Indianapolis to Disney World

Another Hoosier here! We area going to Disney in September and plan on stopping for the night somewhere in Georgia. Where is a good place to stop, and what areas should we avoid? It will be me, my DH and DD 3. So I would like to be close to Disney, about 4-6 hours away for the next day.
Thanks so much!!

Nicole
 
Hi! We made the drive down last summer (Mothers day) and stopped just south of Atlanta (south side of Macon) in Byron GA. There's a nice Comfort Suites off of exit 149. We left Pendleton (North of Indy) at around 7:30 am and got there around dinner time. New (renovated about a year or two prior) rooms and good staff. Excellent breakfast.

Check them out
 
Right now the plan is to drop the "furry babies" off at puppy camp Thursday and try and leave Indianapolis early Friday morning.. It could be an interesting trip as DH isnt going to be able to leave till Saturday so he is flying down. He may actually be at the "mouse" before we are. The neices and nephew are getting so excited about going... We stopped at macon Georgia the last time we drove so we may stop there agian this trip..
 
My only suggestion is to go thru Atlanta at 2am. Did that once and sailed right thru town without even slowing down.:goodvibes
 

We are going to be going through Atlanta around 10am on Saturday morning. What does everyone think traffic will be around that time?? Do you think we should take the by-pass??
 
Another Hoosier here! I will keep checking this post as we plan on driving down to Disney next June :goodvibes
 
We did the drive from the Indy area this past Christmas. We stopped at the Lincoln Birthplace NHS south of Louisville on our way down and really enjoyed the visitor's center there. We stopped for lunch at the Brickyard Cafe in Bowling Green, KY (a little out of the way but YUM!). We made it to Macon, GA that evening and stayed at a Residence Inn there.

On the drive back we really enjoed Smok'n Pig BBQ in Valdosta, GA. We stayed in Chattanooga at a really nice Residence Inn on the northside of town. Lots of restaurants nearby. We probably could have driven farther, but it was New Years Eve and we didn't want to be on the road too late. We'd planned to hit a National Battlefield the next morning (DH has theNat'l Park passport so we always try to check them out) but it was rainy and cold. I do remember seeing signs for Ruby Falls and thinking it looked interesting. We ended up stopping in Bowling Green again for dinner and ate at Mariah's, which was also yummy.
 
We did the drive from the Indy area this past Christmas. We stopped at the Lincoln Birthplace NHS south of Louisville on our way down and really enjoyed the visitor's center there. We stopped for lunch at the Brickyard Cafe in Bowling Green, KY (a little out of the way but YUM!). We made it to Macon, GA that evening and stayed at a Residence Inn there.

On the drive back we really enjoed Smok'n Pig BBQ in Valdosta, GA. We stayed in Chattanooga at a really nice Residence Inn on the northside of town. Lots of restaurants nearby. We probably could have driven farther, but it was New Years Eve and we didn't want to be on the road too late. We'd planned to hit a National Battlefield the next morning (DH has theNat'l Park passport so we always try to check them out) but it was rainy and cold. I do remember seeing signs for Ruby Falls and thinking it looked interesting. We ended up stopping in Bowling Green again for dinner and ate at Mariah's, which was also yummy.

How was the Residence Inn in Macon, we are driving this May and my game plan is to get south of Atlanta and stay all night. Still tossed on exactly where to stay, but we are looking for nice but affordable.
 
Another Hoosier here. Is it really much cheaper to drive with the price of gas? We always fly. I would like to drive down sometime when we have a couple extra days so we can enjoy the scenery :goodvibes
 
I did a comparision of driving versus flying and this is what I came up with:

Cost per gallon
Miles Per Gallon $3.00 $4.00 $5.00 $6.00
15 $507.40 $676.53 $845.67 $1,014.80
16 $479.06 $638.75 $798.44 $958.13
17 $454.06 $605.41 $756.76 $908.12
18 $431.83 $575.78 $719.72 $863.67

For myself, DH and DD to fly it would cost $1,253.86 (includes flight, rental car, airport parking). So even if I only get 15 miles/gallon and the price of gas is $6.00/gal then I will still be ahead $200+.
 
I will be driving from west of Indy to Disney this summer. On the way down, I plan on stopping at a friend's house near Atlanta. I would really like to drive straight through on the way back. My kids are 7,5 and 3. My adult sister will be along, too.

What are your best nonstop plans? Do you leave early and arrive late or leave late and arrive early?

Any good suggestions? Thanks!
 
I will be driving from west of Indy to Disney this summer. On the way down, I plan on stopping at a friend's house near Atlanta. I would really like to drive straight through on the way back. My kids are 7,5 and 3. My adult sister will be along, too.

What are your best nonstop plans? Do you leave early and arrive late or leave late and arrive early?

Any good suggestions? Thanks!
 
Does anyone have any suggestions of where to stop along the way and things that might interest the kids to see?

We drove out last year about this time and on the way back stopped at "Tellus: Northwest Georgia Science Museum" in Cartersville. If your kids like rocks, they'll like it -- unless you insist on them reading all the educational info by the displays. Not that I'd ever do that... :rolleyes1

Actually, eldest and I really did spend most of the time there looking at rocks and reading up on them (she likes shinys); the younger kids spent most of their time back in the water play area (which is technically panning for gems), sifting for fossils, and hanging out in the gift shop. My younger kids like museums -- but they loooove gift shops. :rolleyes: For us it was a perfect stop while driving -- including wandering the grounds a bit it was maybe an hour. Plus if you're a member of an ASTC museum (which we are), then it's free!

http://www.tellusmuseum.org/

We've also stopped at that Dinosaur place near Cave City, which also took maybe an hour. Most of that is outside, so not a good choice in bad weather.

Both of those are right off the highway, as is Mammoth Cave National Park (it's about 10 miles from I-65 to the Ranger Station or whatever that's called, and about half that to the park itself), so perfect if you're just looking for a bit of a break. :)

What about Nashville? You could stop a the Parthenon, it would give the kids a good place to get out and run around, plus if you're lucky you might be able to catch a really cool art fair that they have there.

Love the Parthenon, and there's a big city park around it that's nice for kids, too. It's not far off the highway, but it's city traffic, which the other three aren't. Oh, and you have little ones, they may find the statue of Athena intimidating -- one trip one of my kids had to hide behind me all the way through that room, and another trip one of the kids wouldn't go up there at all. But both of them loved the Parthenon despite that. :confused3 Probably because it has a giftshop. :rotfl:

In addition, as you stop at the rest areas or gas stations, look for the free travel booklets they have sitting out. There are always coupons for the hotels along the highway.:)

We've had mostly good luck with those coupon books -- a lot of new places advertise in there, as do places that have just been remodeled. We've stayed in some great suites and played in some cool pools. :thumbsup2 Although hubby's also good at asking questions and assessing the place before we sign in, which helps I am sure.
 
I would really like to drive straight through on the way back. My kids are 7,5 and 3. My adult sister will be along, too.

What are your best nonstop plans? Do you leave early and arrive late or leave late and arrive early?

When my kids were that age, we never drove more than about six hours a day. Four of my kids would have gone further pretty easily, but eldest son would get impossible round about six hours in. Complaining, squirming, poking his siblings, talking loudly when they were trying to sleep, crying over nothing, I don't know what all, different every time but the end result was everyone wanted to strangle him. :p The only two solutions we ever found were to stop at six hours (because he would keep this up for an hour or more), or to give him his own seat, in which case he'd wind up for twenty minutes and then pass out and snooze for a few hours (not practical when we were traveling with all the kids but my dad made use of this when he only had a couple of them).

Which is to say, with some kids, there is no best plan for nonstop driving. No matter what you do, it's gonna be miserable. :rolleyes: OTOH, four out of the five I think we could have pulled it off. Driving at night works best if the driver can tolerate it and your kids will sleep then. Driving during the day, we would stop every two hours and at lunch and insist the kids burn off some energy for ten or twenty minutes; we'd either stop somewhere with a play place or do a picnic lunch in a park with a good-size play area. I used to collect little toys, like the ones you get in Kid's Meals, in a bucket and then distribute "new" ones periodically on longer trips; if the kids got wound up playing and it was time to go that would usually settle them down.

We also did the little sticker books and sticker paper dolls from Dover that worked well even with our 3-year-olds (so long as you peel off the backing paper so they can get the stickers more easily -- and I'd remove the staples, myself). Seven-year-olds sometimes enjoy the little travel books with games and puzzles and dot-to-dot you color or work with a pencil, but a lot of mine never thought much of them. I found a sticker book one year with license plates for all fifty states (along with Mexico and Canada), which was a huge hit (eldest daughter usually saw the actual plate, unless we were in a slow-down, but all of them got to look for plates and to move their stickers ;) ), but I've never found it again. :sad1:
 
Not sure if I missed this topic or not but are there tolls on the route from Indy to DW? I want to make sure I'm totally prepared :)
 
Not sure if I missed this topic or not but are there tolls on the route from Indy to DW? I want to make sure I'm totally prepared :)

The only tolls we ran across were in Florida. I don't remember how much they were (we've got the electronic gadget that pays them), but I know there were some tolls.
 
Not sure if I missed this topic or not but are there tolls on the route from Indy to DW? I want to make sure I'm totally prepared :)

Only in FL, right before you get to WDW. I want to say it was around $2.50 total, each way.
 
In Athens, Tennessee of exit 52 on I-75 is a place called Mayfield Dairy which gives you free tours of how their Ice Cream is made, plus they have a great gift shop and their Milkshakes are simply amazing to try.
 
Correction to one of my posts -- The Parthenon is not far off I-65; it's a bit further from I-24, a bit after the two meet and then separate (if you're going South).

I was going through my notes from last year and ran across a quote I believe I pulled from here - sorry I can't credit the original poster, but I thought it worth sharing.

We drive from southern Indiana & my favorite rest area of our 16 hour drive is Lake Nickajack in TN. It is always clean & has a nice little park area to let the kids run some energy off or eat a snack/meal (that you packed). There is an area to walk behind the building that looks out over the beautiful lake, which is very peaceful. It is a must do every trip.

You cross Lake Nickajack between exits 158 & 161, right near the Georgia border. It was darkish both times we hit it but from what we could see looked pretty. :)
 







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