Road Trip from Baltimore to Salt Lake City

In just a few weeks, right at the end of October, we’re moving from Baltimore to Salt Lake City. I’ll be in my AWD Element with all-season tires, so that’s not too bad… but we’ll also be towing my motorcycle on a small motorcycle trailer. We’re planning on taking I80 pretty much the entire way, since it’s pretty much a straight shot.

We don’t have a lot of time for this trip, unfortunately, but might be able to spare a day or so. Is there anything along the way we absolutely can’t miss?

Also, is there any particular section of the trip which might be difficult that time of year?

What do you like to see and do when you travel?

ETA: also why I-80 over I-70? It’s pretty much the same mileage and time, based on routing between Baltimore and Salt Lake City.

If I-70 then I suggest the Gateway Arch in St. Louis, including the Museum of Westward Expansion on the first floor. Good BBQ in STL includes Pappy’s Smokehouse, and Sugarfire (there are 3-4 locations).

Well, like I said, we don’t have much time of this trip… and we’ll have the dogs with us. Basically, we’re just looking for the touristy things for which we’d never specifically make a trip. On our way out here, we went out of our way to go by Mount Rushmore, because we figured that we’d really never have another chance.

Pretty pictures, maybe?

UNESCO World Heritage Sites is a list I use to prioritize my travels. The only one along your way is Cahokia Mounds near St. Louis. I briefly visited once, for 2 hours, and it is historically and culturally interesting. I don’t think there are many places for pretty pictures. I do plan to go back, since I go to St. Louis a few times a year.

Wikipedia, list of WHSs by state: List of World Heritage Sites in the United States - Wikipedia

UNESCO page: UNESCO World Heritage Centre - World Heritage List
Otherwise along your way are a couple of museums I like but haven’t been to in several years:

Dayton OH: The USAF Museum at Wright-Patterson AFB - great if you’re a plane buff
Indianapolis IN: The Indy 500 Museum at the racetrack - great if you’re a race fan

I 70 would be a better choice. You don’t have to deal with Chicago traffic. Both are horribly boring through the plains states, but 70 through Colorado is beautiful while 80 through Wyoming is depressing. 70 is also better maintained in bad weather because they need to keep it open for the skiers. 80 in Wyoming gets closed a lot and can be a death trap if there’s snow and especially wind. When you get into Utah, peel off on Hwy. 191 through Price and down into Provo, then up to SLC.

Most people I know prefer I-80 to I-70 for Denver-SLC. I would also question the assertion that more effort is taken to keep I-70 open “for skiers” than to keep I-80 open for a vast amount of interstate commerce.

Both routes have their problems, the high plains of Wyoming on I-80 versus two 10,000 foot passes on I-70. But neither is likely to be an issue in October.

You are right about the Wyoming interstate being the most ugly and boring place in the world, though.

Did you decide where you’re going to land when you get here? Short-term rental while you look for a permanent place? Or did you find a home you liked?

We’ve got corporate housing lined up for at least two weeks, during which time we’ll be looking for a place to rent. While our current house sold for more than we bought it, we won’t really come out ahead enough to buy a new place thanks to inspections.

Sounds like a good start. Don’t look back.

If you’re looking for a scenic area close to I-80, Flaming Gorge in western Wyoming might fit the bill.

I’m north of SLC by about 25 minutes; I’m impressed by how fast the Utah housing market came back for the most part.

Therefore it’s more a seller’s market than a buyer’s market? That won’t help the OP.

Canonsburg, PA, has Sarris Candies. No factory tour, but enough chocolate in the gift shop to choke a zombie horde. Ice cream shop, too. Just north of Washington, PA, off I-79 (slight detour off I-76, or take I-70 further west).

I-70 through Colorado has Glenwood Canyon, one of the most beautiful and spectacular stretches of highway on the Interstate system.

I-80 through Wyoming has…Rawlins. Your call.

+1 for Glenwood Canyon, especially in the autumn. Beautiful. But there’s also Loveland Pass further east, closer to Denver, and the highest vehicular tunnels in the Interstate system.