Road trip

Jackiemarie21

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Joined
Sep 17, 2012
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1,109
We are thinking of driving from St. Louis to Disneyland. We want to do it vacation style and see some things along the way. Have any of you done this type of trip before? Is there a good website to help plan destinations along the way? We haven't really been west much and I am interested in taking in some of the sights along the way. Thanks!
 
@MarbleBob did a trip report on this very thing...his family went from St. Louis (or nearby) to DLR...stopping at locations along the way, and with stops in Yosemite and San Francisco, etc...
I think you can find his trip report still on the Disneyland Trip Reports Forum, it's called "Our California Adventure West", I believe.

Great road trip report...lots of stops and recommendations, etc...
 
There is a great site called roadtrippers. We used it for a car trip from Portland, OR down to Anaheim a few years back. It gives you routes, attractions, places to eat, etc. We also used it for a trip to Moab last year. That should be an amazing trip!
 
I will be driving from San Antonio to Disneyland next summer, but we'll be going straight out I-10, and only stopping for gas, toilets, food, and a night of sleep each way. Not a lot to see that way.
 

We have made the road trip from Kansas City to Disneyland and back 4 times. There's so much to do that I would go again tomorrow if I had the time.

Do yourself a favor though and research the national parks between here and there. Don't just stop at the Grand Canyon and call it done. We stopped at several parks on the way out and the way back each time.

That stretch across Kansas on I-70 is killer. But once you get to Denver the drive becomes the destination

Our 4th trip is detailed in photos in the "3000 miles" link in my signature.
 
@MarbleBob did a trip report on this very thing...his family went from St. Louis (or nearby) to DLR...stopping at locations along the way, and with stops in Yosemite and San Francisco, etc...
I think you can find his trip report still on the Disneyland Trip Reports Forum, it's called "Our California Adventure West", I believe.

Great road trip report...lots of stops and recommendations, etc...
I found it and I have enjoyed reading their journey so far! Thanks for the recommendation!
 
There is a great site called roadtrippers. We used it for a car trip from Portland, OR down to Anaheim a few years back. It gives you routes, attractions, places to eat, etc. We also used it for a trip to Moab last year. That should be an amazing trip!
Thanks that will really help! I am thinking this will be really fun! My DH actually has a conference in Anahiem and at first me and the kids were just going to tag along, then we decided to make an adventure out of it!
 
We have made the road trip from Kansas City to Disneyland and back 4 times. There's so much to do that I would go again tomorrow if I had the time.

Do yourself a favor though and research the national parks between here and there. Don't just stop at the Grand Canyon and call it done. We stopped at several parks on the way out and the way back each time.

That stretch across Kansas on I-70 is killer. But once you get to Denver the drive becomes the destination

Our 4th trip is detailed in photos in the "3000 miles" link in my signature.
I have quietly followed along with a few of your reports, I didn't realize you were from Kansas City. Sadly we have made that I-70 drive many times...my brother lives in Denver. But, I have never been past Denver. I haven't seen much of the west at all. That's why I'm so excited about this idea! I'm going to check out your trip for sure! Thanks!
 
what time of the year and what are your interest?
It will be July. We love history, pop culture (for example in Dallas we went to Southfork and loved), kitschy roadside attractions would be fun too! We are also interested in seeing national parks. Basically we just want to see a little bit of the west. We haven't seen much of the west at all.
 
So lets say you want to be two hours out of Disneyland for a days rest and explore the only attraction of its kind in the WORLD!!!
Palm Springs Tram

Hike above the Palm Springs art museum and see a landscape of nothing but palm trees as far as the eye can see east, building code has noting higher than those palm trees. I have been there at sunrise and it is beautiful. And this from a man with his share of gorgeous volcanoes.

Salton Sea. Look at what a dried up body of water has left behind.

Joshua tree national park and its big, very climbable huge boulders. Look at what wind, rain, heat and freezing has been creating. then Look into the San Andreas fault that is going to create a new California.

Big Morongo Canyon preserve. Oldest exposed rocks in California. Avian habitat.

And take a picture, you will be standing in the biggest county in the continental United States

Into folk art, stop in Yucca Valley and see what the big atomic bomb program created and the ACLU couldn't destroy.
So much for world peace!!!!! It's a big, big, big world, just hours away from Disneyland.
 
Hi, I've been out of it for a couple weeks, but I just noticed that @Tyggress tagged me in this thread. Looks like you found my trip report... I'm about 2/3 of the way finished with it. Without rehashing the TR, I can only say that it was a trip of a lifetime. Truly amazing sites all the way! I'm sure you'll have an amazing trip if you do it!

I used a combination of Road Trippers, roadsideamerica.com, Google, Yelp, and Trip Advisor to plan the trip. I found Trip Advisor to be the most helpful, as they have forums for major cities and destinations, as well as ratings and reviews for attractions. You can learn a whole lot from lurking on those Trip Advisor forums.

To figure out where we'd stay each night, and what attractions we might hit along the way, I plotted everything out on a Google map. You can enter a starting destination and ending destination and it will tell you how many miles are between the locations and how long they think it will take to drive. For example, they said driving from St. Louis to San Francisco is about 30 hours without stops. We first planned to do the trip in 3 days, which could be 10 hours each. So, I started in St. Louis and plugged in locations that were about 10 hours from St. Louis. And then, 10 hours from that. And then we played around with the time zone changes and seeing what would happen if we left a little earlier. Etc. Eventually, we decided that we wanted to spend some time in Marceline, MO on the first day, so we broke it into 4 days. But ultimately, I used Google directions to figure out where we should stay each night. Then I looked at Trip Advisor for good hotels at that location. If there were two or three cities that might make a good stop for the night, I used Trip Advisor to help figure out which one would have better/cheaper hotels and better food options.

Once we had the skeleton route in place, I then used things like Road Trippers to find interesting roadside attractions and stuff along the way. This is an old version of the Road Trippers map, but here's an example of one of the maps that I used to track what we wanted to see:

https://roadtrippers.com/map?a2=t!4...ign=trip&utm_medium=share&utm_source=copy&z=5

And again, I used Google maps to help figure out what time we might arrive and how much time would be reasonable to stop there. (For example when we stopped at the Golden Spike Tower in Nebraska on the way out, I had a pretty good idea of when we would arrive and about how much time we could spend without arriving at our hotel too late that night.)

On our way out west, we headed north and traveled along I-80 to San Francisco and then headed south to Anaheim. On the way back to St. Louis, we came back on 40/44. Without a doubt, I found 80 to be the better, more interesting drive. But we did make a few interesting stops on the way back, and it was a lot of fun seeing some of the Rte. 66 sites since we had just visited Radiator Springs a couple days before.

I'm sort of typing in a hurry, and I'm not sure if any of that made sense, but feel free to ask any questions that you might have about the trip. And of course stay tuned to the TR for all the stuff we saw on the way back to St. Louis from LA. Even though I liked I-80 better, driving through Arizona and New Mexico was incredibly awesome too! :thumbsup2
 
I have quietly followed along with a few of your reports, I didn't realize you were from Kansas City. Sadly we have made that I-70 drive many times...my brother lives in Denver. But, I have never been past Denver. I haven't seen much of the west at all. That's why I'm so excited about this idea! I'm going to check out your trip for sure! Thanks!


Oh man, if you were going to Denver, you've been going right to the edge of all those great sights! Next time plan some days after you visit your brother to head farther west. You won't regret it. :)
 
We are driving from NW Arkansas in December. We aren't doing a tourist style road trip, just driving from here to Santa Rosa, NM, staying over there in this little old school Route 66 motel. Looking at the town, it makes me think of Radiator Springs LOL! When I called to reserve a room (they only have 17), they just took my name and phone number. No credit card to hold or anything. They just told me to call if we weren't going to make it, and even told me what room #they'd put us in. After that we are driving and staying in south Laughlin, NV. We are going to the central coast to visit my family for Christmas from there (I-15 to hwy 101). We are hitting DL and DCA on the way back, then will stay over in Flagstaff, AZ and see the Grand Canyon, then maybe stay over in Santa Rosa again if we loved the place, then back home. I have 3 kids ages 11, 3, and 2. It is going to be an adventure!
 
Hi, I've been out of it for a couple weeks, but I just noticed that @Tyggress tagged me in this thread. Looks like you found my trip report... I'm about 2/3 of the way finished with it. Without rehashing the TR, I can only say that it was a trip of a lifetime. Truly amazing sites all the way! I'm sure you'll have an amazing trip if you do it!

I used a combination of Road Trippers, roadsideamerica.com, Google, Yelp, and Trip Advisor to plan the trip. I found Trip Advisor to be the most helpful, as they have forums for major cities and destinations, as well as ratings and reviews for attractions. You can learn a whole lot from lurking on those Trip Advisor forums.

To figure out where we'd stay each night, and what attractions we might hit along the way, I plotted everything out on a Google map. You can enter a starting destination and ending destination and it will tell you how many miles are between the locations and how long they think it will take to drive. For example, they said driving from St. Louis to San Francisco is about 30 hours without stops. We first planned to do the trip in 3 days, which could be 10 hours each. So, I started in St. Louis and plugged in locations that were about 10 hours from St. Louis. And then, 10 hours from that. And then we played around with the time zone changes and seeing what would happen if we left a little earlier. Etc. Eventually, we decided that we wanted to spend some time in Marceline, MO on the first day, so we broke it into 4 days. But ultimately, I used Google directions to figure out where we should stay each night. Then I looked at Trip Advisor for good hotels at that location. If there were two or three cities that might make a good stop for the night, I used Trip Advisor to help figure out which one would have better/cheaper hotels and better food options.

Once we had the skeleton route in place, I then used things like Road Trippers to find interesting roadside attractions and stuff along the way. This is an old version of the Road Trippers map, but here's an example of one of the maps that I used to track what we wanted to see:

https://roadtrippers.com/map?a2=t!4821195&lat=35.79999&lng=-105.71045&utm_campaign=trip&utm_medium=share&utm_source=copy&z=5

And again, I used Google maps to help figure out what time we might arrive and how much time would be reasonable to stop there. (For example when we stopped at the Golden Spike Tower in Nebraska on the way out, I had a pretty good idea of when we would arrive and about how much time we could spend without arriving at our hotel too late that night.)

On our way out west, we headed north and traveled along I-80 to San Francisco and then headed south to Anaheim. On the way back to St. Louis, we came back on 40/44. Without a doubt, I found 80 to be the better, more interesting drive. But we did make a few interesting stops on the way back, and it was a lot of fun seeing some of the Rte. 66 sites since we had just visited Radiator Springs a couple days before.

I'm sort of typing in a hurry, and I'm not sure if any of that made sense, but feel free to ask any questions that you might have about the trip. And of course stay tuned to the TR for all the stuff we saw on the way back to St. Louis from LA. Even though I liked I-80 better, driving through Arizona and New Mexico was incredibly awesome too! :thumbsup2
Thank you that is so helpful! I am finding your TR to be very inspiring for this trip! We kind of lucked into this trip. My DH has a conference out in Anahiem and at first we thought the kids and I would tag along, then we decided to add a few days. Then we thought about driving and making it a true "road trip". I pretty excited! Looking forward to more of your families adventures!
 
Oh man, if you were going to Denver, you've been going right to the edge of all those great sights! Next time plan some days after you visit your brother to head farther west. You won't regret it. :)
I know we have to see more of the west! I feel like we are missing so much of the country! Another great reason to go to Disneyland....see more along the way!
 
We are driving from NW Arkansas in December. We aren't doing a tourist style road trip, just driving from here to Santa Rosa, NM, staying over there in this little old school Route 66 motel. Looking at the town, it makes me think of Radiator Springs LOL! When I called to reserve a room (they only have 17), they just took my name and phone number. No credit card to hold or anything. They just told me to call if we weren't going to make it, and even told me what room #they'd put us in. After that we are driving and staying in south Laughlin, NV. We are going to the central coast to visit my family for Christmas from there (I-15 to hwy 101). We are hitting DL and DCA on the way back, then will stay over in Flagstaff, AZ and see the Grand Canyon, then maybe stay over in Santa Rosa again if we loved the place, then back home. I have 3 kids ages 11, 3, and 2. It is going to be an adventure!
That's sounds fun! The motel sounds awesome! I love the idea the old school Route 66 town, especially after visiting cars land!
 
We are driving from NW Arkansas in December. We aren't doing a tourist style road trip, just driving from here to Santa Rosa, NM, staying over there in this little old school Route 66 motel. Looking at the town, it makes me think of Radiator Springs LOL! When I called to reserve a room (they only have 17), they just took my name and phone number. No credit card to hold or anything. They just told me to call if we weren't going to make it, and even told me what room #they'd put us in. After that we are driving and staying in south Laughlin, NV. We are going to the central coast to visit my family for Christmas from there (I-15 to hwy 101). We are hitting DL and DCA on the way back, then will stay over in Flagstaff, AZ and see the Grand Canyon, then maybe stay over in Santa Rosa again if we loved the place, then back home. I have 3 kids ages 11, 3, and 2. It is going to be an adventure!

Flagstaff often has snow in December, so you might want to have a Plan B, just in case.
 
We are thinking of driving from St. Louis to Disneyland. We want to do it vacation style and see some things along the way. Have any of you done this type of trip before? Is there a good website to help plan destinations along the way? We haven't really been west much and I am interested in taking in some of the sights along the way. Thanks!
We drive from about 2.5 hours south of STL its awesome!! My BF don't let us stop and see stuff along the way but there is TONS to do!! Grand Canyon, Vegas, Roswell NM (I like aliens lol) depending on what time of the year around Alb. NM they have hot air balloons
 
Flagstaff often has snow in December, so you might want to have a Plan B, just in case.
I was just going to mention the same thing, we drive from SE MO and our first trip was December there was snow on the ground on the way out and then on the way back we had a bit of a crazy snow storm that covered the road pretty quick
 






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