Jul-09-2017 07:07 PM
Jul-11-2017 02:29 PM
AGC wrote:
I would love to take some of the suggested routes (i.e. RT36, RT50, etc.),
especially if it has a more scenic drive but
I don't have a lot of time off so was hoping to take the most
direct/fastest route.
We have 2.5 weeks off and
plan to stop in
Colorado,
Utah,
Grand Canyon and
Las Vegas, with very limited time off I figured driving via interstate would be faster than state roads.
Busskipper wrote:
MAP
Living just south of you in Annapolis and having 4 Granddaughter's in Colorado this is the Route I'd advise. Faster - Gets' you on RT 36 so as to not be so boring - then will deliver you to Buena Vista - Montrose - Ouray - Telluride then Mesa Verde.
Easy enough - only one real Pass - Monarch - gets you into some of the Beauty of Colorado before delivering you to Mesa Verde.
Give it a look and it should compare well to most of the other route you will receive.
MAP
Best of Luck, if this works we can fill in a lot of the Blanks as you travel.
Jul-11-2017 08:35 AM
AGC wrote:I agree, but even the Interstates are sometimes slow--Chicago metro area on I-80 and Indianapolis-St. Louis-KC-Denver metro areas on I-70. The fastest is probably I-80/I-76/I-25/US 160/I-40 to Mesa Verde, Grand Canyon, and Las Vegas, with a return on I-15/US 89 to Zion and Bryce, then I-70 and home. That avoids most high mountain passes except Wolf Creek, Vail, and the Eisenhower Tunnel, but those last two are on I-70, not a two-lane highway.
2.5 weeks off and plan to stop in Colorado, Utah, Grand Canyon and Las Vegas, with very limited time off I figured driving via interstate would be faster than state roads.
Jul-11-2017 07:20 AM
Jul-10-2017 09:23 PM
Busskipper wrote:That would be fine by me. Thanks for asking!fanrgs wrote:If you don't mind I'll add it to my list to refer others to when they travel in Colorado.
When planning your route through the Colorado mountains, take a look at my new blog HERE.
Jul-10-2017 05:18 PM
Jul-10-2017 03:03 PM
fanrgs wrote:
Two years ago, we took US 36 from Hannibal, MO to I-70 in Colorado on our way home from a Great Lakes RV trip. As others have said, it's a good 4-lane road in MO, a somewhat hilly 2-lane road across KS, and a relatively flat 2-lane road in NE CO. Little truck traffic in MO and little any kind of traffic in KS and NE CO. We had planned to stay at Prairie Dog SP in KS, but it was late when we got to Norton, we were hungry, and the SP is a few miles west of town. So we made the decision to stay in Norton on a grass lot with FHU, pull-thru RV sites ($20/night) across US 283 from the football stadium.
We picked the "RV park" (neighbor: "just walk up to the house on the hill to pay") because the librarian said that it was across a side street from "the best restaurant in town and be sure to have their mashed potatoes!" After dinner, we sat on the sofa and watched a JV football game between Norton HS and Colby HS out our picture window. Hard to beat a FHU site, a good meal, and unusual entertainment for $20 plus the cost of dinner!
However, if you are planning to play tourist on the way from PA to CO, US 50 has more interesting towns, state parks, and attractions through KS and CO. This route approximates the Santa Fe Trail, so has sites like Fort Larned, Dodge City-Fort Dodge, and Bent's Fort that are worth stopping for an hour or two each. Helps break up the trip and see places you may have only read about in history books. And, if you use I-70 only to Kansas City, I-35 from KC to Emporia, and US 50 from Emporia, you stay off the expensive-for-an-RV Kansas toll roads.
When planning your route through the Colorado mountains, take a look at my new blog HERE.
Jul-10-2017 02:05 PM
Jul-10-2017 11:55 AM
Jul-10-2017 10:57 AM
Jul-09-2017 07:57 PM
AGC wrote:
Going to be driving out west this August. We'll be in our Class C going from PA to Mesa Verde. Based on google map, it looks like I can take 70W or 80W.
Is one road preceded over the other, any suggestion on which I should take
Thanks in advance
Jul-09-2017 07:34 PM