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  1. #46
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Port Macquarie
    Age
    55
    Posts
    648

    Default

    Alex,

    Hire a Winnebago and travel using the many, many parks setup specifically for travellers in Winnebagos. In my expereince they are clean, safe and easy to use and much cheaper than hotels or motels. I've stayed in parks opposite Disney in LA, in the middle of Vegas, next to Candlestick park in San Fran, San Diego, Pheonix and many more. I travelled through California, Arizona and Nevada over a six week period and it was great. Each night planned the trip for the next day or decided to stay another night where we were.

    The open road is great and met some interesting people in some of the off the beaten track spots we drove through and stayed at.

    Grand Canyon is great, Hoover Dam, Vegas. Be careful ordering ribs in Arizona as they are usually beef ribs and very large!!

    Our Winnebago had fridgefreezer, toilet, shower, microwave cooktop and oven although we mostly ordered out for pizza

    I also lived in a place called Salinas in California for a while which is near Monterey. If you happen to drive through drop in at the Penny Farthing English pub, my cousin owns it. Salinas is a short drive from Carmel, Monterey and a famous links golf course, so other stuff to see too.

    Above all get mobile so you can get out and about and off the beaten track.

    HH.
    Always look on the bright side...

  2. #47
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    Paignton. Devon. U.K.
    Posts
    1,611

    Default

    Alex.
    If hiring a car in Florida or other S.Eastern states be aware that they quite often restrict driving to some states only.. Whereas the northern states appear to let you drive anywhere in the USA.
    woody U.K.

    "Common looking people are the best in the world: that is the reason the Lord makes so many of them." ~ Abraham Lincoln

  3. #48
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Port Macquarie
    Age
    55
    Posts
    648

    Default

    Checkout this site for KOA campsites for RVs they're everywhere !!

    http://www.koa.com/where/usa.htm

    HH.
    Always look on the bright side...

  4. #49
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    Orange NSW
    Age
    75
    Posts
    0

    Default Do the Colorado plateau circuit

    I took my family to usa a couple of years ago for my son's wedding which was in St Paul. We started out in San Diego and flew early one morning to Las Vegas and picked up a Caddy, then headed off to the Grand Canyon, spent a very full day there then went and stayed the night in the Navajo area. Next day we travelled through Monument Valley (where many of John Wayne's westerns were filmed) finishing the day at Mesa Verde NP. Next day looked through the various old Indian communities before heading off for Moab. Stayed there for a couple of days to catch up, including much of a day at the Arches NP. This was a surreal experience as the day was over the century (in the old fashioned measure) but you could look out on the snow capped ranges over the way (part of the Rockies I think). From there we travelled to Bryce Canyon then to Zion NP and back to Las Vegas to catch a plane to St Paul.

    What was it like? I haven't seen anything to rival the Grand Canyon - much much bigger than the valleys in the Blue Mountains, but the smoke haze hung around all day so that the view wasn't as good as it could have been. The movie of someone flying through the canyon in an ultralight was great but the motel was abysmal. The Cameron Trading Post was extremely interesting, left a fair bit behind in exchange for a Navajo rug. The accommodation at Mesa Verde was very ordinary, but the ruins were well worth the look. The drive in bank at Moab has to be seen to be believed. The motel at Bryce Canyon was better than any of the preceding ones and the Canyon is fascinating, lots to see and all in a very small area, but I thought that Zion NP was the best of all of them - saved the best till last.

    interesting experience at the end - we arrived an hour late for our flight, but the plane was two hours late so we were OK. On the first take off there was a loud bang half way down the runway, so we went back to the terminal and waited - we waited on the plane for three hours with no A/C, no drinks, no food, and it was still over the hundred. Ended up getting to our hotel in St Paul at 4AM.

    Driving around was dead easy, once you get used to driving on the wrong side of the road. The interstate highways are fabulous - I would have liked to bring one or two of them home in place of the RTA goat tracks that we have. Be aware that there is no such thing as a roadside stopping place, you are supposed to go to a fast "food" joint and eat that stuff they call fast-food.

    The scenery was spectacular. Interesting to see so many variations on the theme of desert landscape within a 6 day drive - here you would have to drive for a month to see the same diversity of scenery - and you won't see anything like Bryce canyon anywhere in Australia.

    Because it is a big place and the well known spots are so far apart you will probably have to fly, which is a pity. Many of the airlines are bankrupt and the service shows that. All flight bookings go into a computer system which seems to be on the look out for overseas visitors flying on single journey tickets - they are picked out for the strip searches, intrusive baggage checks and general airport hassle. It really is more enjoyable if you can drive.

  5. #50
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Tallahassee FL USA
    Age
    82
    Posts
    0

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by W.Lill View Post
    ... Be aware that there is no such thing as a roadside stopping place, you are supposed to go to a fast "food" joint and eat that stuff they call fast-food.
    ...
    Many of the airlines are bankrupt and the service shows that. All flight bookings go into a computer system which seems to be on the look out for overseas visitors flying on single journey tickets - they are picked out for the strip searches, intrusive baggage checks and general airport hassle. It really is more enjoyable if you can drive.
    The fast "food" joints can be avoided. Near larger towns/cities, a venture of a few miles away from the interstate will reveal some actual restaurants. Nearby rest areas and tourist info stations (usually at state lines) often have stacks of brochures with local services. Research via internet can also help.

    In recent years, airport hassle has increased for all. I suppose overseas visitors might trigger more intensive inquiry, but not by much. No question it's more enjoyable to drive, especially if you're old enough to remember that air travel was pleasant once.

    Joe
    Of course truth is stranger than fiction.
    Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain

  6. #51
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    dixon
    Posts
    9

    Default

    Don't know if its been mentioned but Las Vegas, Nevada is all kinds of fun. There is so much to see. Free alcohol when you are in the casino's (well most of them). If you go during the week it is really cheap to stay there. Weekends can be very expensive though. Of all the places I've been this is my favorite place to visit. The hotel New York, New York has the craziest roller coaster I've every been on. You start in side the building then it goes outside upside down then it looks like you are going to plow into the street below. Circus Circus is a cheap place to stay and the have an indoor amusement park in case you have kids. I even enjoyed it at the age of 25.

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