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Driving YVR to SFO (return)

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Driving YVR to SFO (return)

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Old Nov 17, 2007 | 11:42 am
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Question Driving YVR to SFO (return)

Any suggestions (driving route, itinerary, sights, places to stay and eat) for an eight-day driving trip down the west coast highways from Vancouver to San Francisco?
My husband and I (and our two Yorkies) are hoping to make the return drive over the Christmas break (December 22-30, 2007).
Any suggestions are welcome and greatly appreciated. I'll certainly post details from the trip once we've done it for those who are interested in doing a similar trip (I can't find anything on the subject here on FlyerTalk - go figure, a driving itinerary on a flying website! heh).
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Old Nov 17, 2007 | 1:19 pm
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Try this though there's another similar thread (LAX-YVR in 3 weeks).

http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/showthread.php?t=303173

The mountains will probably be out because of snow and seasonal road closures, not to mention clouds that'll obscure views.

Be aware that the coastal drive can be long and slow.

Last edited by YVR Cockroach; Nov 17, 2007 at 1:45 pm
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Old Nov 17, 2007 | 6:13 pm
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I've driven between SEA and California (usually Southern) over the winter holidays on numerous occasions.

Everything subject to short-term weather forecasts, my recommendation is to use I-5 as far as Drain, Oregon (a bit north of Roseburg) and cut over to Reedsport using Oregon Highway 38. It's a very scenic road, usually some roadside elk, and the last 20 miles or so into Reedsport are through the very scenic Umpqua River canyon.

Overnight in Bandon, one of the nicer and more scenic towns on the Oregon south/central coast. There are some okay restaurants in the Bandon "old town" near the harbor.

The coastal scenery between Bandon and the California line is about as good as it gets on the Oregon coast, so take your time, and take plenty of time going through the Redwoods south of Crescent City. All the "grove" turnoffs are excellent, even if it's misty/raining.

Try not to drive between Crescent City and Eureka at night or near "sunset." The road can be twisty and hard to track sometimes, and if nothing else you'll arrive at Eureka pretty knackered. You might give a tryout for a meal at the Samoa Cookhouse in Samoa (over the bridge from Eureka) - family style meals in a lumber camp mess hall, served by your Grannie, provided your Grannie talked like a lumberjack. Ferndale, a bit south of Eureka, also has lots of twee bed-and-breakfast places in Victorian houses. Haven't been there around Christmas, but I imagine it's the town that puked Christmas, if I had to bet.

If time permits, the stretch of California Highway 1 from Fort Bragg all the way into SF (it rejoins 101 shortly before the Golden Gate Bridge) is one of the most beautiful highways in the US. Take it if you can.

Go to http://dogfriendly.com/ and/or http://petswelcome.com/ for excellent leads on accommodations where your pooches are allowed. We usually look for dog parks with off-leash facilities as destinations for rest stops; there are quite a few in the Seattle, Portland, Salem and Eugene areas, relatively few and far between on the Oregon coast or northwestern California, but some.

Be mindful of short daylight and the almost near-certainty of rain, wind, etc. on the coast, or if you decide to go inland, snow in the Siskiyous and/or black ice in the Rogue Valley and parts of the northern Sacramento Valley. It's that time of year.
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