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12 days 3400 miles coast to coast with kids

RedJeep
Explorer
Explorer
This summer I have 12 days to get from Portland Oregon to NYC. 3400 miles. Wife, nine year old twins, two dogs and a cat. Major stops along the way include Mount Rushmore, Niagara Falls, and Boston. Once we get to NYC then we get to slow down and relax for the next 4k miles.

I'm not sure if many folks do these long haul trips with kids. I decided to post in Class A because travelling in a motorhome is a different thing from TT and FW.

I figure we can average 500-600 miles per day to give us six to seven days of road time and five to six days of site seeing. Of course, I wish we had more time to get to NYC, but schedules are fixed.

Even though my kids are young they are well experienced travelers.

Anyway, I thought it would be good to share some thoughts and ask you to do the same.

What we found that works on long driving days:
* Keep kids occupied with reading, school lessons, games, electronic media and lots of stops.
* Pets are great to keep the kids occupied.
* Rule is... "let me (the driver) know if you need to get up (bathroom, drink, etc.)."
* We try to avoid making reservations that lock us into a time commitment. We like figuring it out as we drive.
* If we drive really late we will look for rest stops to camp at (actually sleep for a bit and then get up and go after a few hours).
* If no rest stops then we'll look for truck stops or walmarts.
* We tend to avoid RV Parks on the long haul days unless we need to dump the tanks. Or, if we just need a break then we look for RV parks.
* If just looking for an overnight stay we may call ahead by a few hours or just show up late at night and see what we can find. We can almost always stay at a park even showing up super late. Only a handful of times have we found that we could not get into an RV park.
* We always travel with a full fresh water tank.
* I try to fill up the fuel tank at about 1/2 full. RV is gas. Tank is 75 gallons. So we stop often. I figure you never know when you'll need some extra gas.
* I drive pretty slow (about 57 mph).
2008 Georgetown DS350 Class A
Wife, kids, dog and cat
37 REPLIES 37

wildtoad
Explorer II
Explorer II
Seems that the trip is actually around 6,700 miles if you just go Portland to NYC to NO to Portland. That's a lot of miles for nine year olds (and adults)to be nice....

on edit, it just seems to me the mileage, time allotted, MPH, and having a good time are at odds with each other.
Tom Wilds
Blythewood, SC
2016 Newmar Baystar Sport 3004
2015 Jeep Wrangler 2dr HT

valhalla360
Nomad III
Nomad III
Sounds like punishment to me but if you enjoy a lot of driving...

I would suggest trying Liberty Harbor in NYC (jersey technically). It's basically a parking lot with utilities and a bath house but you can walk to the PATH which connects into the subway system and you can walk to the Statue of Liberty docks. Great location.
Tammy & Mike
Ford F250 V10
2021 Gray Wolf
Gemini Catamaran 34'
Full Time spliting time between boat and RV

Wishbone51
Explorer
Explorer
RedJeep wrote:
I'm not even sure I want to drive the toad in those cities. Thinking public transportation or Uber.

I did OK with my truck in NYC, Boston and Chicago. NYC was a bit rough though.

Some campground ideas:

NYC: Black Bear Campground. A little ways from the city, but there's a train station nearby that will take you there. Very nice campground and friendly staff.

Rushmore: Big Pine Campground, in Custer, SD

Boston: Boston Minuteman Campground. Very nice CG.
2017 Jayco Jay Feather 25BH
2004 Nissan Titan

RedJeep
Explorer
Explorer
nparker76 wrote:
We are doing something similar in a couple of months.
  • From Little Rock, AR to Boston, MA and back
  • Me, the wife and 5 kids (ages 10, 9, 3 yr old twins, 6 month infant)
  • In a travel trailer pulled by a Yukon XL
  • 16 days


We are making many stops to break it up so we aren't just driving the whole time. Some places we are staying multiple days.

  • Nashville
  • Washington, DC
  • Lancaster, PA
  • NY
  • Boston
  • Niagra Falls
  • Columbus


We are looking forward to it, but I know it's going to get exhausting. We are staying at campgrounds each time to give the kiddos some outside time.

Wish me luck!


Three year old twins? LOL. Our last giant trip (2010 5k miles, 7 weeks) was when our twins were three. I bought my first RV for that trip. 1986 Class C towing a 1978 CJ5. **** near everything broke on everything. Best trip of my life (and I have traveled quite a bit.) Good luck!
2008 Georgetown DS350 Class A
Wife, kids, dog and cat

RedJeep
Explorer
Explorer
Lantley wrote:
pianotuna wrote:
12 days and 3400 miles may make for a not much fun trip.

I agree not enough time to be truly enjoyable.
I understand you have to make the most of the allowable time. But that schedule just seems just to hectic/rushed/ambitious to truly enjoy the adventure.

Yep, we are certainly pushing it. We'll have to decide on the Boston leg of the trip once we are near Niagara Falls. However, once we leave NYC for the second half of the trip we'll take it at a much more leisurely pace. After NYC we shoot down to DC, then maybe New Orleans. Point being is that once we leave NYC we won't be in such a rush. My preference is to limit driving to about six to eight hours a day with plenty of "no drive" days.
2008 Georgetown DS350 Class A
Wife, kids, dog and cat

RedJeep
Explorer
Explorer
DrewE wrote:
I think you may be overestimating the distance; it looks to be closer to 2900ish miles with the reasonably direct routes (which do not pass through Boston, as it is hardly on the way from Portland, OR to NYC). I might aim for a cadence of about two days driving and one day staying somewhere, which means probably 8 hours of actual drive time on the travel days (and somewhat more wall clock time); but you know your family and limits far better than I do. If you can share the driving that will be a big help. I know that when I do too much over ten hours of driving in a day my driving skills pretty soon start to plummet.

The Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village (I guess they call it "The Henry Ford" now), near Detroit, is a great place to spend a day or two.

It probably goes without saying, but actually driving in NYC and especially Boston in a class A motorhome is not a great idea.


Yep, Boston adds quite a few miles to the trip. Motohome will actually never enter NYC or Boston. I'm not even sure I want to drive the toad in those cities. Thinking public transportation or Uber.
2008 Georgetown DS350 Class A
Wife, kids, dog and cat

Lantley
Nomad
Nomad
pianotuna wrote:
12 days and 3400 miles may make for a not much fun trip.

I agree not enough time to be truly enjoyable.
I understand you have to make the most of the allowable time. But that schedule just seems just to hectic/rushed/ambitious to truly enjoy the adventure.
19'Duramax w/hips, 2022 Alliance Paradigm 390MP >BD3,r,22" Blackstone
r,RV760 w/BC20,Glow Steps, Enduraplas25,Pedego
BakFlip,RVLock,Prog.50A surge ,Hughes autoformer
Porta Bote 8.0 Nissan, Sailun S637

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
12 days and 3400 miles may make for a not much fun trip.
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

nparker76
Explorer
Explorer
We are doing something similar in a couple of months.
  • From Little Rock, AR to Boston, MA and back
  • Me, the wife and 5 kids (ages 10, 9, 3 yr old twins, 6 month infant)
  • In a travel trailer pulled by a Yukon XL
  • 16 days


We are making many stops to break it up so we aren't just driving the whole time. Some places we are staying multiple days.

  • Nashville
  • Washington, DC
  • Lancaster, PA
  • NY
  • Boston
  • Niagra Falls
  • Columbus


We are looking forward to it, but I know it's going to get exhausting. We are staying at campgrounds each time to give the kiddos some outside time.

Wish me luck!
2015 Jayco Jay Feather Ultra Lite X254

DrewE
Explorer II
Explorer II
I think you may be overestimating the distance; it looks to be closer to 2900ish miles with the reasonably direct routes (which do not pass through Boston, as it is hardly on the way from Portland, OR to NYC). I might aim for a cadence of about two days driving and one day staying somewhere, which means probably 8 hours of actual drive time on the travel days (and somewhat more wall clock time); but you know your family and limits far better than I do. If you can share the driving that will be a big help. I know that when I do too much over ten hours of driving in a day my driving skills pretty soon start to plummet.

The Henry Ford Museum and Greenfield Village (I guess they call it "The Henry Ford" now), near Detroit, is a great place to spend a day or two.

It probably goes without saying, but actually driving in NYC and especially Boston in a class A motorhome is not a great idea.

Busskipper
Explorer
Explorer
RedJeep wrote:
This summer I have 12 days to get from Portland Oregon to NYC. 3400 miles. Wife, nine year old twins, two dogs and a cat. Major stops along the way include Mount Rushmore, Niagara Falls, and Boston. Once we get to NYC then we get to slow down and relax for the next 4k miles.

I'm not sure if many folks do these long haul trips with kids. I decided to post in Class A because travelling in a motorhome is a different thing from TT and FW.

I figure we can average 500-600 miles per day to give us six to seven days of road time and five to six days of site seeing. Of course, I wish we had more time to get to NYC, but schedules are fixed.

Even though my kids are young they are well experienced travelers.

Anyway, I thought it would be good to share some thoughts and ask you to do the same.

What we found that works on long driving days:
* Keep kids occupied with reading, school lessons, games, electronic media and lots of stops.
* Pets are great to keep the kids occupied.
* Rule is... "let me (the driver) know if you need to get up (bathroom, drink, etc.)."
* We try to avoid making reservations that lock us into a time commitment. We like figuring it out as we drive.
* If we drive really late we will look for rest stops to camp at (actually sleep for a bit and then get up and go after a few hours).
* If no rest stops then we'll look for truck stops or walmarts.
* We tend to avoid RV Parks on the long haul days unless we need to dump the tanks. Or, if we just need a break then we look for RV parks.
* If just looking for an overnight stay we may call ahead by a few hours or just show up late at night and see what we can find. We can almost always stay at a park even showing up super late. Only a handful of times have we found that we could not get into an RV park.
* We always travel with a full fresh water tank.
* I try to fill up the fuel tank at about 1/2 full. RV is gas. Tank is 75 gallons. So we stop often. I figure you never know when you'll need some extra gas.
* I drive pretty slow (about 57 mph).


I drive pretty fast, in a CAR, speed limit plus 9 and when I drive back on the I's from Denver, at least 5 times, I average between 54-56 (avg highway speed on cruise control of 75+) so you might want to re think the schedule, or steal a few more days, IMHO you will be luck to average 400 miles maybe 450 in 12-14 hours of driving.

But here is how I'd try to do the trip, it's 1400 miles to Mt Rushmore. - But it's 861 miles to Yellowstone and the Tetons
so two long days to YNP then a day to drive through and then a day to Mt Rushmore 4/5 days and you are 1/3 of the way drive through Badlands and stop in Sioux Falls, Spend the night catch your breath. let the kids play then back for a couple more long days to the end of the second third of the trip to Niagara Falls - then a day and a half to get to NYC.


Try to do a lot of drive throughs on the way - push hard for a couple of days then find a good site and let the kids get really worn out in the pool.

I'm breathing hard and I'm sitting down - can it be done ?
Sure - Will it be Fun? Sure - will it????? - The issue is the POOR Driver - so only you will know.

A suggestion I give often to the Supermen of the World - Try to get some more time - Leave after work not in the Morning - that 4-6-7-hours is priceless at the end of the trip and is just total bonus time - Learn how to just stop in a Wal*Mart for the night - In the Summer not as easy because you might need A/C, but you have a generator right? Drive through so at least you will Know what you need to come back for - and try to get a good rest day in the MIDDLE of the trip to recharge.

This FAMILY took three weeks every YEAR so it can be done!

BOL,
Busskipper
Maryland/Colorado
Travel Supreme 42DS04
GX470-FMCA - Travel less now - But still love to be on the Road
States traveled in this Coach

Wishbone51
Explorer
Explorer
I did just about that exact same trip, Portland, OR to NYC a few years ago, with the same stops, and many others, except I had 5 weeks to do so...

Lots of memories for the family. Was our second only RV trip, and learned a lot along the way.

Here's my trip report:

http://www.titantalk.com/forums/titan-towing-hauling/147124-coast-coast-towing-27-travel-trailer.htm...
2017 Jayco Jay Feather 25BH
2004 Nissan Titan

RedJeep
Explorer
Explorer
GordonThree wrote:
Sounds like a fun trip.

600 miles a day is a lot, even for two drivers... at 60mph that's 14+ hours when you add in fuel stops, food stops, bio breaks, etc.

How usable is your coach with the slides in? If you and the wife are exhausted and you overnight at a Cracker Barrel or WalMart, slides out is typically frowned upon.

Maybe a book like Next Exit will help find campgrounds along the route, and the copilot can call ahead to make sure they're accepting late arrivals?


Great point. We chose our RV based on the floor plan being usable while closed.
2008 Georgetown DS350 Class A
Wife, kids, dog and cat

RedJeep
Explorer
Explorer
Dutch_12078 wrote:
Will your wife also drive to relieve you at times? Or is at least familiar enough with the coach to drive it if necessary?

Yes, she can drive the RV. I do most of the driving but she chips in on long days.
2008 Georgetown DS350 Class A
Wife, kids, dog and cat

bigred1cav
Explorer
Explorer
If you are in the Cleveland area stop and take a look at the Rock and Roll Hall of fame. Drop down 50 miles and tour the NFL Hall of Fame your kids unless they are young will enjoy both. You will be about 5 hours from Niagara Falls. A freebee at Erie, Pa is the bow of the ship Niagara from War of 1812. Erie is 2 hours from the falls. Ft Niagara near the falls is a good trip also.

RedJeep wrote:
This summer I have 12 days to get from Portland Oregon to NYC. 3400 miles. Wife, nine year old twins, two dogs and a cat. Major stops along the way include Mount Rushmore, Niagara Falls, and Boston. Once we get to NYC then we get to slow down and relax for the next 4k miles.

I'm not sure if many folks do these long haul trips with kids. I decided to post in Class A because travelling in a motorhome is a different thing from TT and FW.

I figure we can average 500-600 miles per day to give us six to seven days of road time and five to six days of site seeing. Of course, I wish we had more time to get to NYC, but schedules are fixed.

Even though my kids are young they are well experienced travelers.

Anyway, I thought it would be good to share some thoughts and ask you to do the same.

What we found that works on long driving days:
* Keep kids occupied with reading, school lessons, games, electronic media and lots of stops.
* Pets are great to keep the kids occupied.
* Rule is... "let me (the driver) know if you need to get up (bathroom, drink, etc.)."
* We try to avoid making reservations that lock us into a time commitment. We like figuring it out as we drive.
* If we drive really late we will look for rest stops to camp at (actually sleep for a bit and then get up and go after a few hours).
* If no rest stops then we'll look for truck stops or walmarts.
* We tend to avoid RV Parks on the long haul days unless we need to dump the tanks. Or, if we just need a break then we look for RV parks.
* If just looking for an overnight stay we may call ahead by a few hours or just show up late at night and see what we can find. We can almost always stay at a park even showing up super late. Only a handful of times have we found that we could not get into an RV park.
* We always travel with a full fresh water tank.
* I try to fill up the fuel tank at about 1/2 full. RV is gas. Tank is 75 gallons. So we stop often. I figure you never know when you'll need some extra gas.
* I drive pretty slow (about 57 mph).