Mar-17-2015 06:53 AM
May-11-2015 11:17 AM
Jim102 wrote:
Well,
We delayed the trip and will be leaving his coming Sat 5/16. Although looking at I80 today there is snow, ice and black ice....
Is it winter all the time there? 🙂
Jim
May-10-2015 01:16 PM
Apr-04-2015 10:46 AM
Mar-27-2015 10:22 AM
Mar-27-2015 06:52 AM
Mar-25-2015 07:03 PM
Mar-25-2015 04:17 PM
Jim102 wrote:Well . . . my son once played a soccer game in a Memorial Day weekend tournament the morning after a nighttime snowstorm hit Denver. And a few years ago, my wife and I flew to Albuquerque in mid-April and left the airport in our rental car in a snowstorm.
I am still worried about the trip from Ft.Collins to Utah....Looking at it now there is 50 mile an hour winds and 3 inches of snow coming....How long does this go on?? Jim
Mar-24-2015 09:03 PM
RCMAN46 wrote:Yeah, that's what I wasn't sure about. Sometimes, LATitude doesn't have as much influence on early spring weather as ALTitude. You can get a surprise almost anywhere between Big Bend and Yellowstone in April. Heck, we had a couple inches here on Friday, the first day of spring. And we're about 4 inches above sea level.. 🙂
Staying South then taking I15 North may not be any better than going across Wyoming.
Mar-24-2015 04:37 PM
Mar-24-2015 03:27 PM
Mar-23-2015 02:02 PM
JimFromJersey wrote:I agree with staying south if the weather is at all "iffy" on I-70 or I-80. However, I would suggest leaving I-40 at Albuquerque and heading NW on US 550 to Farmington. It's a very good road, generally 3- to 4-lane and no major climbs. Then head west to Shiprock and north on US 491/191 to Moab and I-70. US 191 joins US 6 at Green River, which will take you into Provo and I-15. You will have some hills/grades along US 6, but nothing you shouldn't be able to handle.
Have you considered going staying 'south' as you go west first, and then heading up I-15 to Ogden rather than going 'north' and then west? Looking at a map, it appears that you just need to figure out where to branch off and head north in order to connect to I-15 in Utah. It looks like you might be able to take 191 north from I-40 just inside of Arizona, that will head up to to Moab, and then you can jump on I-70 west, take it right to I-15 and then I-15 north. If I remember, I-15 south of SLC (or actually south of Odgen for that matter) is fairly flat and uneventful, compared to I-70 in Colorado, and I-80 and I-84 in western Wyoming and Utah.
Mar-22-2015 01:40 PM
Jim102 wrote:I-80 climbs through Wyoming from Laramie to Rock Springs and Evanston very gradually - there are no real long climbs to even consider. Once west of Evanston, though, there are two ways down in to Utah - Staying on I-80 down in to SLC, or branching off on I-84 which comes down just south of Ogden. Both of them have some really fun whoop-de-do's going downhill. Great in nice weather, could be more adventure than you plan for in snow or ice. I-80 is literally flat from the Quad Cities to Evanston, as far as I'm concerned. The ONLY real grade up or down is right around Laramie, and it's nothing at all. Your bigger problem will be the crosswinds coming down off the North Pole. They about blew us into Colorado a couple of times. 🙂
Rea/Mark,
How is US80 as far inclines etc?
Jim
Mar-22-2015 01:35 PM
Mar-22-2015 06:54 AM