Gold Hills Hotel, Virginia City (we had the two rooms with the balcony). Inside, our room-The Rose room.
Arches National Park
Snowing in Santa Fe, while eating a great Mexican stew.
Death Valley Photos. Showing Bad Water, Zabriskie Point and Artist Drive
REFLECTIONS.
Highway 50 is touted as a roadtrip through smalltown America. Well in sometowns the arrival of the big box outlet stores have destroyed smalltown America. Particularly Price, Montrose and Fallon and to an extent Ely. Austin, Virginia City, Ely were still smalltown USA.
Route 66. I don't think it lives up to its reputation. Well, apart from Oatman which is really a small western town that is becoming a tourist trap.
Moab is great, surrounded by Arches and Canyonlands National Parks, highly recommend it. Also Ojay (million dollar highway between Montrose and Durango), appears as the orginal deal as a western town with NO box outlets. Long may it stay that way. And finally, Santa Fe, wonderful town, its reputation enhanced by enjoying a heavy dump of snow on the day we were exploring it on foot. Also, it had a great coffee shop, with Mexican chocolate.
Accommodation:
Must recommend the airBnB at Moab, out by the golf course. A very comfortable 2 bedroom condo. What a great place to spend a few days. Would use it again in a flash.
Guadalope Inn in Santa Fe, recommended as well. Great rooms and even have real crockery at breakfast. The coffee was great as well. Just 5 or 10 minutes walk from the plaza. Very friendly person and "wee" son running the palce.
Transport
Always get a bigger vehicle, you accumulate so much junk on road trips. We had originally booked a Rav SUV, but on the recommendation of the Alamo agent upgraded to a large SUV (Nissan Infinity) which just barely coped with the additional bagged. That aside it was comfortable to travel in. Could stretch and figit around easily. It turned out to be a very economical ride averaging 10.4 litres per 100 kms (better than my aging Mazada 6 stationwagon).
Travelling with others.
Regan, thankfully did the bulk of the driving (and very good at it), this meant I drove about every third day. Which way better than driving every day.
Kerry with her data was the chief navigator, proves having data plus access to realtime Google beats out having to hire a navigation system (Regan would probably disagree with me).
Petrol: While it was cheap (US$ 1.90 to 3.50 a gallon), having to use credit cards or prepaying was a little hassel. We chose to have a petrol kitty, every one put in money then used that to pay.
Sharing music didn't turn out to be a problem. We just listened to what ever was on the radio. This proved to be Country and Western. Every now and again we stumbled across a mexican station. Brought back memories of travelling through Mexico.
And Finally keeping the distance travelled to less than 200 miles meant only 3 or 4 hours in the car this couple with regular stops didn't tire us out (well apart from the last day driving from Death Valley to LAX), that was long and challenging. And of course we took turns of choosing resturants which meant we got to experience different cuisines. We did have nigths where we did our own thing. We would either eat "in" while the other couple "ate" out. There comes a point where one gets sick of eating out and desires to cook for themselves. This is where the air BnB at Maob proved wonderful.
That is it. I would encourage you to drive Highway 50, not in summer, but perhaps late September/October. November proved too cold at night. Mind you the days were sunny and temps got up to 15 degrees C.

