Hitting the highway
By Larry Meyer - Argus Observer
Wednesday, July 4, 2007 10:01 AM PDT
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| Don Johnson, Battleground, Wash., Studies travel brochures provided by Dayna Smith, volunteer at the Snake River View Rest Area, Tuesday. Travelers stop at the local visitor centers in a steady stream, particularly during the Fourth of July holiday. |
ONTARIO - Despite the cost of fuel, a large number of Americans are still hitting the road for their holiday activities and vacations, and foreign visitors are joining them, as demonstrated by the signatures in guest books at two local visitor centers.
“We’re getting a lot people through,” Dayna Smith, a volunteer hostess at the Snake River View Rest Area along Interstate 84, said Tuesday. “We get a lot of traffic for the fourth. Yesterday (Monday) we were swamped.”
The traffic flow continued at a steady pace throughout Tuesday Smith said.
“Most people are focused on the Tetons, Yellowstone and Stanley Basin,” Smith said.
Also, Twin Falls was the stopping point of choice for traveling late in the day, she said.
Travelers include people from New Hampshire, Alaska, Maryland, Missouri and Iowa.
“We get a lot of people from New Zealand,” Smith said. “We get them around the world and the U.S.”
American Automobile Association Services in Europe offers a special where people can rent a motorhome and tour the United States, especially Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon. They prefer to travel in the Northwest because it is safe, Smith said.
Virginia Saito, staff member at the Ontario Welcome Center, delivered a two word answer to the question about popular destinations of people coming into Oregon.
“The coast,” she said.
Saito said other popular locations for travelers include, Portland, the Willamette Valley, Crater Lake and the Columbia Gorge. At least 400 people a day stop at the center, Saito said, who was also handling a steady stream of people Tuesday. Fuel prices seemed to have stabilized across the nation, Elliot Eki, American Automobile Association/Oregon spokesperson, said. The exception to that will probably be the Midwest, where a refinery in Kansas has been closed by flooding, he said. Oregon’s average gas price for regular gasoline — at $3.03 per gallon Tuesday — continued to stay close to the national average, which is $2.95 per gallon, Eki said. Oregon’s average price was 21st in the nation, he said. In Idaho, the average gas price was $3.11 per gallon.
“We expect prices will stay low,” Eki said. “The demand will go down after the holiday,” he said, and may continue to drop into the fall.
Motorists locally will not have to contend this holiday with highway construction along major routes because contractors shut down well-ahead of the holiday, according to Tom Strandberg, Oregon Department of Transportation spokesperson.
Also, a planned closure of the Stanton Boulevard overpass at Interstate 84, originally set to start Monday, has been postponed, Strandberg said. The closure will now not occur until November.
willie wrote on Mar 9, 2010 2:02 PM: