Are you ready for your next road trip? On today's episode of Time To Talk Travel Nasreen Stump, Desiree Miller, Ciaran Blumenfeld and Maureen Dennis chat the good, the bad, and the ugly of road trips. From getting your car ready to dealing with vomit they share what they've learned over years of travel writing, business travel and family travel.
You'll hear about:
- What to pack in an emergency kit
- Pit stop strategies
- Road Trip snacks
- Vomit - how to make it suck less
- What to do before you hit the road
- Our best and worst road trip tips and stories
- Ways to keep your car from being stolen on the road
- and more
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Transcript
Road Trips- The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly
[00:00:00] Narrator: Do you dream about your next trip? You're in the right place on the Time To Talk Travel podcast. We come to you weekly to share places to go and what to do when you get there. Let's dive into this week's adventure.
[00:00:16] Nasreen: Hi, my name's Nasreen. We are here with another episode of Time to Talk Travel and we've got Des, Ciaran, Mo and myself here today. We are going to talk about the good, the bad, and the ugly of road trips. Pretty much everyone has done one at some point in time, whether it was because they chose it or it was just the only way to get somewhere. Leading off, we would love to talk about what goes well on road trips. What is the good side of road tripping?
Des, do you have good road trip tips?
[00:00:46] Desiree: Number one rule for good road trips to me is who you bring along. And I know you don't always have control over that, but I am the queen of getting up at 4:00 AM to take my eight hour road trip to Florida if I'm bringing all the kids because then the kids are asleep for more than half the trip, and I don't have to deal with them.
I love my kids, don't get me wrong, but I also don't love them. Eight hours in a car stuck. Talking, blah, blah. Those days are mostly behind me . And I am not shy about going all by myself. I love a good road trip all alone. Good music or podcasts playing in the background. Sometimes, and I've done this quite often, turning down the volume on everything. I used to not get silence in my life, and I loved getting in the car and having no one talk to me and no music, nothing. I've discovered it's much easier to pass the time with something playing in the background when I go by myself. But, it's all about who you take.
[00:01:41] Ciaran: It is also about the space you take them in because there has to be enough room, particularly when you're traveling with kids, that everybody isn't touching. Because the minute kids are touching things go wrong is what I found. So bigger vehicles are better for more people and more things.
[00:02:01] Maureen: true. I love the conversations. I love that when you're in that space after they've had a good snooze, with your teens, especially, you get like a full download of everything going on in their life. And they have nowhere to go. They're bored and . They just share everything. So that's always a good one. Sometimes I'm like, maybe I'm overdue for a road trip to get the 4 1 1 on what's going on with the kids right now.
[00:02:25] Ciaran: My kids when they were little, used to always ask me all the really hard sex questions whenever we were on a road trip, I'd be like merging in like heavy traffic on some, unfamiliar street somewhere, and they'd be like, mommy, what's bj?
[00:02:39] Maureen: Yep. There's a lot of good conversations that come out in the car and you can't run away either.
[00:02:44] Nasreen: No. That's the best time to ask all that stuff, man. But Wow. Yeah. In unfamiliar territory, being asked the unexpected. So yes, definitely on the road trips in conversation .100% with what Des said about it, being quiet in the car sometimes and being okay alone. I used to do a lot of car travel between accounts when I was account managing large territories.
It was just the most efficient way to get to some places, and I really actually enjoyed the time alone. And now even as a parent with a lot of kids, I like to step away sometimes into the serenity of my minivan. But I think some of the things for us, having driven between Texas and New Hampshire a lot
were little rules that we instituted that made things go smoother, so someone goes to the bathroom. Everyone goes to the bathroom. We don't stop for two hours after we start. That's the rule. No stops for two hours. Everybody tries to go when we stop, we are synchronizing our bladders. And then the other one is flip-flopping, the expected screen time.
We would hold off as much as possible. So during the daylight they would do crafty things and coloring. During the nighttime, they could use their screens, but it was the opposite for whoever sat in the front seat. So my oldest teenage son, that would be when we would talk or he would play DJ because I can't have the screen glowing next to me in the dark.
So he got his screen earlier.
[00:04:04] Maureen: That makes sense. I love being able to catch up on things like podcasts and things because I used to do a ton of driving. I actually missed that time where you really don't have much else to do. And I remember one of the best and freaky coincidences was I was driving and it happened twice where I was listening to this podcast and it was all about these utopian, oh God, I can't remember what it's called. I'll find out. They were talking about all these different tries or attempts at Utopia, like the first subdivisions and all these places. I'm not joking you, as I'm driving there goes the sign on the exit for that exact place. Like what?
How does this podcast know where I am?
But I was thinking that would be really cool
if the podcast knew where you are and you're like, Hey, do you want to learn some tidbits about where you are right now? Yes.
Yes, I do.
[00:04:53] Nasreen: I had always wondered if there would be a way to do road trip playlists where you were, driving through Louisiana and listening to Cajun music and then you get over to Florida and you've got some country music with the word Florida in it constantly. It would be fun to sync that up for the number of miles and the amount of time it should take you.
[00:05:10] Maureen: That's a great idea. When I used to drive to sailing with my son a lot, we had this playlist that was like the , keep mom awake
'cause we gotta haul through and get there . And it was all like Latin music and energy. It was like, gotta keep going.
[00:05:25] Nasreen: Oh my goodness. Who gets to pick the music when you road trip?
[00:05:28] Maureen: driver has veto. I'll give you that much.
[00:05:30] Nasreen: Yeah, I let the kids pick a lot, but I definitely can veto things.
[00:05:35] Desiree: I, when my kids were little, it was always Disney songs. And they all knew every single word to every Disney song. So it was often a concert in the backseat. And I'm talking, 12 year age gap between them, but they really got into every Disney album. They had hit a point probably three or four hours in where I'm like, okay. Enough of that, there was that cursed period where the littlest one loved kids bop and I Nope. Couldn't do that for longer than an hour, nope. For so many years they had the movies playing in the DVD on the back seat, and I'd heard so much of Barbie in Paris.
Barbie is a murder. Mermaid.
[00:06:09] Ciaran: Bibble. Do you remember Bibble? I know all the characters from all the Barbie movies, even though I've never watched them,
I've heard all of them.
My kids now, in their twenties, when we have holidays and they all get together, watch all the old Barbie Fairytopia
[00:06:24] Nasreen: I've seen that one too many times, or listened to it, I should say.
[00:06:27] Maureen: Yeah, they can sing the song,
[00:06:29] Ciaran: Yeah, there's the Prince and the Pauper one. I'm just like you. You're just like me. I know. I know all the songs.
[00:06:36] Nasreen: I.
[00:06:36] Maureen: you really did get.
[00:06:38] Nasreen: So I have to say the one fun thing too with the music, or this is the weird musical story from Road Tripping is my son was maybe like 16 at the time , and he was like, I heard this music with this fire beat and I don't know what it is. And so it became the mission of the road trip.
We spent hours with him playing things, me naming songs, him pulling them up. No, that's not it. That's not it. I cannot tell you the amount of time we invested into figuring out what this Fire beat was. Okay. Do you know what it ended up being? A Chance the Rapper Doritos commercial. It was the background music, like it was the jingle from that and I both was happy that we had finally figured it out, but the amount of time invested for it to be a Doritos commercial, I just like that might be an ugly road trip story.
Like I had a moment.
[00:07:27] Desiree: Let's talk about that. What are some of the worst road trip memories for you? Naz?
[00:07:31] Nasreen: Oh man.
There's been things over the years, but they always become part of the plot line, so I guess it ends up being okay-ish sometimes. But there was a period of time when we were doing the Texas to New Hampshire thing where Everett was getting moody, a little over one.
Not communicative, hard to have him explain anything to anyone else, but like just would, just scream sometimes for fun, not in the car. When you took him out of the car to bring him and change him and things like that. Okay, now here's the issue. Usually I had my older son with me, and if anyone has road tripped through Texas with younger kids, you can't leave kids under 16 in the car by themselves.
You can get a ticket for it because of the heat. It's to avoid children being left in the car. So when I didn't have my older son with me, I'd have to bring everyone in because my girls weren't old enough to sit right outside with him and. One time just shrieked the entire way through the gas station.
We make it through the one in Texas. We're in Kentucky A day later . And he's screaming bloody murder so hard in the gas station and we're trying to deal with him. And you have to keep in mind my kids are blonde. Don't necessarily look like me. Someone called the cops. We made it out of there and we were leaving as they were pulling in and they looked at me and he's doing this and the sisters are there and we're fine.
And we got in the car and I think they just read the room and wandered off. But it was definitely in response to us. I saw someone pointing at us as they were coming out the door. So that was traumatic. And, puking on the side of the road in Colorado from altitude sickness myself.
But other than that,
It's all part of the plot.
[00:09:08] Desiree: I get the elevation illness as well, but I had the screaming kid for 14 hours. I was moving from Norfolk, Virginia down to Panama City Beach, Florida. And my son, this is 28 years ago 'cause he was two and he. Screamed like bloody murder, hated his car seat. And it was just me in my car.
My husband at the time was driving the U-Haul and I had the chocolate lab in the backseat. Baby screaming the entire time. Chocolate lab vomiting in the back. 14 hours of hell. The entire trip. That was a horrible one. The other road trip from hell that comes fresh to mind is when my ex was driving and we ran out of gas.
He just didn't look. We were on a massive interstate. We were probably 15 miles from home and had to pull into the median side. I wanted to lose my everlasting mind. I was raised with a father who was a mechanic who said, you never let the gas get below a quarter of a tank. So I didn't understand this concept of you ran out. Like, how does that even happen? And after being in the car for eight hours, I was done. I was done. Yeah.
[00:10:20] Maureen: It's the reason he's an ex.
[00:10:22] Desiree: Yeah.
[00:10:23] Ciaran: I'm a little worried that I might be setting myself up for a bad road trip because we're driving my daughter out to Utah in a couple of weeks and it's about an eight, nine hour drive. But we are bringing her and the cat that we have been fostering for the last two and a half years because of her. It's like her ex boyfriend's crazy moms, abandoned cat that she made us take just for two weeks that like three years later
is still. And like of course at the time, she was still in school and she couldn't take the cat. And this cat hates all other cats. It's literally been like we have a portion of my house that this cat lives in and I'm so excited about finally getting rid of this cat that I'm willing to drive eight hours with a yowling all the way to Utah. Hopefully it won't be vomiting. 'cause the last time I drove to Utah was for a blogger conference and my son was vomiting the whole way. He got super car sick and it was like every single outfit that we had packed for him . Every hour we kept stopping and trash bags and, oh as a mom, I think every mom has had that one trip where there's a vomiting kid and it is just sheer misery
[00:11:37] Nasreen: I have to share my one tip that has like revolutionized car vomit. Okay. And I don't like to be like, Hey, revolutionizing car vomit. Woo. But okay.
[00:11:48] Maureen: I want to hear this 'cause I got one
[00:11:50] Nasreen: And you probably know what it is because it's a sailing like boat thing normally. So they have those folding buckets that are for scooping water out of a boat. They come in a bag and you can fold 'em down completely flat and they're made out of like a rubbery material and we keep those in the pockets.
And literally a child is about to vomit and the thing just flings open. It has a really big opening, and you can dump them and rinse them out when you stop the next time. So you don't have a grocery bag hanging over their ears that there's a hole in that you didn't know about. It does happen occasionally, especially when you're in the car for that long.
So I will tell you that the rinsable bucket, not. A hard one that has to stay. Like one that can just be whipped out. You put a couple in different places. Amazing. Amazing. When vomit happens, which isn't amazing.
[00:12:40] Ciaran: They make them for the kids,
for the beach too. They're sand
buckets that collapse
[00:12:43] Maureen: I have a friend with six kids and she steals the barf bags off
planes and keeps those, but I have found the best are the big, huge zip locks. Keep those in there, they barf in them, and then you seal them up because you do not want that barf going. Anywhere and you can't always just pull over,
big Ziplocs also works for friends who've
maybe been overserved on the way home.
[00:13:09] Desiree: Wouldn't know a thing about that.
[00:13:10] Maureen: Road trips are not always just with children.
[00:13:13] Desiree: Amen.
Amen.
[00:13:14] Maureen: Into my girlfriend road trip era. Let's go with that.
[00:13:17] Nasreen: We did a Thousand Miles of Awesome was our name for it with my friends. So it was myself, my husband, and then my best friend. And his best friend who are married to each other. They came down to Texas to visit us and we did an account loop that I was doing for work, but they came along for the ride essentially.
And we drove from up near College Station all the way down past Houston, through Victoria, down through like Harlingen, Macallan, Laredo, like along the border and it was a thousand miles and then back up through San Antonio and man, you gotta like someone to road trip with them. We all survived it and we did good.
And we were coming off of, myself and my friend, massive hangovers the day before. In retrospect, not a good idea. Do not get drunk the night before you leave on a massive road trip. It's a horrible idea.
[00:14:08] Desiree: That goes back to tip number one. Careful who you take with you.
[00:14:11] Maureen: before any travel, essentially traveling, hungover is not ideal.
[00:14:15] Desiree: That one I know.
[00:14:17] Maureen: traveling, while still tipsy. That's not bad.
[00:14:20] Desiree: No. I remember when I moved from Panama City Beach to Knoxville, they threw me a party the night before I left, and that was not a good idea. Definitely super hungover, and I had to stop an hour and a half in the trip and say, I just need to park the car for an hour because I was so ill. And , that's no fun. That's another bad one. Okay, so what are we good, the bad, the ugly. I feel like the vomiting is pretty much the ugly.
[00:14:46] Maureen: Like we skipped the good, I think or the bad.
[00:14:48] Nasreen: Yeah.
[00:14:49] Maureen: We had one trip where we were driving from Houston to Miami. All four kids, St. Bernard Jack Russell Chihuahua, and a 23 foot boat on the back. We made it to Baton Rouge. So about five hours into a 23 hour drive. We're going over the Mississippi River and basically the hub of the trailer broke. We had just gotten off the bridge, it could have been a very different, very ugly story if that had happened on the bridge. My husband pulls over and it's probably like eight, nine and, we call AAA and they're going to send somebody out. We wait and we wait on the side of the road, which is not ideal. The guy finally comes out like an hour and a half later and goes, oh yeah, we don't deal with trailers. We unhooked the trailer, leaving the boat on the side of the road in Baton Rouge, which is not ideal. We hope it's there tomorrow. And took the kids to a hotel, stayed the night. Found out that the manufacturer of the trailer, thankfully, is based in Baton Rouge, so that was. Just a miracle to be able to get that part. My husband got it the next day. We had it changed out and off we went to Miami. But yeah, the more stuff you take the more crazy things can happen. That's for sure.
[00:16:04] Nasreen: Yeah. Wow. That was lucky though, man. I mean unlucky and then lucky.
[00:16:09] Maureen: Yes. Oh, I was so lucky 'cause we would've had to wait days to get it shipped in.
[00:16:13] Desiree: I think that brings up a good point though is we should probably talk about safety for road trips and making sure you check your car. We totalled a Suburban, if you can believe that. Did a whole donut on the interstate when we hydroplaned. And again, ex-husband driving. But we kissed that cement wall fishtailed into it. Everything shattered. And it was so slow motion for me. I saw the whole donut and I was doing a play by play. Okay, here we go. Hold on tight. We're going to hit. Boom. And I didn't speak for like the next three seconds, so he thought I died.
Just taking a breather. We both walked away, but the suburban was totaled and it was because the tires were bald and I just assumed he handled that stuff. I didn't even look and I should have. So checking tires, now I do that.
[00:16:59] Maureen: My daughter goes to Arizona State and she drives up to go skiing and they're driving a car that lives in Phoenix, up to Flagstaff, and they got caught in three feet of snow and they're like we're going to try and drive home. I'm like, no, you are not.
You have the wrong tires and you have a driver who does not know how to drive in snow, I will rent you an Airbnb, a hotel, whatever, but you live in Flagstaff now until the roads are clear,
[00:17:25] Desiree: Good for you
[00:17:26] Maureen: Canadian. She should know this.
[00:17:28] Desiree: Yeah. You get out of
[00:17:29] Maureen: Texas and Arizona too long now.
[00:17:31] Desiree: Yeah. So that checking your oil, checking all your fluids, windshield wipers. There's nothing worse than being in a bad rainstorm when the wipers weren't working, that kind of thing.
And also downloading maps. You assume you're going to have great wifi every mile of your trip. And all of a sudden you have no signal left here, right here.
I don't know where I am. There are sites and apps you can use to download them in advance so that you don't need wifi to know where you're going. I'm still a printed out kind of gal, but bringing that.
[00:18:01] Nasreen: I screenshot.
[00:18:03] Ciaran: even between here in Las Vegas there's dead Zones where there's no wifi, I've driven to Vegas several times and it's such a well traveled route between LA and Las Vegas. But there's dropout zones, so I'm like, oh, I need to get gas, or I need to stop for a snack and WiFi's down.
So it's really good to have that downloaded.
[00:18:20] Desiree: Yeah.
[00:18:20] Maureen: and like you said about the gas thing, because there are. Parts of Louisiana, driving from Houston to New Orleans that it's a highway that is over the Bayou. You can't get off, there's nowhere to go. And trust me, everyone will hate you if you hold up that very long bridge or the causeway across anywhere.
And then, Alligator Alley in Florida. There's a lot of places where you need to look at your route and not assume. My son now drives regularly between Houston and Miami, and he's 20.
That's a long drive by yourself. And he's learned a lot about having, something like AAA and having that card and having that backup or making sure you know what your roadside assistance package is or number is. 'cause it never happens at a convenient, good time. It always happens at, you know, 11 o'clock at night in Baton Rouge.
[00:19:08] Nasreen: And you're saying, driving to New Orleans and I used to do that route a lot and it's funny 'cause in recent years I've been like, wow, it's come so far. There's so many more exits than there used to be. However, even though it feels less remote than it used to where you really had nowhere to go.
Those areas when there are accidents and they shut down for hours. If it's the middle of the summer, you want gas so you can run the AC sporadically so you need to be stopping or getting extra. The one thing that I carry in my car other than spare gas, if we're on a really long road trip is a fire extinguisher, which was never a thing that I carried in my car all the time, except for that we were in Louisiana. This is all going to be Louisiana Stories apparently. And we were on our way.
I know, right? We were back on our way back from Montgomery. My daughter and I, we had gone for a trip when she turned 10.
We're on our way back. And we're driving. It's moving, and all of a sudden there's a car accident in front of us. Two people hit each other and I. We are very lucky. The lady behind us moved and didn't hit us. I was able to turn, we did not get hit in any way, but we were right behind the cars that had hit each other. Wget out, make sure everyone is okay. We're in between exits in a fairly remote parish. I realized the guy's car is now smoking and I can see flames. I'm telling everyone to get out.
We're getting people out of the cars. It took almost 20 minutes for a firetruck to show up. By that point in time, his car was completely engulfed. It would not have been a total loss if any one of us had a fire extinguisher and been able to put it out immediately. Instead, the entire car went up. It felt so helpless to watch it happen.
Knowing that it was going to happen with no one being able to do anything. We all have fire extinguishers in our car now. I don't want to lose my car like that. I don't want to watch that again. It's just something I never thought of.
Exactly.
[00:21:04] Desiree: I don't have one, but now that's a good move. I do keep jugs of water and snacks.
[00:21:09] Ciaran: I am making notes for my road trip.I'm like all the things that I need to put in my car for this upcoming trip.
[00:21:16] Desiree: I keep my hiking boots in my car and an extra layer of warmth, only because in Atlanta we had an incident and it was just the 10th anniversary last weekend, where it was Snowmageddon. When we get ice, we shut down. 'cause we just don't have the equipment.
Now, I think we're a little better prepared, but there were people who were stuck out on the roads. Overnight, freezing, their cars ran outta gas, trying to keep warm. And I just said, I don't ever want to be that person stuck. I'm going to have my hiking boots, I'm going to have an extra layer of warm. I'm going to have my protein bars. I'm going to have a jug of water.
But I didn't even think about a fire extinguisher. And that's a really good point.
[00:21:55] Nasreen: Yeah, we have a lot of stuff. Because of just the extensive amount of road tripping, we just always had kits in all the different cars, and some of it's kids stuff, right? Paper towels, Clorox wipes, the. Cords, the bungee cord things just ratchet things that come in handy at some point in time.
You can fix anything with a zip tie and duct tape. Always good to have with you. And just like all these Yeah, exactly like random things. I
[00:22:22] Ciaran: Machete rolls of plastic, a shovel.
[00:22:26] Nasreen: understand how much stuff I had, anything that came up, I could deal with it, man. But quarters, emergency cash, like underneath.
Things in the car and hidden and just everything that you could possibly need. There's a lot. And I always clean it out before a road trip and position things near other people so I don't have to be handing things around the car . We'll bring it in for a checkup or get an oil change right before that comes with the multi-point inspection.
When you were saying the thing about the tires obviously important, but also fluids. You don't think about it. So having lived in Texas. Also, having lived in the Northeast, I realized something that I had forgotten. Things freeze. The windshield wiper fluid in Texas is different from the windshield wiper fluid that's designed for freezing weather.
And it will freeze when you spray it on your windshield if it's really cold out.
[00:23:13] Maureen: You have to have a whole winter kit for that. You're supposed to have candles,
you're supposed to have all kinds of things for a winter kit. And then same thing for the ridiculous heat in the south in the summer. If you don't have air conditioning and water, you're not going to last very
long out there.
[00:23:27] Desiree: Cool tip for your windshields too. I learned this totally by accident. I didn't get to park my car in the garage for several years and when it would be cold in the morning and I'd have ice you could scrape it. But then they also had, I don't think it was the Rain X brand, it's a yellow one.
I'll have to go look in the
[00:23:43] Nasreen: I have the Rain X one now. Yep.
[00:23:45] Desiree: it's yellow.
You spray it on the windshield and it thaws everything right away.
It does, but not just that. It has stayed on. I've been parking my car in the garage for five years now, but that layer of sheen has stayed on the windshield so that when I'm driving, the rain just pellets off just off the side.
You don't even have to use your windshield wipers. I love that because sometimes the windshield wipers are annoying. It's not raining hard enough to really go full throttle, but it's enough that it's bothering you. But you put that ice thing on there and it just right off.
It's a beautiful thing.
It's just, I just could see the beads, the beads of water, just leave the windshield, which is a beautiful thing.
[00:24:26] Maureen: We had our Texas winter, it was like a day and a half. But you pull off your windshield wipers off the windshield, so they're sticking out like that. So that they don't freeze to it. And they were all like, why would they do that? It's so funny because you just
think like you just do those
Even thinking about it. But yeah, then you can just spray it and you're not trying to chisel out your
windshield wipers
[00:24:51] Nasreen: yeah. And it's a good thing to have on in general that or any ice removal spray, because in Texas we did have issues with people's mechanical gates freezing during the ice storms where they were not operating properly or the keys were frozen and wouldn't punch because the rain had come sideways and done that.
But one other thing I recently added to my kit. My MacGyver kit in the car is Dollar Tree Sells these white marker pen things that you can write with. On the windows. So if you had to leave your car or something, you could write like tow truck coming or went to, you could leave a note on it or your information or just write some direction.
'cause a lot of times now when people leave the car 'cause they have to go to another exit or they have to do something, it helps. So I put one of those in each of our cars. Dollar 25
[00:25:40] Maureen: actually want to see this MacGyver kit. I feel like we're going back into this flight conversation where I have nothing in my car and you guys have the
[00:25:48] Desiree: Mo you have to have the,
[00:25:50] Maureen: section,
[00:25:51] Nasreen: I.
[00:25:51] Desiree: have to have the white marker mo You have to, they use it for everything here. Graduations and,
[00:25:57] Maureen: and then they're like, Hey, your car's on the side of the road. You're like,
[00:26:00] Desiree: oh no. This is for fun stuff. To decorate, we do it Disney bound or now they do it with people, put their Venmo.
[00:26:07] Maureen: They put
[00:26:08] Desiree: I.
[00:26:08] Maureen: on. Yeah buy. Do you know people are doing that? Just Hey, she's getting married, and you're like, no, she's not. She want to pay for drinks
[00:26:16] Desiree: That's horrible. That's horrible. 'cause I'm the sucker who will give somebody five
[00:26:20] Nasreen: But it's a horrible idea in general. My main goal when I'm on these long distance road trips is not having the car broken into while I'm on it. Okay. That is a bad on a road trip. Even if we're traveling cross country for extended periods of time, the minivan, we're not.
Putting things up high. I'm not stringing those things across my car that my kid pulls something off every time we go into a new state. I'm not riding Disney bound. I don't want everyone to know we're out of our element and might have fun stuff in our car. Like that stuff drives me crazy. I look at that and I'm like, you decorated your car for your kids, for your road trip, and now everyone knows that you are traveling.
You might have stuff in there. You probably brought the kids electronics. No.
[00:26:58] Maureen: Related. So if you have an F two 50, like I used to have they are, there literally should be a class action lawsuit that like, they are so easy to steal. My son drove mine to the mall, went to a movie, came back, it was gone. We figure it was probably, we had valeted it downtown. And when you hand the keys. Those keys don't have a scrambler on. It's really easy to copy the code. They put an air tag in your truck. They basically can just go pick it up. Now we live in a gated community, so they couldn't come get it from my house as easily, but they went to the mall, basically just drove it away.
Gone. Probably gone to Mexico, gone on a container, gone, stripped, gone. So a couple things. If you have a vehicle that is likely to be stolen get a key scrambler. We learned this from a friend who was driving their kid to college. Everything this kid owns is packed in the back of an F250. They stop at a gas station, they all go in for the group pee break, synchronizing, bladders, getting snacks, come back out, truck's gone. Truck's gone. Everything he needs for college gone. Like you think of how much stuff
[00:28:02] Nasreen: Oh no.
[00:28:03] Maureen: is closed, his like, everything you had bought for the kid gone. So they got another F250 and they got a key scrambler.
But, we had an air tag show up in the truck. We valeted it Friday, it showed up Saturday. We just figured it was like a kid head or something, we were going somewhere and didn't really pay attention to it, and then Sunday it was gone.
Yeah.
We have air tags on all of our car keys, and we have an air tag in two of our cars that our children drive. But that was my truck
and I always know where it is, . I figured nobody would steal it without the keys. So
[00:28:36] Nasreen: Yeah, the air tag thing, we definitely did that when we road tripped, and I know I said this on another episode and everyone looked at me like I was crazy. But I don't refill the gas at night. I leave it with very little in it and do it in the morning. So if they steal it, they gotta go find a gas station.
[00:28:50] Desiree: I am the opposite.
[00:28:51] Maureen: say
that, but then I'll end up on the side of the road with no gas.
[00:28:55] Nasreen: That's fine. Fine. I'm not going to, they're going to, I know how far I have to go. I got a plan.
[00:29:00] Maureen: Of course
[00:29:00] Nasreen: Sometimes. Sometimes, not always.
[00:29:03] Maureen: I don't like to let it go below half. It's
just stressful.
[00:29:06] Nasreen: I know.
[00:29:07] Desiree: Any other must springs? Any other must things.
[00:29:10] Ciaran: I, I have a important question that I can't believe we have not addressed. Road trip snacks, do you have a specific go-to snack for road trips or indulgence that you only eat on road
trips?
[00:29:22] Desiree: it used to be Dairy Queen, but now there are dairy Queens in every city. It used to be that there was only, dairy Queen on the interstate. And you'd stop there.
[00:29:31] Maureen: Oh really?
[00:29:32] Desiree: Yeah. Whenever we traveled from South Florida, it took us five hours to get out of the state and, you would only see them on the interstate.
It was always a treat for a road trip. I just bring my own snacks now. I'm a protein bar girl, y'all know that.
[00:29:45] Maureen: Gluten and dairy, so that makes my like road trip food options. Pretty pathetic. That is until I moved to Texas and there are Buccee's. Buccee's is a game changer. There's a reason why it has a hundred gas pumps plus, and, home decor along with your snacks and your whatever. But it does give a lot of different options food wise, and so that definitely becomes our main stops. But without that. Yeah, I really do have to pack carefully for myself. We've trained up our kids to basically be aiming for every four to five hours to stop, you're going to get whatever you need at that stop.
You get candy like once a trip. Not every time we go into the gas station . That bag of candy means it's a road trip, not just an average day.
[00:30:30] Desiree: Yeah, unless there's a Buccee's, then you get to stop more than the four or five hours. They are spaced pretty far. But for us, we time when to get gas based on where the Buccee's because it's a lot less,
[00:30:41] Maureen: We've had to be more Buccee's efficient.
You guys know what you want. Let's get in, let's get out. 'cause we can. Easily spend an hour and $150 at Buccee's,
[00:30:49] Desiree: Amen. Amen. Yeah.
[00:30:52] Ciaran: We stop at Costco for gas. And
for snacks. We know I'm going to find a snack. I can eat 'cause I'm gluten free also. But it is hard.
You have to be like, okay, no, we're not going to look like what different snacks they have at this Costco. And check out oh, isn't that a cool blanket that's not happening. Control
yourself.
[00:31:10] Desiree: We start with the philippic. Costco, the next Philips at Buccee's, the next Philip. It depends on if we can hit another Buccee's.
[00:31:17] Maureen: Talk to people who do that road trip a lot. 'cause there's usually some little gems in there. We found this meat market in Louisiana that now we have to stop and get Tur, duckin and budin that like, I don't even know, I didn't even know these words when I moved here.
[00:31:31] Nasreen: Dan.
[00:31:31] Maureen: Boudan, there you go. But you gotta get the whole Louisiana accent going. But I will say I will give Subway Canada credit. They do have a gluten-free bread . And every time I go into an American one I'm like, why can't you just give me some bread? it makes it so much easier if one
stop, like Subway is consistent enough along a highway
that you could actually stop and eat something.
[00:31:53] Nasreen: Chick-fil-A is usually a treat for the kids on the road because what we do is my older son and I eat in Chick-fil-A while the younger ones would play on the playground and then we would get their food to go and they would eat it in the car. But typical road trip snacks that I do are, I have a couple of junk food items I like to go to. I like mint Milanos, I like bugles and I like peanut m and m, but specifically the peanut m and ms are because they're crunchy and so later at night, especially if I'm by myself.
They like keep me awake. I like their
[00:32:24] Maureen: That's hilarious. I
[00:32:25] Nasreen: so yeah.
[00:32:26] Maureen: thing. That and gummy bears,
[00:32:27] Nasreen: Yep,
exactly. Lot of work. Lot of attention paying.
[00:32:31] Maureen: after one summer of driving around, I honestly can't eat gummy bears anymore. Too much driving and too many gummy bears.
[00:32:38] Nasreen: Oh my goodness. I think we covered a lot on road trips and I'm sure we could do an entire nother one on road trips 'cause they're such a hot topic.
[00:32:46] Maureen: And road
trip to a middle spot.
[00:32:48] Nasreen: Oh yes. And how did everyone get there and unpack our cars and show what we brought?
[00:32:53] Ciaran: In our emergency kit.
[00:32:55] Desiree: I'm down for that.
[00:32:56] Maureen: wine.
[00:32:56] Nasreen: Oh my goodness.
[00:32:58] Desiree: We'll have a time to talk Travel Road Trip, meetup somewhere, and we can invite all the listeners too.
[00:33:03] Maureen: could record it along the way.
[00:33:04] Desiree: Yes.
[00:33:05] Nasreen: Okie dokie. We have covered a ton. We are going to sign out for this episode of Time to Talk Travel, and we'll be back next week with a new episode where we cover a different topic or maybe road tripping again. Who knows?
[00:33:17] Narrator: This has been another episode of Time to Talk Travel, brought to you by HashtagTravels. com. You can keep in touch with us between episodes by checking out our site, joining our newsletter, or connecting with us on social. We've always got the information you need in our episode notes. Until next time, happy travels, and thanks for being a part of our trip.