There are many routes to take if you’re going coast-to-coast in the U.S. You can take I-80 if you hate yourself. You can take Route 50 if you’ve never turned off the Golden Oldies station in your life. You can even route yourself over the Great Lakes if, actually, at the moment.
I myself have gone a few different ways, always routing myself either over or under the tallest parts of the Rockies. The last time I did the drive,.
BILLINGS, MT.—The bar we are in informs us, via loudspeaker, that “Power Hour” is soon to occur.…
The time before that I did , eating pie on the dry side of the Sierras and boiled peanuts in the rather more green Great Smoky Mountains. My car also . There was something very satisfying about sticking to one highway pretty much the whole way, at least one highway that took me past a lot of the more beautiful parts of the county.
I realize now that the Volkswagen I bought under an oak tree in Sacramento has been here to New…
It had somehow narrowed down to hours, how I was measuring time. It wasn’t a question of days or…
There are good routes for different times of the year, and better routes for different priorities. I think if you’re looking to eat your way across the country, you want to bend all the way south, routing yourself through New Orleans and the Southwest. The radio is going to be good, too. Sticking to staying up north isn’t bad, but I’d be willing to sacrifice moon-sized pancakes in Wisconsin so that I wouldn’t have to hunt for vegetables across the rest of corn country.
Since there are so many ways to get across the continental U.S., I think we should ask two questions:
How do you rank the major arterial interstates? I loved 40, as I said, but I’ve never spent much time below it on 10 or 20, as I was always afraid of getting stopped by Border Patrol. I have hated 80, but I think parts of it aren’t as bad as the reputation. Chunks of it in PA are borderline scenic!
The other question would be more general. Which route have you taken that you’ve enjoyed? What would you do again?