准备清单:
• CAA membership
• emergency survival kit,
• jumper cables
• extra windshield washer fluid
• fm transmitter
• Non-perishable food, like energy bars or candy bars.
• Candle, waterproof matches and a small tin, a flashlight and batteries
• blanket, extra footwear and winter gloves
• sand, salt or kitty litter, as well as a tow rope or chain
• mobile power pack
• full 10 litre jerry can
• Cash, as some places in Saskatchewan do not use interac or credit cards.
• plan your route with reasonably short days
• Find hotels in advance
• Load your iPod with lots of great rock & roll, and stay well caffeinated!
• Pace yourself, take plenty of breaks and if you feel tired, get off the road.
• Making the maximum mileage out of the relatively small amount of daylight available, hit the road at about an hour before sunrise, stopping about an hour after sunset.
• You'll have 12 hours to drive each day when you begin, but by the time you get to Calgary, you'll only have 10.5 hours of driving, because you'll be further north.
• It takes 42 hours of driving (without stops) to get from Toronto to Calgary in the summer
• You are going to be driving a very long distance in winter conditions, and some very long road sections will be very isolated.
• Cell phone coverage in some of those areas is also very poor. If you end up in the ditch, you could be there for several hours before any help arrives, so make sure you're prepared for that.
• Gas stops are not an issue as there are plentiful as long as driving in daytime, night time more small stations are closed.
• Emergency call: 911
• CAA membership
• emergency survival kit,
• jumper cables
• extra windshield washer fluid
• fm transmitter
• Non-perishable food, like energy bars or candy bars.
• Candle, waterproof matches and a small tin, a flashlight and batteries
• blanket, extra footwear and winter gloves
• sand, salt or kitty litter, as well as a tow rope or chain
• mobile power pack
• full 10 litre jerry can
• Cash, as some places in Saskatchewan do not use interac or credit cards.
• plan your route with reasonably short days
• Find hotels in advance
• Load your iPod with lots of great rock & roll, and stay well caffeinated!
• Pace yourself, take plenty of breaks and if you feel tired, get off the road.
• Making the maximum mileage out of the relatively small amount of daylight available, hit the road at about an hour before sunrise, stopping about an hour after sunset.
• You'll have 12 hours to drive each day when you begin, but by the time you get to Calgary, you'll only have 10.5 hours of driving, because you'll be further north.
• It takes 42 hours of driving (without stops) to get from Toronto to Calgary in the summer
• You are going to be driving a very long distance in winter conditions, and some very long road sections will be very isolated.
• Cell phone coverage in some of those areas is also very poor. If you end up in the ditch, you could be there for several hours before any help arrives, so make sure you're prepared for that.
• Gas stops are not an issue as there are plentiful as long as driving in daytime, night time more small stations are closed.
• Emergency call: 911