Year long 70F North America tour
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Year long 70F North America tour
Came across this WP article https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2023/05/31/road-trip-weather-70-degrees/
The idea is to travel along a route where the temperature will always be around 70F. Interesting concept but distances can be a challenge (> 100 miles/day in June) and routing not ideal (typically Interstates)
Anyone here has done something of the kind? And or covering a different geographical area?
The idea is to travel along a route where the temperature will always be around 70F. Interesting concept but distances can be a challenge (> 100 miles/day in June) and routing not ideal (typically Interstates)
Anyone here has done something of the kind? And or covering a different geographical area?
#2
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 37,606
Mentioned: 208 Post(s)
Tagged: 1 Thread(s)
Quoted: 17456 Post(s)
Liked 13,548 Times
in
6,440 Posts
Link doesn’t work for me, but I remember seeing it a while ago. IIRC, I rode through some of the areas during the specified times. I wouldn’t say “always.”
Reminds me of Andalucia. It was supposed to be relatively nice. Reality was that I experienced colder and wetter conditions than normal in many places.
Reminds me of Andalucia. It was supposed to be relatively nice. Reality was that I experienced colder and wetter conditions than normal in many places.
#4
Member
Maybe this link will work, but the article is probably behind a paywall.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/weath...er-70-degrees/
I like maps and statistics so I found the article interesting. As for turning this into a bike trip, that sounds like lunacy to me. Nevertheless, I try to go on my bike trips when the weather is most likely to be optimal.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/weath...er-70-degrees/
I like maps and statistics so I found the article interesting. As for turning this into a bike trip, that sounds like lunacy to me. Nevertheless, I try to go on my bike trips when the weather is most likely to be optimal.
#5
Hooked on Touring
In the West, the average high may 70F,
But on Monday the high may be 90F and by Wednesday it may be 50F.
But on Monday the high may be 90F and by Wednesday it may be 50F.
#6
Palmer
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Parts Unknown
Posts: 8,193
Bikes: Mike Melton custom, 1982 Stumpjumper, Alex Moulton AM, 2010 Dawes Briercliffe, 2017 Dahon Curl i8, 2021 Motobecane Turino 1x12
Mentioned: 35 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1455 Post(s)
Liked 1,480 Times
in
876 Posts
Then there's this:

Statisticians are punished in Hell by having one foot in ice and one foot in steaming water: on average, it's not so bad.

Statisticians are punished in Hell by having one foot in ice and one foot in steaming water: on average, it's not so bad.
Likes For tcs:
#7
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Tallahassee, FL
Posts: 4,658
Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1458 Post(s)
Likes: 0
Liked 863 Times
in
476 Posts
I've lived in about half a dozen places along that route throughout the country. In no case would "minimal fluctuation" be applicable.
#8
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: northern Deep South
Posts: 8,504
Bikes: Fuji Touring, Novara Randonee
Mentioned: 36 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2377 Post(s)
Liked 1,698 Times
in
1,069 Posts
I think the article referenced a blog site, which I don't have handy. It was good for a headline and probably for clicks, but when I looked at the details I found the devil. "Average temperature" for a date is the way the guy designed the route. I don't know that I've ever cycled anywhere the temperature was "average" when I went through -- it might be 40F that day, or 100F, but I'm really hoping it'll settle on the average 70F. Note, too, that this is the average of hourly readings for the day, so a 50-90F day in the desert may average 70F, and those 10F swings are not much of a deviation from "normal" (in the statistical sense).
The other thing I thought was a bit strange is that you're supposed to loiter for months along the southern coasts, then speed up to cover long distances when the temperature is right. Might work out for bicycle touring if you don't mind towing the CR-V for three months, then put the bike in the car for the next six months or so.
But after all the grumbling, it does sound intriguing. Maybe I'll persuade She Who Must Be Obeyed to get an RV when we retire, and we can travel the country for a year or two.
The other thing I thought was a bit strange is that you're supposed to loiter for months along the southern coasts, then speed up to cover long distances when the temperature is right. Might work out for bicycle touring if you don't mind towing the CR-V for three months, then put the bike in the car for the next six months or so.
But after all the grumbling, it does sound intriguing. Maybe I'll persuade She Who Must Be Obeyed to get an RV when we retire, and we can travel the country for a year or two.
#9
Senior Member
Counting on seasonal averages would be a fail. I tend to get record heat where ever I go. That said you might stand a better chance of setting the route based on shorter term forecasts "on the fly". Also you could choose areas where the temperature was more stable, but that would limit the route quite a bit.
#10
working on my sandal tan
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: CID
Posts: 22,560
Bikes: 1991 Bianchi Eros, 1964 Armstrong, 1988 Diamondback Ascent, 1988 Bianchi Premio, 1987 Bianchi Sport SX, 1980s Raleigh mixte (hers), All-City Space Horse (hers)
Mentioned: 98 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 3850 Post(s)
Liked 2,507 Times
in
1,545 Posts
Love it! Your own work?
#11
bicycle tourist
The net result was the following approximate route:

One could then adjust the starting date/location together, start in Washington DC in April, Indianapolis in July, Seattle in October, etc.
This led me to think starting on my birthday in DC wasn't too bad of a combination even though I was no longer planning a full year on the road.
However, my route+temperature planning program missed one fatal flaw for me... I didn't include anything for terrain or difficulty of getting between city pairs but assumed a mile was a mile...
So when I started riding my route, the first instance this came to play was that the sequence of BostonMA to ConcordNH to AugustaME to BurlingtonVT would cycle more easily as BostonMA to AugustaME to ConcordNH to BurlingtonVT given the topography of northern Maine/New Hampshire/Vermont.
The real big one for me was having the route go from HarrisburgPA to CharlestonWV. I realized I could do it but not have as much fun crossing the Appalachians that way ... So I took advantage of not being on a one-year journey to visit every capitol and instead dropped HarrisburgPA and CharlestonWV from my itinerary.
Not quite a temperature gradient but I used temperature+wind to optimize my circumnavigation of Australia. In this case, I wanted to be north in the Winter, South during the summer and generally anti-clockwise was better than clockwise. Also in my plan, it was eight months to split the time.
A similar optimization came in cycling the Pan-American highway from Alaska to Argentina. In this case, I wanted to avoid winter conditions at either end and skip across wet seasons in the middle. This led to one of two budgets: either a ~9 month trip starting early summer in Prudhoe Bay and ending late summer in Tierra del Fuego or a year and a half going from summer solstice to summer solstice. I picked a solstice to solstice ride...
Likes For tcs:
#13
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2022
Location: The Ring of Fire
Posts: 575
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 244 Post(s)
Liked 340 Times
in
205 Posts
A physicist, an engineer and a statistician are on a hunting trip. They are walking through the woods when they spot a deer in a clearing. The physicist calculates the distance of the target, the velocity and drop of the bullet, adjusts his rifle and fires, missing the deer 5 feet to the left.
The engineer rolls his eyes. 'You forgot to account for wind. Give it here', he snatches the rifle, licks his finger and estimates the speed and direction of the wind and fires, missing the deer 5 feet to the right. Suddenly, the statistician claps his hands and yells "We got him!"
The engineer rolls his eyes. 'You forgot to account for wind. Give it here', he snatches the rifle, licks his finger and estimates the speed and direction of the wind and fires, missing the deer 5 feet to the right. Suddenly, the statistician claps his hands and yells "We got him!"
Last edited by Ron Damon; 06-02-23 at 06:17 AM.
Likes For Ron Damon: