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  3. I've got a road trip planned. It'll be about 2800 mi, 4500 km. I think I'm prepared but sure I'm overlooking things. I'd love to hear your tips and recommendations; your holy grails!

I've got a road trip planned. It'll be about 2800 mi, 4500 km. I think I'm prepared but sure I'm overlooking things. I'd love to hear your tips and recommendations; your holy grails!

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  • tehbamski@lemmy.worldT [email protected]

    I can't help but think that a toddler wrote this comment. As if to say, 'If you don't have snacks, then why go on the trip. And if you don't have a good selection of snacks, I'm not going.' xD

    But in all seriousness, having healthy snacks like a few bananas, trail mix, plain or low salted nuts, and some deli meat sandwiches, all stored in a cool with 3-5 ice packs, is very wise.

    B This user is from outside of this forum
    B This user is from outside of this forum
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    wrote last edited by
    #61

    ... The entire post is asking for recommendations for planning a long trip, I'm not sure why you would immediately project all the extra baggage onto such a simple statement.

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    • T [email protected]

      2 adults and 1 younger teen

      We're going on a two week road trip that'll be fairly leisurely. Stopping by some parks and sights as we go and a few nights at our ultimate destination

      I had my car recently serviced. It all checks out

      I have a steam deck on the way! Any recommendations here for travel accessories? Or just in general?

      We've all got devices and chargers and their respective blocks. I'm looking at a power inverter for the hungrier devices
      I was debating bringing the oculus to give whomever a bit of isolation if they need; is there anything specific I'd need to do to use it where there's no internet? I haven't used it enough to be very familiar with most of its abilities

      We adults have ps5s. Most likely won't bring one. I've seen portable monitors that people use with a local device; does anyone have experience using one for remote play for the ps5?

      And making sure we've got entertainment downloaded to our devices; obviously books and offline/non electronic entertainment will be brought, as well

      I'm really looking forward to this and want to make it the best experience for all involved! I look forward to hearing your tips

      Edit to add: the point of the road trip is to bury my grandfather. And I'm petrified of flying in the current state of the US

      Since we HAVE to make this trip we're trying to make the most of it by stopping by some state/national parks and other landmarks/pois during which we'll be present. But there's going to be LONG stretches of literally nothing exciting. Like corn fields. Many hours of corn fields. Most days are 6 - 10 hours in the car

      P This user is from outside of this forum
      P This user is from outside of this forum
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      wrote last edited by [email protected]
      #62

      As others have noted, you have a single "the car is good" note, and the rest is all about entertainment & comfort. That's cool, but it tells me you're not very handy. I see lots of folks recommending tools, but I think you'd be better served by a AAA membership or similar. If your car does break down, what's your plan? Also, don't 100% count on having cell coverage.

      Second note - I drive home to check on my elderly parents every month. It's a 6 hours drive that I used to do in a straight shot. Now I take a break every 2 hours & get out & walk around a bit. Yes, the drive now takes an extra hour, but it is so fucking worth it. I strongly encourage planned breaks.

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      • T [email protected]

        2 adults and 1 younger teen

        We're going on a two week road trip that'll be fairly leisurely. Stopping by some parks and sights as we go and a few nights at our ultimate destination

        I had my car recently serviced. It all checks out

        I have a steam deck on the way! Any recommendations here for travel accessories? Or just in general?

        We've all got devices and chargers and their respective blocks. I'm looking at a power inverter for the hungrier devices
        I was debating bringing the oculus to give whomever a bit of isolation if they need; is there anything specific I'd need to do to use it where there's no internet? I haven't used it enough to be very familiar with most of its abilities

        We adults have ps5s. Most likely won't bring one. I've seen portable monitors that people use with a local device; does anyone have experience using one for remote play for the ps5?

        And making sure we've got entertainment downloaded to our devices; obviously books and offline/non electronic entertainment will be brought, as well

        I'm really looking forward to this and want to make it the best experience for all involved! I look forward to hearing your tips

        Edit to add: the point of the road trip is to bury my grandfather. And I'm petrified of flying in the current state of the US

        Since we HAVE to make this trip we're trying to make the most of it by stopping by some state/national parks and other landmarks/pois during which we'll be present. But there's going to be LONG stretches of literally nothing exciting. Like corn fields. Many hours of corn fields. Most days are 6 - 10 hours in the car

        C This user is from outside of this forum
        C This user is from outside of this forum
        [email protected]
        wrote last edited by [email protected]
        #63

        You have a smartphone, right?

        1. Go get the TILE app, the one for finding tile-branded locator chits. Don't buy anything just get the app.
        2. Don't register anything. Just load it. If you have an apple phone, cry and re-auth it to use your gps and get ready to re-allow it weekly because apple hates competition
        3. On the tile app will be an icon for your phone, like "Dave's Samsung". Go into its properties and share that with someone you trust who also gets the app.
        4. Now they can see where your phone last pinged, which may help if you don't turn up at a prearranged checkpoint.

        It doesn't care about phone types, map app types, social networks or shoe size. It just works.

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        • C [email protected]

          Butt pillows; even if the seats are comfy, just to shake things up, keeps you from being stiff afterwards

          T This user is from outside of this forum
          T This user is from outside of this forum
          [email protected]
          wrote last edited by
          #64

          Oh yeah thank you! I love pillows and I didn't think of bringing some extra for traveling

          That makes me think of riding in my grandparents car that had beaded car seat covers. They said it helped circulation when sitting for long periods

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          • T [email protected]

            2 adults and 1 younger teen

            We're going on a two week road trip that'll be fairly leisurely. Stopping by some parks and sights as we go and a few nights at our ultimate destination

            I had my car recently serviced. It all checks out

            I have a steam deck on the way! Any recommendations here for travel accessories? Or just in general?

            We've all got devices and chargers and their respective blocks. I'm looking at a power inverter for the hungrier devices
            I was debating bringing the oculus to give whomever a bit of isolation if they need; is there anything specific I'd need to do to use it where there's no internet? I haven't used it enough to be very familiar with most of its abilities

            We adults have ps5s. Most likely won't bring one. I've seen portable monitors that people use with a local device; does anyone have experience using one for remote play for the ps5?

            And making sure we've got entertainment downloaded to our devices; obviously books and offline/non electronic entertainment will be brought, as well

            I'm really looking forward to this and want to make it the best experience for all involved! I look forward to hearing your tips

            Edit to add: the point of the road trip is to bury my grandfather. And I'm petrified of flying in the current state of the US

            Since we HAVE to make this trip we're trying to make the most of it by stopping by some state/national parks and other landmarks/pois during which we'll be present. But there's going to be LONG stretches of literally nothing exciting. Like corn fields. Many hours of corn fields. Most days are 6 - 10 hours in the car

            U This user is from outside of this forum
            U This user is from outside of this forum
            [email protected]
            wrote last edited by
            #65

            I second things like spare tire, pillows, less focus on electronics (boredom is a gift not many are given today), take time for spontaneous detours and breaks, drink water and limit intake of sugar and quick energy.

            Try to involve the whole family in the planning.

            Maybe there's something the kid wants to take a look at, or that might be helpful for a school project/class or to talk about in show+tell (ancient burial site, gigant cheese, takeoff/landing strip for hobby airplanes, arcade, space museum).

            Make sure to move around and stretch at breaks and in the car, perhaps everyone can take turn to lead a "movement minute" where one person does a series of movements or stretches and everyone else follows (make this fun and silly, stretching doesn't have to be boring! do things with name like frog-jumps and helicopter arms and/or make the instructions silly like "keep your hands on the ground and make your butt touch the ground then make your butt touch the sky"). If everyone get to take their turn to lead they might have fun with it instead of complain. If your kid is prone to embarrassment, find a bit of shelter to do the stretches in, behind a bush or other structure not visible right off the road.

            Have a 5-15 min dj session every hour where one person get to play a prepared playlist, and another person gets their turn the next hour (or take it in a row if your family also has trouble waiting for their turn). If you really want to structure it you can suggest different themes for the playlist, like "songs that represents the roadtrip", "songs you wish grandpa/great-grandpa could have heard", "songs that make you feel something", "songs from when you were little", "songs your friends like".

            A short RPG could be fun for the family as the driver can also be involved, there are systems that only require a set of six-sided dice, and DM-less games where everyone plays (I think "bunny we bought a house" could be suitable for a 13-year old, and they could get to control the pen and paper to draw the dungeon as you play it).

            Go to bed early and give eachother some space once you leave the car for the night. Don't demand a lot of socialising (unless everyone want to) at dinner or afterwards. Let everyone decompress on their own. ...unless of course everyone has had their headphones in and been on their devices with their friends all drive - then its probably time for some family time.

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            • T [email protected]

              Since tech seems to be what people are focusing on and not actual advice, the point of the trip is to bury my grandfather. I am fearful to fly in the US currently. We have to make this trip so we're making it as enjoyable as possible. I didn't feel like including that in the post because I didn't feel it was actually relevant

              H This user is from outside of this forum
              H This user is from outside of this forum
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              wrote last edited by
              #66

              People are trying to give advice! You may be surprised if you let your brain get bored and watch the scenery. Take in the environment and people around you. May be good for the grieving process. You only live once! The games will be there when you are back in half a month. My advice is like the others, focus on healthy snacks and hydration. Hanger can easily sour moods in a long journey! Good luck out there

              T 1 Reply Last reply
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              • H [email protected]

                People are trying to give advice! You may be surprised if you let your brain get bored and watch the scenery. Take in the environment and people around you. May be good for the grieving process. You only live once! The games will be there when you are back in half a month. My advice is like the others, focus on healthy snacks and hydration. Hanger can easily sour moods in a long journey! Good luck out there

                T This user is from outside of this forum
                T This user is from outside of this forum
                [email protected]
                wrote last edited by
                #67

                Yes I did get a lot of good advice! I'm still working through it all really because some things were things I wouldn't have thought of myself. I do appreciate the time people took for helpful comments

                We've got plenty of stops to make and all of them are going to be new to the other parties. The kiddo likes the screens but is also equally satisfied staring out the window. I know they'll both have their minds blown at the sights we'll be experiencing

                And +1 in wholesome snacks and hydrating beverages

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