MudQueen22
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2014
- Messages
- 1,019
For some reason, I was thinking you lived in Pearland. Austin is a long drive with a camper. (We love to take our camper to the hill country. We usually leave by 3am to beat the Houston traffic.)
I'm of two minds on how you should do it. Part of me wants to advise you to leave Pearland by 4:00 am and get through Beaumont and Orange before rush hour. I don't think you will have as much trouble in Orange in the morning as you will in the afternoon. Beaumont will be a booger-bear if you don't get there before the rush hour people leave for work, however.
The option to leave later in the evening would also work, but I'm not a fan of driving on I-10 and into Louisiana after dark. Louisiana likes to have a good time, and there is a whole lot of no-where between Orange and Lake Charles, and again between Lake Charles and Lafayette.
For us, we are staying overnight in Lafayette the first night so that we can get a head start over the Baton Rouge bridge.
If you can leave early enough to make it to Lafayette before dark, that would be a good plan. You would need to time it right.
There are some alternate routes, but I don't find the signage in my part of the state to be all that great. I would take them myself, but I would hate to tell you to take an alternate route and end up lost with a camper. Sometimes, it's better to be in heavy traffic and know where you are than to be moving along well but on the wrong road.
I'm of two minds on how you should do it. Part of me wants to advise you to leave Pearland by 4:00 am and get through Beaumont and Orange before rush hour. I don't think you will have as much trouble in Orange in the morning as you will in the afternoon. Beaumont will be a booger-bear if you don't get there before the rush hour people leave for work, however.
The option to leave later in the evening would also work, but I'm not a fan of driving on I-10 and into Louisiana after dark. Louisiana likes to have a good time, and there is a whole lot of no-where between Orange and Lake Charles, and again between Lake Charles and Lafayette.
For us, we are staying overnight in Lafayette the first night so that we can get a head start over the Baton Rouge bridge.
If you can leave early enough to make it to Lafayette before dark, that would be a good plan. You would need to time it right.
There are some alternate routes, but I don't find the signage in my part of the state to be all that great. I would take them myself, but I would hate to tell you to take an alternate route and end up lost with a camper. Sometimes, it's better to be in heavy traffic and know where you are than to be moving along well but on the wrong road.