Ten Automobile Travel Tips for Summer Fun

Despite the recent rise in gasoline prices, we can still enjoy summer travel in our cars if we remember to plan ahead. Some of these tips will save you annoyance while you drive cross-country. If you're not sure you can afford to go, try
A. Green's article on saving money on travel this summer.

1) Plan ahead to keep the number of miles you travel minimized. Ensure you have good stopping points to rest your eyes and stretch your legs. Often, we'll plan to stop at wild life refuges, city parks, rest stops, at two-hour intervals. If you bring along your binoculars, you might spot a bird or animal you've never seen before.

2) Carry spare water and chains for going over mountain passes. It may be 80F and still hail hard enough to make the roads slippery. If there's heavy lightning, rain or hail, you may want to pull over to the side of the road and wait the storm out.

3) Fill up your tank even if half full if you're going on side roads to a wild life refuge. Few side roads have gas stations and you may drive further than expected. If the price seems too high and your gas tank below a quarter tank, consider filling anyway, especially if you don't know whether you can reach the next large town. Not all gas stations are open after dark and on weekends.

Kendra Dahlstrom's has some helpful tips on servicing your car before you travel.

4) Bring picnic supplies and a cooler, especially one that is not made out of Styrofoam. There is nothing more annoying than the squeak of Styrofoam. Restaurant food gets old after a week on the road. Many of our parks have picnic tables in beautiful spots. Don't feed the animals if you do stop.

5) Make sure your automobile travel club and insurance are paid up in full. Most clubs such as AAA will provide free maps. Often, they have books that provide the history of an area and many of the best places to pull over.

Related information
  • Don't open your window to a stranger if other people aren't around.
  • Even if it's 80F out, thunderstorms may bring hail and make roads slippery.
  • Have a navigator spot for animals, focusing on the lights glinting off their eyes after dark.
 
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Next month we will be paying $8 a gallon in England.

Posted on 07/14/2007 at 6:07:00 AM

Excellent.

Posted on 06/16/2007 at 5:06:00 PM

Wonderful tips!

Posted on 06/13/2007 at 12:06:00 AM

Good advice, love that picture!

Posted on 06/12/2007 at 7:06:00 PM

Good advice, love that picture!

Posted on 06/12/2007 at 7:06:00 PM

Great tips... especially about filling up when your tank is at half. I have many times hit very long stretches of road with no gas stations. As for the driving in Europe, only the UK and Australia are backwards. The rest of us switched in the 60s.

Posted on 06/12/2007 at 4:06:00 AM

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