Plan our cross-country road trip!
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Where MUST we stop on a road trip from the Bay Area (CA) to Baltimore (MD)? My fiancee and I will get married in November, in California. Afterwards, we'll throw some junk in her car, and drive from there (the East Bay, just across from San Francisco) to Baltimore (where I live, and will be carrying her, against her will but alas, for the sake of love). She's got a fun car to drive (Acura TL -- it's an automatic, but I'm done giving her a hard time about that), and that's good, because I know she's going to make me do about 94-95% of the driving. I know we can just generically do the I-80 to I-70 thing all the way here, and that there's even some decent scenery along that path (mainly out west), but surely there's a more fun, more scenic way to do it? I'm open to being torn away from this "optimal" route. For instance, I'm already pretty sure I want to throw Chicago into the mix. St. Louis is good, too -- I have friends there who'll offer us free lodging, and it'll be good to see them after a while. But I've wondered about the beauty of Montana for the longest (hear good things about Glacier National Park!), though I've also heard Utah's natural beauty is not to be missed. Geography demands I pick one or the other, though. I've heard great things about the farthest northern reaches of Wisconsin and Michigan's UP. Idaho's supposed to be really pretty in parts. The Dakotas, from what I can tell, have an amazing, idiosyncratic beauty. (Me living in Baltimore, and her living in California, we'd actually find the "utterly mind-numbingly boring, flat" nature of the Great Plains to be an utterly fascinating change of pace.) I hear Central Nebraska is fascinating, in its own unique way. So, in any event, I'd love to hear some recommendations about how we can transform this otherwise mundane "let's haul the rest of your crap into our new home" trip into an adventure, in and of itself. Hey, we're already going to be raped on gas, to the extent that it'll COST as much as an exotic vacation, so I figure we might as well make the trip BE a destination in itself! FWIW, this will happen in November, just before Thanksgiving, so yeah -- certain parts of the continent might be kind of inhospitable, weather-wise. But let's assume otherwise, for the sake of argument. Many thanks, fellow travelers!
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Answer:
This'll sound stupid, but if you're in St. Louis roll down the bluff in front of the arch. It's amazing. The incline is just steep enough to allow you to feel out of control without being steep enough to break your neck, and all you see is groundGIANTFUCKINGARCHskyGIANTFUCKINGRIVER on a loop. I first did it as a kid on a school trip, and a few years back decided to check if it was as great an experience as an adult as it was when I was twelve and it was even better.
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Other answers
The most scenic part of a x-country trip I ever made was to zig-zag across Wyoming: US89 from Salt Lake City through http://www.byways.org/explore/byways/2001/places/3045/ to http://www.nps.gov/grte/, over http://www.cycletourist.com/Seattle_to_Boulder/Togwotee.html on US26 to Riverton, US 20 through http://reid.org/glenn/wyomingtrip/wyomingtrip-Pages/Image12.html to http://www.thermopolis.com/Attractions/Hot+Springs+State+Park.htm, US 16 through http://www.trails.com/tcatalog_trail.asp?trailid=XFA134-026 to Buffalo, where you can get back on the interstate 90. So, yeah, totally out of your way, but should be exciting in November! Seriously, if weather permits, stay off th Interstate as much as you can. Take the old US routes and let the spirit of the road move you.
TDIpod
Here's some http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&lr=lang_en&hl=en&msa=0&msid=104838974071973839921.00044346c63a3e7e63f41&ll=38.702659,-85.737305&spn=13.687391,23.466797&z=6 of a trip I am planning for a different time of year. Might help to visualize:Yellow: Amusement ParksOmaha: Lots of National Register of Historic PlacesKansas City: BBQMemphis & St. Louis: Music & FoodAppalachia might be nice that time of year, and doable even if you cut up to Chicago. If you do that you can certainly loop up through the Dakotas, Minnesota, or Wisconsin. For Montana you'd cut up at SLC and that's an easy few days of sightseeing. Depending on the weather you'd probably want to at least dip down to SD if going eastward to Chicago from MT.
rhizome
2nding Jackson, WY. Close to Yellowstone, too.
gnutron
I know you said you weren't optimizing the route, but I'd probably pick either Chicago or St. Louis. It's a 5 hour drive on the Interstate (7-9 on old 66, depending on the stops) between them, and you're not that much closer to your destination. Illinois is a long state. I'd totally pick Chicago, but, I don't have friends to see in STL.
hwyengr
I did this trap, but in reverse, Baltimore to SF. You have to see thehttp://www.nps.gov/badl/. Deserts never looked so good. The Rockies and Yellowstone were gorgeous. Along the way, you must eat at the local dive restaurants or bars. That's where all the good food is.
Brandon Blatcher
I think the most majestic scenery I've ever seen in the continental US is the Grand Tetons near Jackson Hole, WY, so I'd second that detour.
Taken Outtacontext
I live in Montana, and I would suggest Yellowstone over Glacier. Glacier is indeed fantastic, but Yellowstone is a place that everyone should explore. Glacier is a long drive north. Traveling out the east entrance of Yellowstone takes you to Cody, Wyoming and the fantastic Buffalo Bill Museum. Keep going east through Wyoming and you'll find yourself near Devil's Tower, which is a spectacular sight worth seeing. The Black Hills and Mt. Rushmore are in South Dakota just across the border. Deadwood, SD is a fun but touristy town with casinos and other attractions. (Kevin Costner owns a hotel/casino there and is seen there pretty often). The west has some boring drives, punctuated by incredible sights.
Fuzzy Skinner
It just occurred to me that I'll see the friends in STL a couple of weeks prior, at the wedding, anyway. It IS kind of out of the way if I'm going via Chicago (which I'd rather do anyway), and while I'd miss the chance to see whatever cool downtown lofty place they'll have by then, I guess I can live without. We'll either do this after the wedding (which is November 8), or right after flying back to CA for a friend's wedding on November 22. The challenge with the latter is getting back here in time for Thanksgiving, which will only be five days the friend's wedding . . . and I really don't want to rush this. We'll figure it out in due time, I suppose. Sigh . . . I hate this pressure of time . . . Anything interesting on the eastern half? Would you suggest routing through SE Ohio/West Virginia for the scenery, for instance? I've been through the eastern Ohio/sliver of WV/SW PA area before, and that can be kind of neat if you take non-Interstate alternates. But is the more southerly alternate more interesting?
CommonSense
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