My wife and I are going to be visiting bits of England and Scotland for a couple weeks starting about the end of May (by rental car). She has spent most of the dreary days of this past winter planning and re-planning our itinerary. It's nailed down to the point where we know, and have booked, where we will be spending each night. A question she asked me today had be stumped once I started to think about it.
Some background... When we do a road trip from home (Vancouver area of British Columbia, Canada) we frequently have only a very few routes to choose from to get from home to the various parts of Western North America we've visited. This includes traveling by major highways, minor highways, local roads, and in some cases barely passable dirt tracks and logging (mountainous!) roads. This is easily summed up by: much space, few areas of population, lots of impediments (mountains often).
On the other hand, it appears from glancing at the various maps we have, that to get from many places in the U.K. to other places there are often a multitude of route choices if one chooses to avoid the major motorways.
So, without knowing all the details of what lies along the various possible routes, how does one go about choosing possible routes?
(some guidelines... we're not interested in making the fastest possible times, nor do we need to see every little back country track. It's not always about the destination, often it's the "getting there" that's most interesting.)
If any of you fine folks over there have any suggestions on how you choose routes when you go "for a drive" I'd love to hear them.
(I will only be bringing my F3 with a couple of lenses and a bunch of Acros. Tripod of course too.)
Thanks, Dave
Some background... When we do a road trip from home (Vancouver area of British Columbia, Canada) we frequently have only a very few routes to choose from to get from home to the various parts of Western North America we've visited. This includes traveling by major highways, minor highways, local roads, and in some cases barely passable dirt tracks and logging (mountainous!) roads. This is easily summed up by: much space, few areas of population, lots of impediments (mountains often).
On the other hand, it appears from glancing at the various maps we have, that to get from many places in the U.K. to other places there are often a multitude of route choices if one chooses to avoid the major motorways.
So, without knowing all the details of what lies along the various possible routes, how does one go about choosing possible routes?
(some guidelines... we're not interested in making the fastest possible times, nor do we need to see every little back country track. It's not always about the destination, often it's the "getting there" that's most interesting.)
If any of you fine folks over there have any suggestions on how you choose routes when you go "for a drive" I'd love to hear them.
(I will only be bringing my F3 with a couple of lenses and a bunch of Acros. Tripod of course too.)
Thanks, Dave
Moffat-Galashiels-Melrose-Kelso-Coldstream-Berwick. Just a glance in a local tourist guide for possible stops along the way and you'll run out of film before you've made it halfway across.
) 70MPH.