TravelMusings

5 Posts tagged with the road_trips tag
2

Backpacking/traveling around the world is a lot different now than it was just a few years ago. The last time I took an extended trip, nothing I needed was electronic.

 

Today, as I prepare for a few months in Asia, I’m bringing a laptop, cell phone, iPod and two digital cameras, not to mention the extra batteries, memory cards and cords that accompany each. It’s enough equipment to nearly fill my old daypack, which used to be the only bag I would need for months at a time.

 

No more.

 

To try to keep the weight and bulk of my equipment down, however, I’m considering leaving my regular laptop at home and picking up a netbook instead: in particular, the Dell Inspiron Mini 10. Why this netbook? Earlier this month, Dell released a version of the Mini 10 that includes a new GPS option, along with preloaded points of interest (POIs), which can make travel on the road a lot easier. I had the opportunity to preview it just before it launched.

 

dell-mini-10-colours.jpgmini10-gps-05.jpg

The product is best suited for individuals without smart phones or GPS devices already in their cars and who don’t plan on getting either product anytime soon. I like the fact that there is no need to enter your location information—Loki software from Skyhook Wireless automatically discovers your position. CoPilot Live, from ALK Technologies, provides the maps, turn-by-turn navigation and POIs, such as gas stations, hotels and restaurants—important needs when on a road trip.

 

Regions currently supported include the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy and Spain. While the GPS feature won’t help me on my Asia trip, it will come in handy for my other upcoming travels, which include at least two U.S. road trips. Plus, starting at 2.6 pounds, the machine is nearly half the weight of my 5-pound MacBook; and its 74-square-inch frame (35 percent smaller than my Mac) slides more easily into rucksack pockets. I also wouldn’t be as upset if it were lost, stolen or broken during my travels compared to my regular laptop.

 

The downside?

 

The POI information is, frankly, limited, with no key details about the places featured, such as type of restaurant, hours, prices or reviews. In addition, even though the Dell starting price is a very reasonable $349, by the time you include the GPS add-on ($70), required HD screen for the GPS to work ($50), 56WHr Lithium-Ion 6-cell battery for longer life ($35) and Microsoft Office Home & Student ($99), which I need for my work on the road, the price comes to $603, including a $50 “instant savings.” (For a colored or patterned shell, add another $40.) Once my new toy reached the $500 mark, it was no longer a nice extra to have; it was now an investment.

 

Still, I’m undecided. I’m all for “the lighter, the better” when it comes to travel. And since I no longer own a car and depend on rentals (or the generosity of family and friends for use of their autos), it would be nice to have a portable GPS system as part of my mobile office.

 

I leave in three weeks. Any reader thoughts/suggestions?

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Photo: cogdogblog

 

If you’re trying to shrink the carbon footprint of your summer vacation plans this year, you’ve probably run headlong into a number of tricky transportation issues. Drive or fly? Bus or train? Economy or first class? It’s enough to make a person want to take a trip to the nearest coal-fired power plant. Alone. In a Chinese-made Hummer.

 

Or you could download the new “Getting There Greener” guide released by the nonprofit Union of Concerned Scientists, which tackles many of the questions plaguing would-be ethical travelers. You can even download a handy spreadsheet that ranks various transportation choices from best to worst, depending on how many travelers are going and how far a distance they plan to cover.

 

To get you started, here are five tips for greener travel:

 

  1. Go Direct: Detours and stopovers use a lot of extra energy, so plan shorter, more direct routes.

  2. Stay Out of the Hot Seat: Flying economy averages half the carbon footprint of a seat in first or business class.

  3. Fly Solo: For single travelers and couples, a nonstop coach flight will usually burn less carbon than driving.

  4. Bus is Best: Travel by bus or motor coach is almost always greener than either driving (even a hybrid) or flying.

  5. Get a Trade-in: If the vehicle you own is a carbon hog, try renting a more efficient one for your journey.

 

What have you done to make your travel more green? Reply in our comments section, and take our travel poll.

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The fifth edition of Road Trip USA: Cross-Country Adventures on Americas Two-Lane Highways (Avalon Travel, April 2009; $29.95) is now out, just in time for summer travel. In addition to having the pleasure of interviewing author Jamie Jensen last week about his updated book, he shared his top tips for taking a family road trip.

 

Here’s what Jensen has to say about hitting the open road with young ones:

 

1) Break the trip up into manageable, sane segments, rather than try to cover 600 miles at once. It’s hard for most kids to sit still for long periods of time, so stop every 90 minutes or so to get out, stretch, have an ice cream, take a swim break or see an historic marker. It makes each day special and different.

 

2) Let everyone make decisions, including the kids, otherwise people will get frustrated. (Dads in the driver’s seat in particular need to learn this lesson.)

 

3) Use the child locks in rental cars. (Jensen says his brother had a proclivity toward opening the back door during family road trips, before there were such things as child locks on doors ...)

 

4) Have everyone use the Internet to research the trip. This lets family members learn about the destinations along the way and helps in planning itineraries. There might be sites, events or activities that the kids are excited about seeing, such as a minor league baseball game scheduled for the day you plan to pass through a destination. You can make these types of events themes for the day, or set them as a treat at the end of a day. (It’s not quite bribery, but it is effective.)

 

5) Use a GPS system, and let the kids program it. They’ll then be more aware of where they are and what’s coming up, plus it helps them to remember the places along the way. You can then download the route and map and have it as a memento after the trip.

 

Do you have a favorite family road trip tip? If so, share it here in our comment section or on the Jensen Q&A post for a chance to win the new edition of Road Trip USA. Individuals will automatically be entered into the drawing!

 

 

 

 

 

Giveaway rules:

 

 

  • Comments must be left by Monday, May 4, 2009, 5:00 p.m. Pacific time.

  • Only one entry per person.

  • Comments must include a name and valid e-mail address. Anonymous comments are not eligible for the giveaway.

  • To enter you must be a U.S. resident, age 18 years or older. Employees and vendors of TravelMuse, Inc. and their family members are not eligible to enter.

  • Winners will be picked randomly. The first winner will receive the fifth edition of Road Trip USA, valued at $29.95. The next two winners selected will receive either the Route 66 or Pacific Coast Highway pocket guide, valued at $9.95 each.

  • No substitutions including for cash are permitted.

  • Winners are responsible for any taxes and fees associated with receipt or use of a prize.

 

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14

Road trips are the quintessential American vacation experience. Who hasn’t been on one at least once in their lives? Growing up in a relatively rural area of Illinois (along a section of the old Route 66 no less), it was only natural that our annual summer vacations often were road trips through the Midwest. They were what I looked forward to more than anything else all year, since they meant a chance to get away from the usual, explore a new place and see how “other people” lived.

 

Jamie Jensen, a southern California native, also fell in love with road trips at a young age, and went on to write the excellent guidebook Road Trip USA: Cross Country Adventures on America’s Two-Lane Highways, (Avalon Travel, April 2009; $29.95) newly updated this month (its fifth edition). I had the pleasure of speaking with Jenson last week about the new book, his love of the open road and recommendations for those planning their own car getaway this summer.

 

(See the end of the Q&A section for information on our Road Trip USA book giveaway!)

 

Q&A

 

TravelMuse: It’s been more than 15 years since the first edition of your book was published. What inspired you to turn your road trips into a book?

 

Jamie Jensen: I was an L.A. boy and influenced by space age, 1950s architecture, and trained to be an architect. I used to write for travel guides about architectural tours, mostly in big cities, but it was the in-between places that caught my eye more. I appreciated the courthouse squares in Texas and soda fountains, but my editor wasn’t into it. While on a Route 66 trip, I bumped into a motorcycle tour of about 50 Scandinavians. They didn’t care about visiting art museums, they had that back home; all they wanted to see was America, the America of roadside motels, diners and talking to people in Oklahoma, That’s when I realized it wasn’t just me who was interested in this.

 

Then the second stage came during my research. I discovered the WPA travel guides—written in the 1930s before the interstate highways were created—which included driving tours of every state. They took me to wonderful places, and everything in the guides was still there. Nothing had changed. A lot of people wouldn’t know these places existed because they’re just zooming past.

 

TM: What’s new with this edition?

 

JJ: The old places are mostly still there, but trendy places tend to disappear. Earlier on, I was trying to be more comprehensive. What are the five hotels and the five places to eat … people can now find that online. I now give more attention to fewer but more specific places, and am more positive about saying that somewhere is the place to stay or eat and why.

 

I also include more about sites off the main roads and “worth the detour” sections. It’s been nice to fine-tune the book over the years and have ongoing relationship with people in these towns, who help keep me up-to-date.

 

TM: What has changed the most about the routes over the years?

 

JJ: What’s changed is that the people who lived back in the ‘50s heyday, especially along Route 66 who ran the old motels and diners and had stories to tell, have passed on. It’s sad. But there also are a lot of places that have been brought back to life by people who appreciate that era, and its traditional American food, neon signs, etc. It might not be so authentic anymore, but a more comfortable mattress may make up for any lack of authenticity.

 

I’ve also noticed that after 9/11, there’s been a rediscovery of America, a movement to see America first and not be embarrassed by that. There are people who have been to Thailand but not to Tennessee. There’s a lot of fun stuff in our own backyard, even if for just a day or two. Leaving home, even if just for 100 miles, lets you behave slightly differently. People will stop at roadside farm stands and talk to the farmer. People used to do that, then forgot how. It’s coming back together. It provides a different sense of what life is all about.

 

TM: Anything you miss that’s now gone with the changes?

 

JJ: The decline of local newspapers and radio stations. I used to love picking up the Wolfman Jack-equivalent on the local radio, and hear an actual person sitting there playing records or talking about high school football. Now its bland, pre-programmed stations playing modern country or Rush Limbaugh … it’s all the same everywhere. I’m hoping for a renaissance of local media.

 

TM: What are your thoughts on road trips, in terms of the environment?

 

JJ: It’s hard to say driving is a good thing, but compared to other alternatives, it seems good. When I travel, I take a bike with me and do longer stretches in the car, then when I get to a destination, I’ll stop and explore it on a bike. The ideal speed is about 2 miles per hour.

 

TM: Do you have a favorite 2-lane road/route featured in the book?

 

JJ: Going-to-the-Sun Road, named for an American Indian chief, which goes over the Rocky Mountains to Glacier National Park in Montana, that’s part of the Great Northern route. It was built in 1930s across what was then very wild country. It was recently improved and fixed up so you won’t fall off mountain. There are alpine meadows that are fantastic in the summer, beautiful flowers, glaciers; it’s really amazing.

 

TM: Any new routes you plan to explore?

 

JJ: You can get just about anywhere you want to without taking an interstate highway, and there are always new places to discover. Take Texas Hill Country—last spring I managed to make a trip. It’s beautiful country, which is not always obvious in Texas.

 

TM: Any places no longer worth going to or that people should check out now before the era is gone?

 

JJ: Elkhart, Indiana, was the RV capital of the world at one point. Nearly all have gone bankrupt, and there’s high unemployment. You get a sense of what it means to really have an economic downturn. There are those places that suffered in the 70s and 80s when the interstate highways expanded. Anyone who made it through those times is doing OK; I think the worst is over. But so much was lost.

 

Now there’s the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which has championed architecture, and people think this space-age stuff is kind of cool. The Route 66 movement helped add value to all that. A lot of individuals fought for it. If more people start traveling these roads and patronizing mom-and-pop diners and getting away from the Olive Gardens, that’s good. My quest is to get people to spend money in real places.

 

Extra: Read Jensen’s tips for planning a family road trip.

 

 

 

Book Giveaway!

 

Jensen’s publisher has given TravelMuse copies of the new edition, plus two new pocket guides—on the Route 66 and Pacific Coast Highway trips—for a book giveaway! To be eligible for one of the three books, all you have to do is add a comment on this post about your favorite road trip vacation or experience, or add a tip to our Family Road Trip Tips post. Winners will be randomly selected from the entrants. (TravelMuse employees and family members are excluded.)

 

May the best road trippers win!

 

 

 

 

 

Giveaway rules:

- Comments must be left by Monday, May 4, 2009, 5:00 p.m. Pacific time.

- Only one entry per person.

- Comments must include a name and valid e-mail address. Anonymous comments are not eligible for the giveaway.

- To enter you must be a U.S. resident, age 18 years or older. Employees and vendors of TravelMuse, Inc. and their family members are not eligible to enter.

- Winners will be picked randomly. The first winner will receive the fifth edition of Road Trip USA, valued at $29.95. The next two winners selected will receive either the Route 66 or Pacific Coast Highway pocket guide, valued at $9.95 each.

- No substitutions including for cash are permitted.

- Winners are responsible for any taxes and fees associated with receipt or use of a prize.

 

 

 

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You guys ever read “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty”?

 

Think all the way back now, back to your freshman year of high school—James Thurber's classic tale about a man whose daydreams take him away from his dull, everyday life?

 

Well, just call me Walter. Or Walterina? Walterna? What’s the feminine form of Walter? Oh, who cares.

 

I’ve been cooped up in my little house on the prairie since last week, following knee surgery. And by “cooped up,” I mean “trapped in my house with my husband, my mother, and two children who seems determined to find a way to lean on my bad leg.”

 

But! Friday Favorites to the rescue! I surfed the ol’ Interwebs for cool travel links, indulging my inner Walter Mitty. So where did I go? Read on, fellow travelers, and find out:

 

If anyone needed a laugh this week, it was me. I think the surgeon accidentally removed my sense of humor. But this hilarious post about one airline’s quest to use social media to recruit pilots cured me of my bad mood. – The Cranky Flier

 

Most people love March because it signifies the end of winter. Me? I love March because it means Peeps, those delicious marshmallow treats, will be all over the grocery stores. And, apparently, all over the world.Intelligent Travel

 

Because I’m a glass-half-empty (or is it completely drained?) kind of gal, I loved this round up of most disappointing travel experiences. What? Misery loves company. Want to come over? I didn’t think so. – TravelBlogs.com

 

Want to tame a 4-year-old hopped up on refined sugar? Give her your laptop and let her watch the cool slideshow that accompanies this piece on sled dogs in Montana. My daughter and I had a lovely little cuddle while we learned something new. – The New York Times

 

Spring means that summer is just around the bend (yay!), followed quickly by Road Trip Season (boo!). Take a look at the best gear for keeping the kids contained during that long drive to (insert annoying family obligation here). – Traveling Mamas

 

It’s time for me to take another pain pill and drool on my pillow for awhile. Got something you think we should read? Send it to us at editor AT travelmuse DOT com. Happy trails!

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