First time long-distance overland South Carolina to New Mexico

  • HTML tutorial

Kennedy Crew

Rank I

Contributor III

124
South Carolina
First Name
Brigid
Last Name
Kennedy
Hi all! Very excited to find this group! We are planning our first long distance overland South Carolina to New Mexico and back at the end of June 2025. I know there is a lot of places in between, but if anyone has done this trip and would like to share their route, or just points/places that we really shouldn't miss, we would really appreciate your input! We have a '23 Tacoma 4x4, rooftop tent etc.
 

FishinCrzy

Rank V

Advocate I

2,595
South Carolina, USA
First Name
Rob
Last Name
Duncan
Member #

19015

Service Branch
StateHazmatResponder
Hey Brigid, not a huge help on route as I have been traveling more northerly to Colorado and points north. Having a RTT you will be wanting a quiet place to camp. One I found that may be close to your route is just off I-22 in northern Mississippi in Holly Springs NF. Chewalla Lake Rec Area.


I was on my way to Arkansas at the time and it was a very nice stopover. Reservations at the time, '21 as I remember, were not really necessary but couldn't hurt. Think I was in Site 31 as it was secluded and near water spigot. New Mexico is high on my list of places to visit next. Good Luck on your trip!
 

Kennedy Crew

Rank I

Contributor III

124
South Carolina
First Name
Brigid
Last Name
Kennedy
Hey Brigid, not a huge help on route as I have been traveling more northerly to Colorado and points north. Having a RTT you will be wanting a quiet place to camp. One I found that may be close to your route is just off I-22 in northern Mississippi in Holly Springs NF. Chewalla Lake Rec Area.


I was on my way to Arkansas at the time and it was a very nice stopover. Reservations at the time, '21 as I remember, were not really necessary but couldn't hurt. Think I was in Site 31 as it was secluded and near water spigot. New Mexico is high on my list of places to visit next. Good Luck on your trip!
Wow, thanks so much! I appreciate all suggestions. Hoping to avoid most of TX unless someone mentions something along the route we shouldn’t miss. NM is one of my favorite states, I hope you get there soon!
 

ZombieCat

Rank V
Member
Investor

Advocate I

1,421
Maryland
First Name
Adventure
Last Name
Awaits!
Member #

8736

How much time do you have for this trip? What do you enjoy doing? Cultural activities, hiking, etc? I made a similar return trip from Arizona along the southern route, primarily I-40, in April ‘24.
You could stop off in Hot Springs, AR to visit the national park. In particular, tour the museum at the Fordyce Visitor Center. There are several Army Corps of Engineers campgrounds located on nearby lakes. I also spent a day at Crater of Diamonds State Park; I didn’t score any gems, but another person did find a unique brown diamond.
The trip across Texas, Oklahoma and eastern New Mexico is kinda meh…it will likely be hot, too.
New Mexico is very interesting! There are some great high altitude campsites in the Santa Fe national forest. Santa Fe has several museums that showcase Native American history and art. Other highlights in the state are:
- Hiking around Taos, specifically Wheeler Peak
- Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks (now requires reservations)
- Bandelier National Monument; they have a campground in the park
- Valles Caldera Preserve (one of my favorites!)
- Bisti Badlands/De-Na-Zin Wilderness
- Bradbury Science Museum and Los Alamos; watch the film at the museum
- Sandia Mountains, Albuquerque; hike the La Luz Trail up, eat at the restaurant (Ten3, previously the location of High Finance) and take the tramway back down as the sun sets
- Gila Cliff Dwellings (there are campgrounds)
- Mogollon Ghost Town
- Chaco Culture National Historical Park; make camping reservations ASAP and beware traveling the road if wet, NM mud is no joke!
- Carlsbad Caverns (get entry ticket)
- White Sands National Park; hike at sunrise when the sand is cool
Finally, if you can dip into southern Colorado, get tickets on the Durango-Silverton narrow gauge railroad. It’s an all day excursion, but an amazing experience. Have a great trip!
 

highboy4x4

Rank V
Member

Enthusiast III

1,872
Naples, FL, USA
First Name
Russ
Last Name
Derr
Member #

32418

Service Branch
Army (ret)
How much time do you have for this trip? What do you enjoy doing? Cultural activities, hiking, etc? I made a similar return trip from Arizona along the southern route, primarily I-40, in April ‘24.
You could stop off in Hot Springs, AR to visit the national park. In particular, tour the museum at the Fordyce Visitor Center. There are several Army Corps of Engineers campgrounds located on nearby lakes. I also spent a day at Crater of Diamonds State Park;
New Mexico is very interesting! There are some great high altitude campsites in the Santa Fe national forest. Santa Fe has several museums that showcase Native American history and art. Other highlights in the state are:
Excellent information thanks for sharing.
 

Kennedy Crew

Rank I

Contributor III

124
South Carolina
First Name
Brigid
Last Name
Kennedy
How much time do you have for this trip? What do you enjoy doing? Cultural activities, hiking, etc? I made a similar return trip from Arizona along the southern route, primarily I-40, in April ‘24.
You could stop off in Hot Springs, AR to visit the national park. In particular, tour the museum at the Fordyce Visitor Center. There are several Army Corps of Engineers campgrounds located on nearby lakes. I also spent a day at Crater of Diamonds State Park; I didn’t score any gems, but another person did find a unique brown diamond.
The trip across Texas, Oklahoma and eastern New Mexico is kinda meh…it will likely be hot, too.
New Mexico is very interesting! There are some great high altitude campsites in the Santa Fe national forest. Santa Fe has several museums that showcase Native American history and art. Other highlights in the state are:
- Hiking around Taos, specifically Wheeler Peak
- Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks (now requires reservations)
- Bandelier National Monument; they have a campground in the park
- Valles Caldera Preserve (one of my favorites!)
- Bisti Badlands/De-Na-Zin Wilderness
- Bradbury Science Museum and Los Alamos; watch the film at the museum
- Sandia Mountains, Albuquerque; hike the La Luz Trail up, eat at the restaurant (Ten3, previously the location of High Finance) and take the tramway back down as the sun sets
- Gila Cliff Dwellings (there are campgrounds)
- Mogollon Ghost Town
- Chaco Culture National Historical Park; make camping reservations ASAP and beware traveling the road if wet, NM mud is no joke!
- Carlsbad Caverns (get entry ticket)
- White Sands National Park; hike at sunrise when the sand is cool
Finally, if you can dip into southern Colorado, get tickets on the Durango-Silverton narrow gauge railroad. It’s an all day excursion, but an amazing experience. Have a great trip!
wow!! Thank you so much for your thoughtful reply.
Fortunately, we are both pretty open to about everything. it’s all about the experience and creating memories.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ZombieCat

The Deputy

Rank II

Enthusiast III

443
Michigan
First Name
Brian
Last Name
Allison
How much time do you have for this trip? What do you enjoy doing? Cultural activities, hiking, etc? I made a similar return trip from Arizona along the southern route, primarily I-40, in April ‘24.
You could stop off in Hot Springs, AR to visit the national park. In particular, tour the museum at the Fordyce Visitor Center. There are several Army Corps of Engineers campgrounds located on nearby lakes. I also spent a day at Crater of Diamonds State Park; I didn’t score any gems, but another person did find a unique brown diamond.
The trip across Texas, Oklahoma and eastern New Mexico is kinda meh…it will likely be hot, too.
New Mexico is very interesting! There are some great high altitude campsites in the Santa Fe national forest. Santa Fe has several museums that showcase Native American history and art. Other highlights in the state are:
- Hiking around Taos, specifically Wheeler Peak
- Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks (now requires reservations)
- Bandelier National Monument; they have a campground in the park
- Valles Caldera Preserve (one of my favorites!)
- Bisti Badlands/De-Na-Zin Wilderness
- Bradbury Science Museum and Los Alamos; watch the film at the museum
- Sandia Mountains, Albuquerque; hike the La Luz Trail up, eat at the restaurant (Ten3, previously the location of High Finance) and take the tramway back down as the sun sets
- Gila Cliff Dwellings (there are campgrounds)
- Mogollon Ghost Town
- Chaco Culture National Historical Park; make camping reservations ASAP and beware traveling the road if wet, NM mud is no joke!
- Carlsbad Caverns (get entry ticket)
- White Sands National Park; hike at sunrise when the sand is cool
Finally, if you can dip into southern Colorado, get tickets on the Durango-Silverton narrow gauge railroad. It’s an all day excursion, but an amazing experience. Have a great trip!
Great info, thank you. Was heading there last Sept. blind, but now you've got my eyes wide open!
 

grubworm

Rank V
Launch Member

Member III

2,358
louisiana
First Name
grub
Last Name
worm
Member #

17464

Service Branch
USN-Submarines
@ZombieCat pretty much nailed it, but i'll throw in my take on new mexico since it is one of my favorite states to visit...

first off, i'd go on amazon and order the DeLorme atlas and gazetteer for new mexico
1735566470395.png

lots of great info and in the upcoming months, you can get advice on places to see and reference the gazetteer for location and more info.
time and money will be a determining factor on how you plan the trip and there are basically two ways to approach the trip: find specific things you want to see and concentrate on that area OR do a recon trip to see as much as possible with the idea of seeing all you can see and then in the future, plan a trip for specific areas that caught your interest on the recon trip. it is a big state and a lot of things are pretty spread out...

if you are coming in on I-40, angle up to santa fe and check that out. amazing place with a lot of sites and art studios if you like that. from there, go up to taos and you can make a circle going up to eagles nest and red river. VERY scenic and there are camp grounds. if you are digging the southwest vibe, then head northwest from taos to shiprock. there is BLM land and some nice remote camping west of taos. as you go further to shiprock, you will see the cool scenery like in the coyote and roadrunner cartoons with big rocks perched on top of eroded peaks and all the red and tan colors of the mesas. shiprock is cool and that puts you close to mesa verde cliff dwellings like zombiecat mentioned. a very unique area and worth it just to drive thru it.

depending on time, you can drop south on 491 from shiprock and hit gallup which will put you on I-40 if you are heading home and need to make time.
if not...then you can stop in albuquerque and check that out and then drop down on I-25 to las cruses and then north on 70 to see white sands national park and up to alamogordo and thru cloudcroft which is very scenic and head west to artesia and then drop down to carlsbad caverns. i've been there a dozen times and still love going. there is BLM land all around there and we've desert camped outside of carlsbad and enjoyed the remoteness and the wide open skies at night. from there, you can either angle your way back up north thru roswell and hit I-40 or drop down from carlsbad and hit I-10 and shoot across the soul sucking barren wasteland of west texas and hit san antonio and check out the riverwalk and alamo and then work your way back northeast or continue on I-10 thru new orleans and check that out and travel the gulf coast working your way northeast as you go.

get the gazetteer and watch youtube vids on people traveling new mexico and you will get a good idea of what all is there and what would be of the most interest to you.
 
  • Like
Reactions: FishinCrzy