After years of motorcycle camping with the guys in northern Ontario and Quebec, a couple years ago I bought an older GoldWing (1986) in order to take some longer trips with the Squeeze.
Last year we spent a week doing a lazy loop of Pennsylvania. This past summer we did a week long loop of Lake Huron with about 3 days chasing down ghost towns in the Upper peninsula of Michigan. Then a separate second week long trip down to Deals Gap including about 150-200 miles of the BRP on the way home.
We start with a vague idea of where we want to go, have picnic lunches at the plentiful and well appointed roadside rest areas, get road maps at the welcome center of each new state and around 5 or 6 pm we start looking for a cheap motel. After dinner I'll spread out the maps, enjoy cheap beer and plan a direction, possibly even a destination for the next day. We travel without GPS, a cellphone or laptop and average 500-600kms per day.
Roads in the US are amazing. When you don't pay for your nation's healthcare you can build crazy roads to nowhere and keep them in immaculate shape.
Next summer we plan to take a 2 week trip and are debating whether to go south again to the eastern seaboard states - maybe even get to the coast for a swim or to head south west to somewhere we havn't been.
Heading west I've considered seeing some of route 66 or maybe retracing bits of Robert Pirsigs route from "Zen and the art...." but here is my dilema: When I look at the map of the USA it becomes readily apparent just how big it is and how short two weeks is. Sure we could go to the Pacific but this is a motorcycle trip and I'd rather be trying to scrape the pegs in the twisties than play "dodge the retread remnants" on the interstate. The first day of the Deals gap trip was a 800km super slab day to get us close quickly which is OK as long as we can have fun from there on.
Since the west coast is just too far to be fun what about the mid west? Nebraska, Colorado or Texas all look doable in two weeks. Can anyone comment on the squigglyness (if that's not a word it should be) of roads going south west or west? Or suggest alternatives etc. I've got all winter to ponder so I'm open for suggestions.
Thanks in advance
(In the spirit of reciprocity if you're planning a trip to anywhere we've been feel free to enquire, I'd be glad to share)
Last year we spent a week doing a lazy loop of Pennsylvania. This past summer we did a week long loop of Lake Huron with about 3 days chasing down ghost towns in the Upper peninsula of Michigan. Then a separate second week long trip down to Deals Gap including about 150-200 miles of the BRP on the way home.
We start with a vague idea of where we want to go, have picnic lunches at the plentiful and well appointed roadside rest areas, get road maps at the welcome center of each new state and around 5 or 6 pm we start looking for a cheap motel. After dinner I'll spread out the maps, enjoy cheap beer and plan a direction, possibly even a destination for the next day. We travel without GPS, a cellphone or laptop and average 500-600kms per day.
Roads in the US are amazing. When you don't pay for your nation's healthcare you can build crazy roads to nowhere and keep them in immaculate shape.
Next summer we plan to take a 2 week trip and are debating whether to go south again to the eastern seaboard states - maybe even get to the coast for a swim or to head south west to somewhere we havn't been.
Heading west I've considered seeing some of route 66 or maybe retracing bits of Robert Pirsigs route from "Zen and the art...." but here is my dilema: When I look at the map of the USA it becomes readily apparent just how big it is and how short two weeks is. Sure we could go to the Pacific but this is a motorcycle trip and I'd rather be trying to scrape the pegs in the twisties than play "dodge the retread remnants" on the interstate. The first day of the Deals gap trip was a 800km super slab day to get us close quickly which is OK as long as we can have fun from there on.
Since the west coast is just too far to be fun what about the mid west? Nebraska, Colorado or Texas all look doable in two weeks. Can anyone comment on the squigglyness (if that's not a word it should be) of roads going south west or west? Or suggest alternatives etc. I've got all winter to ponder so I'm open for suggestions.
Thanks in advance
(In the spirit of reciprocity if you're planning a trip to anywhere we've been feel free to enquire, I'd be glad to share)
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