AARoads Forum

User Content => Road Trips => Topic started by: webny99 on October 14, 2017, 11:57:45 PM

Title: Thanksgiving 2017 Roadtrips
Post by: webny99 on October 14, 2017, 11:57:45 PM
Does anyone have any road trips planned (family or otherwise) for Thanksgiving 2017?
Title: Re: Thanksgiving 2017 Roadtrips
Post by: 7/8 on October 15, 2017, 12:25:35 AM
I already had my Thanksgiving trip. :) Last Monday, my family drove up to Parry Sound to visit my younger brother, who gave us a "fall colours" tour in a float plane! Here's some of the photos I took:

(https://i.imgur.com/TgnVgI5.jpg)
(https://i.imgur.com/Y6xvga5.jpg)
(https://i.imgur.com/CLpbwEi.jpg)
(https://i.imgur.com/3t0wYH6.jpg)
Title: Re: Thanksgiving 2017 Roadtrips
Post by: 1995hoo on October 15, 2017, 09:33:57 AM
My parents live about 20 minutes from us and we're going over to their place. Not much of a roadtrip!
Title: Re: Thanksgiving 2017 Roadtrips
Post by: pumpkineater2 on October 15, 2017, 04:48:27 PM
I'll be driving 2 hours south to be with my family in Phoenix. Other than that, no real road trips planned for the holiday.
Title: Re: Thanksgiving 2017 Roadtrips
Post by: hbelkins on October 15, 2017, 08:05:40 PM
A good weekend to avoid the crowds and the traffic.

If I'm lucky, I'll come home from work Wednesday evening and not leave the place until I head out for work on Monday.
Title: Re: Thanksgiving 2017 Roadtrips
Post by: Brandon on October 17, 2017, 12:53:20 PM
To drive to Gobles, Michigan, hunt down and kill two trees, tying them to the top of the car to take back to Illinois.
Title: Re: Thanksgiving 2017 Roadtrips
Post by: kphoger on October 17, 2017, 01:20:25 PM
No plans.  My folks live 10 miles away, though.

Thanksgiving is my least favorite to drive long-distance anyway, though, due to two factors:  [1] heavy traffic, [2] almost all restaurants being closed.

My wife and I once waited in a McDonald's drive-through at lunch time on Thanksgiving, and it was taking forever.  Wondering if they were actually open, I got out and read the special hours notice on the door, and we were there within the open hours.  So we waited.  Finally, the car in front moved ahead.  Then we waited forever again, until finally the next car moved ahead.  And so forth.  When we eventually got up to the front, nobody was on the other end of the speaker.  So all those other people had figured out the restaurant was closed and then driven off without bothering to tell the rest of us.  I made darned sure to tell everyone else waiting before we left.  So we made our way to the next McDonald's, finding a long line of cars in the drive-through.  Not wanting to go through all of that again, I did a drive-around and noticed all the lights were off inside the building.  OK, gas station lunch it is!
Title: Re: Thanksgiving 2017 Roadtrips
Post by: J N Winkler on October 21, 2017, 01:52:20 PM
We went to Kansas City last year to celebrate Thanksgiving with relatives who were coming from Omaha, Nebraska.  We did not find traffic to be heavy on Thanksgiving Day itself, though that is largely due to this being the (relatively) thinly populated Midwest.  We had Thanksgiving dinner at a restaurant, but as it was a set meal for which we had made reservations more than a month in advance, I am not sure walk-ins were being accepted.

The following day I had a vague plan to check out SR 152 or go to the Nelson-Atkins, but I was put off by Black Friday traffic.
Title: Re: Thanksgiving 2017 Roadtrips
Post by: jeffandnicole on October 21, 2017, 02:24:51 PM
Quote from: kphoger on October 17, 2017, 01:20:25 PM
No plans.  My folks live 10 miles away, though.

Thanksgiving is my least favorite to drive long-distance anyway, though, due to two factors:  [1] heavy traffic, [2] almost all restaurants being closed.

My wife and I once waited in a McDonald's drive-through at lunch time on Thanksgiving, and it was taking forever.  Wondering if they were actually open, I got out and read the special hours notice on the door, and we were there within the open hours.  So we waited.  Finally, the car in front moved ahead.  Then we waited forever again, until finally the next car moved ahead.  And so forth.  When we eventually got up to the front, nobody was on the other end of the speaker.  So all those other people had figured out the restaurant was closed and then driven off without bothering to tell the rest of us.  I made darned sure to tell everyone else waiting before we left.  So we made our way to the next McDonald's, finding a long line of cars in the drive-through.  Not wanting to go through all of that again, I did a drive-around and noticed all the lights were off inside the building.  OK, gas station lunch it is!

I wonder how many of those people complained when malls and Walmarts said they'll be open on Thanksgiving.