehicle will be stationed at select “pit stops” (JCB dealerships) along the route for those who wish to donate blood as part of this effort.



Today the JCB is in Montgomery Alabama, a very cool little road trip destination !

Next stop, Baton Rouge...

US50 -- Roadside Americana in a Classic British Sports Car



Dear Road Trip,

I live in a Denver CO suburb and am a collector of old cars. For a number of years I have entertained the notion of a cross country trip on primarily two lane roads in one of my 40+ year old Lotus cars. Call it a bit of a nostalgic recapturing of the simpler times of the past. As I get older, I realize that doing is better than having, and memories are the best things we create. I thought that using a Lotus as the tool would add some uncertainty to the process, though it would also add the feel of what our parents and grandparents would have experienced in their travels and, I’m sure will provide stories for future winter nights. I selected US 50 as the perfect combination of a reasonably direct route and predominately a two-lane road where possible.

The start point would be Point Lobos, at the west end of Golden Gate Park in San Francisco where the road is close enough to the ocean that one could dip a toe into it and walk to the car still wet. The ending point; Ocean City, Maryland, a town whose name says all it needs to say. If I carried that shoe dipped into the Pacific in a sealed bag, I could don it and repeat the feat, symbolically mixing the water of the two oceans. Then from Ocean City, MD it is but a short hop to the planned gathering of Lotus owners at Gettysburg in October. Perfect…

Then got a call from some Lotus friends who wanted to join me, so now we have two old Lotus cars to go across the country!

I have planned the route stops pretty well for 250 -300 miles a day and have some great Americana stops planned (Bent's Fort in CO, the Tallgrass Prairie in Kansas, Gateway Arch) but I am wondering what stops would show these two Brits the diversity of the American landscape between St. Louis and Washington, DC. Can you suggest some must see sights along the way?

Thanks,

Ross

PS. Next year (2011) the Great River Road and in 2012 Border to Border. What a great book for daydreaming and planning.


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Hello Ross --

Thank you for writing in to Road Trip USA, and I hope I can help you make this a great trip.

You've made a good start by choosing US50 -- that is my favorite cross-country route

(I live near the west end, almost within sight of Pt Lobos / Lands End -- which is a fantastic spot to kick off a trip! For a photo opportunity, drive over near the Palace of the Legion of Honor -- the original west end of the legendary Lincoln Highway -- and pose with the car along El Camino del Mar, in front of the Golden Gate Bridge).

The rest of the route across California is not US50's best stretch, but the run around Lake Tahoe more than makes up for all the urban/suburban/exurban sprawl.

Are you doing the "Loneliest Road" across Nevada? That is a great run (but not for the mechanically fearful -- it's a good 100 miles between services.). Driving a vintage British automobile is an act of bravery, and will certainly give you increased respect for pioneers and Pony Express riders who went here before you.

:-)

OK, onto your question: good stops between StL and Wash DC. One place you'll simply _have_ to take your visiting Brits is the Vincennes Monument in the eponymous Indiana town, along the Wabash River. The town is all-American (small, quaint and dusty...), but the Revolutionary War history, and the huge memorial itself, is significant.

I have a neat old postcard image, and a little of the story, in my Road Trip USA book -- on page 710.

For a change of pace, and yet more historic interest, think about staying the night in the magnificent and nearby West Baden Springs hotel -- a grand old palace where Al Capone used to hold court. It has been well restored, and is part of a small casino. (If you are a basketball fan, Larry Bird's hometown, French Lick, is next door.)

Here's a URL -- and if you stay, let me know what you think!

Heading east, if any of your travel partners are fans of whiskey (bourbon actually) , I'd recommend a detour off US50 south into Kentucky (Louisville is a very pleasant mid-sized city).

Cincinnati has some interesting places (and there may be some "Oktoberfest action, thinking of all the German heritage hereabouts), and across Ohio are yet more intriguing stops -- I like the many ancient and enigmatic Native American mounds, as preserved at Mound City / Hopewell Culture National Park, near the blue-collar town of Chillicothe.

Coming in toward DC, you have one last great stop: the quaint town of Winchester VA, the "preserved in amber" small town where Patsy Cline grew up. And on the outskirts of DC are Manassas battlefield and the somber green of Arlington cemetery -- both of them moving, beautiful and thought-provoking spots.

Hope these ideas help you make the trip a memorable one -- please send me some pictures of your adventure.

Happy Trails,


Jamie Jensen
--
Road Trip USA

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Solo Woman -- Six-Week Road Trip ?

Hi Mr Road Trip !

I just stumbled across your site and looks like an awesome resource for both where to go and how to do it. I really liked the plan one reader had to travel with a bike so he could cycle around at each location. I myself am planning a road trip of about six weeks in June and July, originating in Washington DC and ending in New York. I’d like to see “all four corners” of the country, and a lot in between, so I’m looking at doing the Oregon Trail, the Pacific Coast, the Southern Pacific and the Atlantic Coast routes (plus the northern part of the Appalachian route to take me up through New England and back down to NYC).

I’ve got a couple of inter-related questions about where to stay along the way. I would love to find cheap lodgings, but I’ll be a 25-year old woman traveling alone and I’d like to stay safe – what restrictions, if any, does that place on my lodgings? If camping grounds are safe and plentiful along my route, I would definitely invest in a decent tent. But I know next to nothing about this – are some camping grounds guarded overnight? How safe are they generally? Other cheap lodgings options I’ve thought of include using couchsurfing.com to find free places to stay in cities (this seems relatively safe because the couch-offerers get rated by previous couch-surfers), but I’d like to spend a fair amount of time in rural areas too. I assume that roadside motels are generally safe – are there any downsides to popping into your average rural roadside motel? As you suggested to another reader, I would consider buying a camper if I could find one for under $4-5K, but I’m curious about where I could park it at nights and whether you think it’s a safe thing for a young woman traveling alone to do. And are there any options that I’ve overlooked?

I’m not usually someone who’s overly concerned with safety, but I need to convince my family and my boyfriend that they don’t need to worry about me while I do this trip alone.

Thank you so much for this site!


Best,

Sally


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Hi Sally --

Thanks for writing in to Road Trip USA. I have to say I am impressed by your plans and adventurous spirit, and will do anything I can do to reassure that your trip will be a great experience. Camping is definitely a great way to travel -- not only is it less expensive, but it lets you wake up in much prettier places (and helps avoid the temptation of watching too much cable TV in a motel room, which for me is both tempting and depressing.)

I am glad you like the website, and hope you get a chance to check out my Road Trip USA book, which has a lot more info and ideas (and pictures, too!)

To give you some specific responses, in my experience roadside motels are indeed safe and pleasant -- the ones you want to avoid usually look like places you want to avoid (which is why I strongly suggest travelers check out their potential accommodations while the sun is still shining, well before you start feeling desperate to find a place to sleep.) To my mind, motels that advertise rates by the month are often less salubrious -- and wherever you go, by all means ask to see specific rooms and get a feel for the bathrooms (and the proprietors) before you hand over the cash.

In general to save money and improve your chance for nice experiences, I would avoid bigger cities as much as possible in favor of small towns, rural areas, parks and forests, and wide open spaces.

I have never tried the couchsurfing mode -- but I definitely suggest you invest in a tent and a good air mattress (and maybe an ice chest and small butane stove). Also, look into youth hostels -- esp the ones run by the non-profit Hosteling International organization; there are 120 of these in 35 states (I'm reading from the website here...) -- and these cost around $25 a night, and may help you meet some like-minded fellow travelers.

Here's the HI Hostels URL: http://www.hihostels.com/dba/country-US.en.htm?himap=Y

I wouldn't really recommend you buy a camper, at least until you find out how you like to travel (And $4000 will rent a lot of motel rooms!) I like being outdoors, and have a camper myself, but usually end up sleeping outside in my tent -- the air is fresher, for sure. Alternating some nights tent camping with a few motel stays is a reasonable balance.

Before you set off on this six-week odyssey, I'd suggest you try some shorter trips, to learn how to pack / unpack and generally get in the road tripping spirit -- a couple long weekends will be good training for your summer marathon!

Also, for your big trip think about encouraging a few friends and / or family members to come meet you in places along the way -- this will help you establish an itinerary, and will break up the solitude (six weeks is a long time to be on your own.)

OK, these are some thoughts -- hope they help you make the trip a great one!

Drop me a line and let me know what you get up to.

Happy Trails,


Jamie Jensen
---
Road Trip USA

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Pacific Northwest Road Trip



Dear Jamie,

What a great idea! A free and personalized personalised travel advice by the author of the nicest looking travel book we've found !

Gladly we take this opportunity for a trip from Amsterdam, Netherlands, to the USA. We will arrive in Portland, Oregon and the first days of our stay will be dedicated to visiting some relatives who live in Halsey, Oregon. Then we have about 14 days to drive to Denver for the flight home. What would be the nicest trip to make in a rented car, sleeping in hotels and motels?

We are 50+, a party of 3 or 4.

Thank you for your time,

yours truly,

Elisabeth


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Hallo Elisabeth --

Thank you for writing in to Road Trip USA, and I am pleased you like the look of my book. It has certainly been fun to pull together, and I hope it helps you plan a great trip!

Portland is a great place to start your visit -- people say it is the most civilized and "European" of American cities, because it actually has a thriving center, and a functioning public transit system, too.

Between Portland and Denver, however, there are simply too many great possibilities for me to decide what you should do. :-)

You can see Yellowstone National Park, one of the real wonders of the world, with steaming geysers, spectacular canyons, and abundant wildlife (bison, wolves, bears and more!). And if you like the outdoors, there are dozens of other spectacular parks in the northwestern US -- in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana -- all of them unforgettable.

Besides Portland, there are other great cities -- Seattle and San Francisco to name two -- and many pleasant smaller towns. I like Astoria Oregon, west of Portland; Mendocino (seen in the photo) above and Arcata in northern California; and Port Townsend in northwest Washington.

All of these towns are fantastic stops for a couple of days, with nice hotels, good restaurants, and a wide variety of activities to enjoy. And the drives between them are very enjoyable and scenic, too!

Nearer to Denver, there are some fabulous parks in central Utah (100s and 100s of miles of redrock sandstone deserts, canyons and monoliths in national parks at Arches, Capitol Reef and Canyonlands and more). And Colorado has more of the same -- amazing landscapes, nice towns (I like Crested Butte, off my US-50 / Loneliest Road route on page 682 of the current edition). An hour from Denver, the town of Boulder, which alas I don't cover in my book, is also "cool" and popular and enjoyable.

A rented car, staying at hotels/ motels -- all sounds great! If you do want to visit the national parks, start trying to make arrangements for your lodgings as soon as you can, but in the other places you should be able to find nice lodgings in May without much hassle. If you haven't been to the US before, I think you will find it an eye-opening experience -- the USA is so BIG and wide (and occasionally even handsome!).

I hope you enjoy getting to know Road Trip USA, and that you have a great trip.

Happy Trails -- heb een goede reis



Jamie Jensen
---
Road Trip USA

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Mother + Daughter Road Trip



Hi there Road Trip USA --

My 20 year old daughter will return to school in late Aug. 2010 after a gap year.

We have always talked about taking a mom and daughter cross country trip.

From a timing standpoint I think we could have a couple of weeks in early August.

We live in NC - would love to drive somewhere and fly home. We have traveled a good bit and are looking for the journey not the destination so to speak.

Am ordering your book but cannot sleep - thus the early morning email.

Thanks,

Chris


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Hello Chris Baker --

Thank you for writing in to Road Trip USA.

A two-week road trip could take you across the country, or to just about any place in the USA you or your daughter has ever wanted to see. Summer is great time to be on the road - the days are long, so yo can get some miles under your belt and still have time to enjoy the places you pass thru. As you suggest, enjoying the journey is a great approach, especially for a trip that sounds like such a wonderful chance for you and your daughter to connect with each other.

Trying to decide _where_ to go is always a challenge, so think about what you like -- quaint towns?? Spectacular scenery? Active recreation or fine dining?? All these things are surprisingly available, once you start looking.

I have a huge variety of suggestions in my Road Trip USA book, which I think is more fun to ponder than the website, so I hope you have got your hands on a copy and that it helps you get started. Then, if you like, feel free to write me again and give me more some more direction about your likes and dislikes, then I'll try to come up with specific routes and other possibilities.

Happy Trails,


Jamie Jensen
--
Road Trip USA

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Labels:

All Around the USA

Hi Jamie.

My friends and I are discussing a full out cross country road trip for this summer.
Basically our trip would start from Pennsylvania and head across the northern US. We want to end up in Seattle, go down the Pacific Coast, and then back across the southern US before ending up back at home in PA.

I have no clue where to even start with planning and any advice you could give would be a HUGE help.

Thanks So Much!

Hannah


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Hi Hannah --

Many thanks for writing in to Road Trip USA. A cross-country road trip is a great idea, and the best thing about it is that you can make it up as you go along -- so don't worry too much about planning everything out in advance.

As far as deciding upon what to see and do, I'd suggest you pick up a copy of my Road Trip USA book (which has a lot more ideas and info than I've squeezed up on the website!), then start marking up a road map (or better yet, a road atlas with as much detail as possible) to highlight all the places that appeal to you and your friends.

Go hang out in a library or bookstore, and check out all the dozens of specialized travel guides out there -- there are books that will take you to artsy small towns, minor league baseball games, scenic spots and historic sights -- all of which I include in Road Trip USA, too.

Plan to drop by and visit old friends, or friends of friends, or re-connect with distant family members -- knowing locals is a great way to insure fun (not to mention your savings on accommodations!)

Also look into lodging at some of the many youth hostels around the USA -- the are great options for all travelers, especially the young (and young-at-heart!)

Seattle is great destination -- as is the whole West Coast, from the Olympic National Park south to LA, and a cross-country round trip would give you an unforgettable sense of just how huge and diverse this country is.

Have fun with the research, then go out and enjoy the ride.

Happy Trails,



Jamie Jensen
--
** Road Trip USA -- on sale now **

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RVs on old roads ?



Hi Jamie,

What a fantastic website! I’m awaiting your book’s arrival from Amazon.

Since I was a spotty 13 year old I’ve dreamed of getting a Winnebago and travelling around the USA for a month. (my dream originally included Michael J Fox, but, I guess the hubby and kids will do!).

Just wondering if the roads you are suggesting are OK for a 30ft motor home?

Having a dream is well and good, but if you can’t actually get anywhere, it’s not that practical!

Many thanks,

Sarah from Yorkshire


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Dear Sarah --

Many thanks to you for writing in to Road Trip USA -- I hope I can do a little something to help you make your long-dreamt-of trip a great success...

With only a couple of possible exceptions, all the roads I recommend in Road Trip USA are fine for RVs -- the only small print might be in New England, where a couple of my detours involve crossing over 300-year-old covered bridges.

And all the roads in Road Trip USA are wide and well maintained, too -- even though they are officially "secondary" roads, almost all of them way bigger than any UK "B Roads" for sure -- but they are more scenic and enjoyable to explore than the mainline US freeways, aka Interstates.

Hope by now you have got your hands on my book, and if you have any further travel questions, please feel free to write me again.

Happy Trails,


Jamie Jensen
---
Road Trip USA

===>>>>>>

PS: The picture above is a mini-RV I saw parked along the Loneliest Road in Nevada. Sleeps 2, and gets 25 mpg! (Actually, I doubt it even moves...)

:-)

Motor-Biking around the USA



Hey Road Trip !

Jamie, your website is excellent.

We are coming to the US in early August, we are going to buy two sports motorcycles in Monterey then ride across and back – Salt Lake City, Mt Rushmore, across to Chicago ending in Niagara Falls (maybe New York -- outskirts not city).

Then down to Indianapolis, North Carolina (Dragon's Tail Ride) then Nashville, Memphis, and onto Route 66 through Oklahoma City, Albuquerque, Vegas, and back to Monterey via LA.

We are unsure about fuel seeing as these bikes tend to need a top up after 200kms and also whether accommodation is readily available given that it’s the summer months. Do you have any advice of this?

Regards

Sandra


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Hi Sandra --

Thanks for writing in to Road Trip USA -- and glad you like the website. (And I hope you'll check out my Road Trip USA book -- which has even more info and images and ideas!)

Your trip sounds very adventurous, and I think you'll find fuel and lodging are pretty much available everywhere -- America is dependent on cars and trucks (and bikes!), so gas stations are abundant, even along the smaller roads that I recommend in Road Trip USA.

One thing I would suggest is that you aim to find your nightly motel or hotel (or campground?) before sun-down, however -- which I suspect you'd want to do for visibility and safety sake, anyway. Even in summer, you can usually find a clean and comfy room at some family-run motel, including a few very characterful / classic ones (like the one in the picture above -- the Wigwam Motel on RT66 in Holbrook AZ!)

Rather than ride at night, try to get an earlier start - you've got a lot of miles to cover, judging from your itinerary. The Dragon's Tail is an unforgettable road! Another great road you haven't mentioned is the Going-to-the-Sun road, winding over the Rockies across beautiful Glacier National Park in gorgeous western Montana -- see if you can veer north and add that trip to your plans.

Thanks again for writing, and hope this helps a little -- please fell free to write me again as you get closer to setting off.

Happy Trails,



Jamie Jensen
---
Road Trip USA

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3-week cross-country / NYC to LA via the Deep South and ?



Hi Jamie,

First, let me say that I love your website and am looking forward to purchasing your book and getting some advice. I currently live in NYC and am seriously considering a move cross-country to California (Southern California, preferably).

The tentative plan is to leave NYC toward the end of August or early Sept. and drive cross country for 2 - 3 weeks before arriving in Cali. I'm naturally drawn to the Southern Pacific route, but am open to your suggestions.

Ideally, I'd like to pick-up / drop-off friends at different airports along the way so they can share in the journey with me, but at the moment not sure how many stops I'd be making. I'd like to finalize my preferred route first, then I can offer it up to my friends and see who's interested in joining me where.

This is my first road trip like this so I'm looking for some advice on the following:

- best route to take
- how much time is needed to explore each new place and how much time in total I should factor in
- your thoughts on picking up friends along the way
- best way to travel (i.e. drive the entire way, take a boat, short local flights, etc.)

I was considering purchasing a new car on the East Coast (possibly a Ford Escape hybrid) and heading across with it but curious to hear your input.

I can't wait to absorb all of the different cultures, flavors, foods, music, sights, etc. that I will encounter along the way.

I think that about covers it for now. I look forward to hearing back from you soon.

Thanks again and keep up the great work you're doing. It's very helpful!

Many thanks,

Stacy

====>>>>

Hi Stacy --

Thanks for writing in to Road Trip USA and sorry it took me a while to reply -- hope you are still planning to take the trip.

In late summer, I think parts of the Southern Pacific route (which includes 1000 miles of Texas, plus the "Valley of the Sun" in Arizona) could be too hot for fun -- 100 degree sunny days may sound fun after all the rain you've been having "Back East", but driving day after day across hot dry dusty plains gets old fast.

My main suggestion would be to combine a variety of my Road Trip USA routes so you can go where you want to go -- down to Mississippi or Memphis (for a blues bash follow by some New Orleans adventure?), then maybe following a stretch of Route 66 across Oklahoma for some classic roadside Americana (and maybe a rodeo?), then heading up into the mountains to be astounded by the western National Parks -- like Yellowstone, Zion and the Grand Canyon.

Then maybe you can come in to the Golden State via the "Loneliest Road," across the wide-open deserts of Nevada before running past the alpine beauty of Lake Tahoe and on via San Francisco and Big Sur to southern California.

About your idea of meeting friends along the way, I myself frequently do this to break up the solitude of madcap solo travels. Rendezvous-ing (?) along the way is a great idea -- this will add variety and "change of pace" to your trip, and help you alter your travel themes from place to place. (Meet a friends who likes to eat for your New Orleans trip, and another who likes to hike when you are in Yellowstone...)

Involving other people could also help you determine the route -- which will inevitably turn out to be a random compilation anyway, so you may as well get used to going with the flow and embrace some travel "serendipity," which is a key to reaching Road Trip nirvana....

Depending on your travel companions and personal preferences, making a few loop trips might be good too -- flying between say, NYC and Memphis and starting a tour there, then hopping west to Salt Lake City or Denver to meet a friend for Round 2, then making a final jump west to SF or LA to explore California. Flexibility is the key, and renting different cars in different regions gives you more options than buying one for the whole trip.

So, there you have a variety of ideas to contemplate while planning this adventure -- please feel free to write in again as your plans take shape, and let us know what you get up to out there "on the road"!.

Happy Trails,


Jamie Jensen
---
Road Trip USA

=====>>>>>>

Atlantic Coast summer fun



Hi Road Trip,

Me and my partner are planning on coming over from England to the States in Summer 2011.I know it sounds pretty far away but trying to get things organised now.
We'll be flying into JFK and spending two weeks driving down to Miami. We know along the way we want to stop off in Philly, Washington, Savannah and Jacksonville - we pretty much have Florida sorted with trips to Tampa and Key West before heading back up to Miami.

However between Washington and Savannah we are a little stuck. As we will be doing alot of beaches in Florida we aren't really looking at much coast stuff in between. We're looking for either scenic towns or under-rated places, ie: ones where people wouldn't necessarily think of heading. We'd also like to visit a typically American town, we heard something about Dillon 'South of the Border,' do you know anything about this?

Any guidance would be great thanks,

Steph :-)


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Hi Steph --

Thanks for writing in to Road Trip USA -- you are quite the forward-planner! Two weeks down the East Coast should be plenty of time to explore and find the things you're looking for. I don't cover Philly in my Road Trip USA books (though it is a fascinating city, with tons of history and character and excellent museums), but I do cover Savannah and Key West, and the whole coastal route in a new book (out this month!) on the Atlantic Coast. On Sale at Amazon Co UK for under £5!!

Such a deal! :-)

I also cover Washington DC on the website and in my "big book" under US50, my "Loneliest Road" route. DC is a great place to learn about and experience the USA -- but it can be very hot and very humid in the summer time. Smaller towns and other cities you might enjoy near the coast include Cape May NJ, Rehoboth DE (a popular summer escape from DC), Richmond VA and what they call the historic triangle down to Colonial Williamsburg; Ocracoke and Cape Hatteras, in North Carolina; and the twin Beiaforts in north and South Carolina, and of course Charleston (which is very pretty, and a slightly "posher" version of Savannah GA.) None of these is a really a "beach town" like their Florida cousins -- they are a completely different species. Further inland, the town of Charlottesville VA is also well worth a look -- I cover this under the "Appalachian Trail" in my Road Trip USA routes and book -- great fun to explore, and full of history, natural beauty and lively "college town" culture.

South of the Border, however, isn't really in this league -- it is more like a giant motorway service station, which lots of kitschy amusements and souvenir stands; good for a break if you are racing down I-95, but not really a town or even a proper "destination" by any stretch of the imagination.

Enjoy the trip-planing, and Happy Trails,



Jamie Jensen
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Road Trip USA

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PS: The picture above is of the Lollipop Motel in Wildwood NJ -- which along with neighboring Cape May makes a great stop between NYC and Philly!

Long and lesisurely West Coast road trip


Dear Jamie,

Firstly may I thank you for your book which has formed the basis for our California Trip.And now may I give you a little background information.

I'm Richard (a young 60) and my girlfriend is Sue(56) and together we are planning a five week tour of California:in fact we bought two return tickets to San Francisco yesterday.Sorry I should have explained we're English.We will be in California during the months of April and May and we would like to travel the Pacific Highway,the east side of the state and any interesting places in between.We love music,photography and are interested in meeting people and discovering the "real America".

Given San Francisco as our starting/ending point we have considered a loop,a figure of eight but to be honest we don't know which way to go.Maybe it doesn't matter but I would be very interested to hear your views.
A few other questions if I may:
* Is five weeks long enough for a leisurely road trip?
* Should the time of year affect our chosen route?
* Any thoughts on a good choice of hire car?
* Should we cross over into Oregon and Mexico (if so where?)
* My girlfriend would like to visit Las Vegas - good idea/bad idea?
*Any suggestions for smaller towns to stay for a day or two?
* I love westerns should we make the effort to see Monument Valley?
* Can I live on seafood,salad and fruit in California?

Some dumb questions maybe but any advice you can offer would be most appreciated.Congratulations on the excellent service you provide for people planning road trips. Believe me we are excited.

Best wishes and thank you,

Richard


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Dear Richard --

Many thanks for your message -- and it sounds like you've got a great trip ahead of you. April and May are great times to travel in California, and 5 weeks is plenty of time to do the things you describe, without feeling pressured or stressed.

And you will have no trouble keeping on a diet of seafood, salad and fruit -- these are all things which California produces and enjoys in abundance.

San Francisco makes a great starting / finish point, or base camp for your trip. You won't need a car in SF -- it is one of the few places in the western US where you can rely on public transport to get around (and in fact it is compact enough that walking is the best way to explore). And once you do decide to hit the road, I have found the best deals are with the biggest companies (Hertz, Avis, etc), picking up and dropping off the hire car at the airport. It is worth searching around for deals -- the collapse of the US car industry seems to have caused some unexpected complications in the car rental business, and rates vary tremendously (the same car can cost anything from $200 to $2000 a week for the same car, depending on details.) In my experience a "compact" car in America is luxury by English standards -- you'll get 4-doors, air-conditioning (and usually automatic transmissions, whether you want it or not).

I think that's covered some of your questions -- now onto the rest:

About Oregon, I'd say yes -- go! (if the weather looks promising), but Oregon is a 500-mile drive north from San Francisco. With some lovely stops on the way (such as Mendocino, and the giant redwood forests near Eureka), the Oregon coast is very pretty, and Portland is a nice city -- one good thing about taking a road trip is that you have more flexibility, and can go where and when you want. And April / May is not yet "peak travel" time, because families have their kids in school, so you should be able to find rooms wherever you go.

Mentioning accommodations makes me think of something -- in contrast to some I've seen in the UK, "bed-and-breakfast" in California is very nice indeed, allowing you to stay in comfortable landmark houses and meet locals and fellow visitors; B&B in California makes a very nice alternative to the generally anodyne hotel/motel experience, and is often quite luxurious.

(I should have said -- I am married to a Yorkshire lass, and have spent 10 years off and on living in England -- the first book I ever wrote was the Rough Guide to California, which I think is a useful companion to my Road Trip USA guide... All of which is to say I have had a lot of experience introducing "Brits" to my native land... )

Here is a directory of nice Calif B&Bs, to give you an idea: http://www.bbonline.com/ca/index.html


Back to your questions -- Mexico is a wonderful country, but the best parts of Mexico are nowhere near California. Quite the opposite, unfortunately -- Tijuana, the main border town, is scary, disturbing and violent... not really my idea of "fun".... The same (and worse!) is true most of the border areas.

Las Vegas, on the other hand, can be a blast - it is overwhelming, crass, commercial, crazy, sexy, seedy and all that, but is also truly one-of-a-kind (fortunately, some might say...). You could hop a plane from SF and be in Las Vegas in an hour -- or make it part of a grand circle drive, maybe even adding on a drive thru the amazing "Canyonlands" of Utah and Arizona (inc Monument Valley and the Grand Canyon, both of which are spectacular and well worth visiting. ).

Maybe you could do Vegas / Monument Valley etc midway thru your trip -- flying in then getting a car for a week-log tour?

If you do Vegas by road, you ought to get there via Yosemite and Lake Tahoe, and of course Death Valley -- these are all on the way.

And you also mention the eastern sections of California: the area along Hwy-395, thru what is known as the Owens Valley, is un-hyped but gorgeous. Towns like Independence and Lone Pine are still small and quaint, sitting at the foot of 14,000-foot peaks of the Sierra Nevada (memorably photographed by Ansel Adams.)

Another photography mecca is the town of Carmel, south of San Francisco, at the start of what is known as Big Sur -- the amazing coastline of central California. Edward Weston worked here for decades, and you can see the same places he saw and photographed - there are also many great galleries in Carmel (and many awful ones, too)

Besides photography, you also mentioned having an interest in smaller towns -- some of my favorites are Sonoma in the "Wine Country", an hour or so from SF, then Mendocino and Arcata further north (mentioned above); and Monterey, Carmel and San Luis Obispo (near Hearst Castle) in the "middle" of the state, and Santa Barbara in the south.

Los Angeles is HUGE and crazy ( I am from there, and it still makes me nuts...), but as you mention a fondness for Westerns I strongly suggest you brave LA just to explore the amazing collections of the Gene Autry Museum (URL is http://theautry.org/exhibitions/imagination )

And if you want a tropical escape, consider Catalina Island, 25 miles offshore -- you may be able to stay overnight in Zane Grey's old house. (I haven't been to Catalina for a _long_ time, but it is magical, for sure.

San Diego is also very pretty (esp the area around La Jolla, on the coast north of downtown), and has a great zoo and a fun "Sea World" -- but to my mind it's best for kids, really.

I feel like I could go on forever with this -- compared to most people, you have all the time in the world to do this trip, and I am sure you will find all sorts of wonderful places to appreciate and enjoy. Hope this note, and my book, helps point you toward some memorable experiences.

Happy Trails,


Jamie Jensen
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Road Trip USA

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