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Road trip USA Nat'l parks
On Tue, 11 Oct 2011 22:59:46 +0100, Graham Harrison wrote:
"Panawe" wrote in message m... On Mon, 10 Oct 2011 15:25:06 +0100, Graham Harrison wrote: "Panawe" wrote in message m... Hi, Advice please. I am planning a road trip (fly-drive from UK and stay in hotels/motels) to the western US next year and I have a number of questions. I would like to go whale-watching and see Yosemite and Yellowstone Nat'l parks (and others if feasible). I don't like cities. I am planning on 14 days, is this long enough? Should I buy a package holiday or just book fly-drive and stay wherever I end up? If I book a package could someone recommend a good tour operator? What's the best time to do this? I was thinking of October 2012. Are there any hotels that I should not miss? Are there any events I shouldn't miss? Can someone recommend a book? Any possibility of an astronomy event, star-watching party? Thanks in advance, I realise I've asked a lot of questions. -- Panawe Yellowstone and Yosemite are probably 2 days drive apart and if the road over Touolmne in Yosemite has closed by then possibly 3 days so 14 days is doable but you're going to need to keep moving if you're going to do anything more than spend a night in each of them (which would be silly). I went to Yellowstone in September this year and previously in October a few years ago. Weather on both occasions was lovely but the week before we arrived in October we were told it had snowed and it has been known to snow in July (but unusual). Accommodation in and around ANY National Park is at a premium; book early and BOOK. You're also going to be in some of the least populated parts of the US where towns with motels I'd stay in can be 80/90 miles apart. Staying in the parks is an experience - expensive and sometimes surprisingly basic but I do it because it saves the hassle of driving in and out every day. In Yosemite THE hotel is the Awanhee. In Yellowstone there are 3 Old Faithful, Mammoth and Lake and I wouldn't like to pick one over the other. That's not to say I recommend any of those 4 - never stayed in any of them but visiting each is worthwhile. I like the Moon series of guidebooks but Lonely Planet or Rough Guide also work. A Rand McNally road atlas can be useful - Amazon sell them in the UK. Make sure you understand the scales - each page/state is different. I would investigate flying to San Francisco and back from Denver - both routes are operated non-stop. The fare will simply be half of each round trip. However, that means paying a one way fee for your car. I'd book a couple of nights in San Francisco to get over jet lag. I'm not a fan of cities but San Francisco is one that I like. Parking in San Francisco is like any city - bad and expensive. Book the car for the day you want to start driving not the day you arrive - even though you'll be a pedestrian it will also give you time to acclimatise to traffic on the wrong side. Public transport is pretty good. Make sure you visit Alactraz - book in advance. Have a read of their highway code http://dmv.ca.gov/pubs/hdbk/driver_handbook_toc.htm - there are some things we don't have. Go south to Monterrey (use highway 1 through Half Moon Bay) and see the aquarium and whales. Now head for Yosemite; you could go via Pinnacles. Next north to pick I-80 east as far as Well, Nevada. Go north to Twin Falls and on towards Sun Valley to turn right and make a stop at http://www.nps.gov/crmo/index.htm then on to Yellowstone. From Yellowstone I think I'd head south through Grand Teton and Jackson to I80 at Rock Springs, Rawlins then south to come over the Rocky Mountain NP for a last night in Boulder CO before flying home from Denver. You need a minimum of 2 nights in Yosemite and 3 in Yellowstone and that's an absolute minimum. In Yellowstone you need to get up early (like before dawn) to get into the prime wildlife spots when the animals are actually about and then go on to have breakfast. (That said THE way in/out of Yellowstone for me is the North East entrance through Cooke City and up to Billings). (Boulder is a small university city with a pedestrianised downtown. The path along Boulder Creek leads directly to the edge of the Flatirons. We stayed in the Quality Inn on Arapahoe which is within easy reach of both on foot. Visit the Chautauqua there if you have time). Hi, I'm blocking in the holiday. Here goes.... Hotel San Francisco 04/09/12 Hotel San Francisco 05/09/12 Hotel Monterey 06/09/12 Hotel Monterey 07/09/12 Hotel Yosemite 08/09/12 Hotel Yosemite 09/09/12 Hotel Yosemite 10/09/12 Hotel Twin Falls 11/09/12 Hotel Grand Teton 12/09/12 Hotel Grand Teton 13/09/12 Hotel Yellowstone 14/09/12 Hotel Yellowstone 15/09/12 Hotel Yellowstone 16/09/12 and back to San Fran over 3 days. What do you think? I need a route back from Yellowstone to west coast, around Crescent City, so I can use the coast road back to San Francisco. Thanks in advance. -- Panawe I'd say you're being far too optimistic if you think you're going to get from Yosemite to Twin Falls in a day. My feeling is that Winnemucca (or maybe Elko)Nevada is as far as you'll get (the road over Tuolumne is scenic, not quick) and you might then make Jackson the following night. There's no accommodation in Teton that I'm aware of so you need to stay in Jackson. Maybe simply pass through Teton en route from Jackson to Yellowstone. As for getting back to San Francisco I'd say Crescent City via CA1 (the coast road) to San Francisco needs 2 days - you can probably plan to catch the last flight from San Francisco if you stay no more than 100 miles north of San Francisco for your last night. However, that means you might glimpse (but not see) the blue of Crater Lake, miss Lava Tubes near Klamath Falls, will almost certainly miss Point Reyes and you'll have no chance to ride the Skunk Train from Fort Bragg (to name but a few sights). It all depends on how much time you want to spend in the car and how much out of it. My view is you're being much too optimistic for a 2 week trip. Yes, I'm sure you're right. I was trying to get an itinerary blocked out and then fiddle about with it (using the advice of yourself and others). I'm already thinking of extending the holiday to three weeks instead of two and I've ordered a couple of books (Lonely planet and Rough Guide) that will alter my thinking. Please don't think I've forgotten your original advice, I haven't, it's all very much a work in progress. Anyway, the planning is half the fun -- Panawe |
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