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Here鈥檚 what I learned on our recent 40-hour, 2,494-mile round-trip drive from Santa Fe to Whitefish, Montana, to visit my mother-in-law.
Here鈥檚 what I learned on our recent 40-hour, 2,494-mile round-trip drive from Santa Fe to Whitefish, Montana, to visit my mother-in-law. (Photo: Kelly Quintia)
The Ultimate Road Trip

12 Rules for a Successful Family Road Trip

From going big on snacks to active pit stops, here's everything you need to know before taking a long road trip with the whole family

Published: 
Here鈥檚 what I learned on our recent 40-hour, 2,494-mile round-trip drive from Santa Fe to Whitefish, Montana, to visit my mother-in-law.
(Photo: Kelly Quintia)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Among the many difficult realities exposed by the 2020 pandemic is just how freaking far most of us are separated from our families. Mobility is one ofAmerica鈥檚 most treasured rights, so it鈥檚 become normal to live a thousand miles from mom and dad. Until this year, it also seemed normal to simply hop on a flight a few times annually听to bridge the distance.

That all changed with COVID-19. There were the airport shutdowns. The shelter-in-place orders. The troubling second wave of infections and morphing rules around interstate travel. Anyone missing family has been faced with a tough choice: (a) skip seeing your parents or grandparents this year, (b) take a health risk and hop on a packed flight, or (c) pack your kids in the car for a multi-day drive. The clear choice for most families, including mine, has been that last option.听But let鈥檚 not call it an easy choice. Stuffing yourself, your spouse, and multiple kids in one car for 20 hours is to risk existential questions about the purpose of even having a family. If you鈥檙e not careful, you鈥檒l be Googling 鈥淗ow do I make my children wards of the state?鈥 before you reach your parents听driveway. But with a little planning, you don鈥檛 necessarily have to suffer. Here鈥檚 what I learned on our recent 40-hour, 2,494-mile round-trip drive from Santa Fe to Whitefish, Montana, to visit my mother-in-law.

Train Like a Marathoner

Running 26.2 miles off the couch is possible, but you won鈥檛 enjoy it. The same goes for marathon car rides. If you鈥檙e planning something ambitious鈥攁nything exceeding, say, eight hours in a single day鈥攖he journey听will be infinitely more tolerable if you take a few easier, progressively longer shakedown trips to develop some road-trip fitness. Which kid is fine going hours without stimulus? Which podcasts entertain the whole family? Who needs bathroom breaks every hour? How many hours can a family-size听bag of potato chips last? You don鈥檛 want to be asking these kinds of questions for the first time with 800 miles remaining. Before we left for Montana, our family of five took several summer road trips of four to eight hours.

Plan Your Route

If getting there in the shortest amount of time possible is your only goal, by all means, go with the recommended route on Google maps. But if you鈥檙e willing to add a few hours, consider the alternate options, especially ones that take you off the mind-numbing interstate and maximize sightseeing on smaller highways. Twenty-two hours in the car on scenic roads is more enjoyable than 20 hours on a high-speed expressway battling armies of 18-wheelers.

Let 鈥橢m Watch 鈥Diary of a Wimpy Kid鈥

Don't feel guilty: screen time on a long road trip is a key way to keep the kids entertained.
Don't feel guilty: screen time on a long road trip is a key way to keep the kids entertained. (Kelly Quintia)

Becoming a parent means subjecting yourself to years of hand-wringing and unsolicited opinions about screen time. But here鈥檚 the thing: streaming movies is an amazingly effective tool for keeping the peace on long travel days. So while we鈥檙e strict about screens at home, we mostly throw out the rules鈥攁nd the guilt鈥攐n travel days. We pack one laptop and a set of good headphones, download a couple of requested shows or movies for each child, and have them take turns. This method keeps everyone happy and avoids a much bigger sin of parental neglect, which is听dragging your kids a thousand miles down the spine of the Rocky Mountains without them seeing any of it.

Don鈥檛 Overlook Audio

Our three kids range from age 2 to 12, so it鈥檚 nearly impossible to find a podcast or book on tape suitable for everyone. (Though here is one shameless plug: on winter car rides to the mountain, my oldest kids love the 国产吃瓜黑料听podcast, especially episodes in the Science of Survival series.) Music can be complicated for the same reason, but we鈥檝e settled on a revolving-DJ approach that often keeps our clan engaged for two-hour stretches. Using a phone with Spotify, we all get a turn to pick a song. The result is a pretty bizarre mix, but I鈥檓 willing to endure repeated plays of Rafi鈥檚 鈥淲heels on the Bus,鈥 or Steve Miller鈥檚 鈥淛ungle Love鈥 (my son鈥檚 latest favorite), if it means exposing my kids to Neil Young deep cuts. Bonus: your kids鈥 picks will occasionally surprise you. My nine-year-old once queued up 鈥淟ondon Calling鈥 by the Clash, and I nearly teared up with pride.

Go Big on Snacks

As with screen time, my wife and I toss out some of the at-home rules of healthy eating on big travel days. We pack lots of fresh fruit听but also let the kids pick out some normally forbidden junk foods, like Doritos and candy, and dole them out liberally. The laid-back approach helps make road trips seem more like a fun novelty to your kids than something to dread.

If you鈥檙e traveling in the age of COVID-19, it鈥檚 also best to bring all your meals to avoid restaurants and other gathering spots. For that, I highly recommend shelling out for the ($200) as a travel cooler. There鈥檚 plenty of room inside for perishable food and cold drinks, and the soft-sided construction makes it easy to pack in the back seat and access your goodies without stopping.

Don鈥檛 Schedule Pit Stops

You鈥檒l be tempted to study the route and choose designated stopping spots in advance. Don鈥檛 do this. You鈥檙e not a train conductor charged with keeping to a rigid schedule, you鈥檙e the lead guide on a Mount听Everest expedition with an array of clients and unpredictable conditions to navigate. Your role is to take charge of the group鈥檚 pace by keeping tabs on your team in regular intervals, assessing the collective mood, and recognizing the signs of flagging morale before it鈥檚 too late. (Sibling bickering is usually a code-red indicator.) Only stop when necessary. Taking this approach, we鈥檝e endured听six-hour stretches without a break, something I never would鈥檝e thought possible.

Find a Park

Keyes got the whole family to do short workouts during pit stops.
Keyes got the whole family to do short workouts during pit stops. (Kelly Quintia)

Gas-station stops are a necessity, but no one feels revived after wandering around a fuel-scented acre of concrete. Highway rest areas,听with few exceptions, are equally limiting. Instead, seek out parks鈥攁lmost every town has one. Whenever the mood in our car signals that we need a half-hour of freedom鈥蝉迟补迟!鈥my wife or I pull out the phone and search 鈥減arks near me.鈥 Most recently, this approach led us to a massive playground on the Animas River in Durango, Colorado, and a shady statue garden with a crystal-clear stream for wading a stone鈥檚 throw from the capitol building in Salt Lake City. I also threw in spontaneous quick workout challenges during stops鈥攆rom push-ups to jogging in place鈥攃hallenging the whole family to get their blood pumping after hours sitting.

Leave Early

As in听before sunrise. This approach has many advantages.

1.The first couple of hours go by faster at 5:30 A.M. than at 8:30 A.M. (Don鈥檛 question this;听it鈥檚 just a fact.)

2. You鈥檒l catch the golden hour, where even dull interstate highways seem majestic.

3. You鈥檒l relieve the pressure on making it to your destination on time and build in room for spontaneous park visits.

4. Kids actually love a 5 A.M. wake-up call. It signals adventure.

Respect Personal Space

If your car has optional third-row seating, utilize it鈥攅ven if you only have two kids. Everyone is happier being master of their own domain.

Embrace Games

We don鈥檛 play a lot of these, but they鈥檙e a good option, especially in the manic final two hours of an all-day drive. Our go-tos are 20 Questions and Would You Rather. You鈥檒l have to set some rules around the latter, or things will turn gross and go off the rails in a matter of seconds. My kids respond well when this game is firmly planted in the ethical realm. This听recent question had them really thinking and debating: Would you rather be one of the popular kids, with lots of friends, but have to pick on other kids to remain in the clique, or be picked on every day but not have to be mean to anyone?听It also prompted the following gold nugget of wisdom from my son: 鈥淲hat would my family be like? If my parents and siblings were nice, I could handle being picked on every day.鈥

Go Long on Day One

If your destination is multiple days away, make your first day the longest, and aim to go more than halfway if possible. After that,听day two feels like it鈥檚 all听downhill. For our 20-hour drive to Whitefish, we drove听12 hours the first day听and eight on the second. That also meant there was still daylight left to run around when we finally arrived in town.

Always Choose to Drive

This really only applies if you and your partner have a child under age three. Otherwise, riding shotgun is the prime position. But with a toddler, you can forget about dozing off or reading a book while in the passenger seat. Instead you鈥檒l spend most of your time as an unpaid, immobile flight attendant, craning your neck to mop up spills, dole out snacks, and read books to your mostly bored and helpless two-year-old. My wife thinks I鈥檓 a hero for taking the bulk of the driving load, but I鈥檓 really just selfish and lazy.

Lead Photo: Kelly Quintia

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