Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the best route, how long does it take and what is a good place to stay overnight en route, with two small kids? TIA!
If you are going in summer and to the northern part of VT, I highly recommend driving up through NY, breaking it into two days, and stopping in Saratoga Springs overnight - they have a lovely park with carousel and beautiful downtown area with shops and restaurants. We also stayed at a farm which our kids loved at the time. https://saratogafarmstead.com/ Then, the next day, you can keep driving and either take the ferry over or the bridge - the kids may really enjoy the ferry. Also, Ausable Chasm https://www.ausablechasm.com/ is just beautiful for a pit stop and quick snack.
Anonymous wrote:Update Op? Did you make it to your destination?
Anonymous wrote:What is the best route, how long does it take and what is a good place to stay overnight en route, with two small kids? TIA!
Anonymous wrote:It takes 9-11 hours. The first 4.5 are relatively easy---straight up 95. Slightly north of NYC you start taking the interstate through NY State. Have never had the time to pick a Hudson Valley town to stay in for the night but that would be my recommendation. That 3 hour stretch of interstate is relatively dull but not hectic like 95. Then you can either veer off and go north through Vermont or continue north through NY and then cross into Vermont (if you are headed to Burlington, e.g.). Those last three hours are on 2 lane roads, so slower driving but scenic. NOTE: I would NOT recommend making the drive in 1 day in winter because it gets dark very early and you can easily run into snow/ice. That happened to me last year and the last 2 hours of driving was harrowing. And take a paper map because if you are headed into the ski areas the cell service/GPS can be really spotty.
Anonymous wrote:It takes 9-11 hours. The first 4.5 are relatively easy---straight up 95. Slightly north of NYC you start taking the interstate through NY State. Have never had the time to pick a Hudson Valley town to stay in for the night but that would be my recommendation. That 3 hour stretch of interstate is relatively dull but not hectic like 95. Then you can either veer off and go north through Vermont or continue north through NY and then cross into Vermont (if you are headed to Burlington, e.g.). Those last three hours are on 2 lane roads, so slower driving but scenic. NOTE: I would NOT recommend making the drive in 1 day in winter because it gets dark very early and you can easily run into snow/ice. That happened to me last year and the last 2 hours of driving was harrowing. And take a paper map because if you are headed into the ski areas the cell service/GPS can be really spotty.